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Manhattan foreclosures reach their lowest point in 4 years — while 2 other boroughs hit peaks

New York City’s foreclosure slowdown is being driven by one borough, and it’s not because the market suddenly got healthier.

Filings slipped 3% year-over-year to 399 in the first quarter, the weakest start in three years, according to PropertyShark.

Manhattan, once a consistent driver of foreclosure activity, is now the least active borough. The borough is in a position it hasn’t held in nearly four years, even as pre-foreclosure filings there ticked slightly higher.

Pre-foreclosure activity, overall, barely budged. On paper, it looks like distress is easing. In reality, the decline is being almost entirely powered by Brooklyn, where filings plunged 45% to just 62 cases — the borough’s slowest quarter since mid-2022.

That drop isn’t random. Brooklyn’s foreclosure pipeline hasn’t dried up. Pre-foreclosures there actually held steady, inching up 3%.

What’s changed is conversion. Fewer of those early-stage cases are making it to auction, likely due to a mix of legal friction following New York’s foreclosure law changes, lenders taking a slower approach to push cases forward and owners finding ways to resolve debt before losing the property.

In short, the distress is still there but it’s just getting stalled upstream.

Specfically, New York’s Foreclosure Abuse Prevention Act (FAPA) likely played a direct role in Brooklyn’s dramatic drop in filings. The 2022 law was designed to stop lenders from endlessly resetting the clock on old, stale foreclosure cases — and last November, the state’s highest court confirmed it applies retroactively to all foreclosure actions where a final judgment hasn’t yet been enforced.

The ruling hit Brooklyn particularly hard because the borough has historically carried a large inventory of exactly that kind of aging, unresolved distressed debt — cases that lenders had been sitting on, waiting to revive. With lenders now forced to assess whether those older loans are even legally pursuable before filing, a significant portion of Brooklyn’s expected foreclosure pipeline may have been effectively rendered unenforceable overnight.

The borough’s pre-foreclosures numbers suggest the slowdown wasn’t about homeowners catching up on payments, but about lenders being legally blocked from pulling the trigger.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Brooklyn’s heavy concentration of condos and two-family homes also plays a role. Those segments saw a pullback in filings citywide, and Brooklyn is disproportionately exposed to them.

The foreclosure hotspot for the quarter was zip code 11234 — covering sections of Georgetown, Bergen Beach, Mill Basin, Marine Park, and East Flatbush — which produced 8 new cases, or 13% of Brooklyn’s entire quarterly caseload.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the coin The Bronx saw filings jump 24% to a post-pandemic high. Staten Island more than doubled. Queens held steady while still accounting for the largest share of cases.

Read original at New York Post

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