http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2010/06/personal-bankruptcy-filin...The 136,142 consumer bankruptcies filed in May represented a 9 percent
increase nationwide over the 124,838 filings recorded in May 2009,
according to the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI), relying on data
from the National Bankruptcy Research Center (NBKRC). NBKRC’s data also
showed that the May consumer filings represented a 6 percent decrease
from the 144,490 consumer filings recorded in April 2010. ...
“While
consumer filings dipped slightly from last month, housing debt and
other financial burdens weighing on consumers are still a cause for
concern,” said ABI Executive Director Samuel J. Gerdano. “Consumer
filings this year remain on track to top 1.6 million filings.”
This graph shows the non-business bankruptcy filings by quarter using monthly data from the ABI and previous quarterly data from
USCourts.gov.
Based
on the comment from Gerdano, it appears the ABI has increased their
forecast to over 1.6 million filings this year from their earlier
forecast of just over 1.5 million filings this year.
Excluding
2005, when the so-called "Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer
Protection Act of 2005" was enacted (really a pro-lender act), the
record was in 2003 when 1.62 million personal bankruptcies were filed.
This year will be close to that level.
I wonder how many of
these bankruptcy filings are by homeowners who lost their homes in
foreclosure and are now trying to extinguish any related recourse debt
(1st or 2nd)?