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UnavailableHousing Market: Delinquent Homeowners Have an Ace Up Their Sleeves, This Time
Currently unavailable

Housing Market: Delinquent Homeowners Have an Ace Up Their Sleeves, This Time

FromReal Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast


Currently unavailable

Housing Market: Delinquent Homeowners Have an Ace Up Their Sleeves, This Time

FromReal Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast

ratings:
Length:
6 minutes
Released:
Apr 26, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

The prediction that millions of homeowners would face foreclosure due to job losses from COVID 19 shutdowns does not seem to be materializing. There are some who say that delinquent borrowers have a way to avoid that fate this time around. Unlike the Great Recession, they have a lot more equity in their homes which they won’t want to lose.When the housing market crashed in 2008, it was the result of easy lending. Home loans were easy to get, often with no down payment or verification of income. In some cases, buyers would get money back for buying a home, or qualify with a teaser rate, not the real rate. That, of course, drove prices up and created a housing bubble. The bubble burst when those loans eventually came due and people couldn't afford the payment. Seems like an obvious problem, doesn't it?As more and more loans reset, more people went into foreclosure, flooding the market with distressed inventory far below market value. Anyone who wanted to sell their home at market value had to compete against bank owned properties that were much cheaper. Thus, the air came out of the bubble. As home values dropped nationwide, even those who could afford to own their home couldn't sell it for what it was worth if they needed to. They owed more than what the property was worth, which they called being "underwater" or upside down on their mortgage. With no home equity in the deal, it made sense to walk away, which many people did. They had nothing to lose except their good credit, and some didn't even have that.That is unlikely to happen this time around, at least to that extent, for one simple reason: Homeowners have much greater equity in their homes. And many of those homeowners also have great credit. According to Realtor.com, only 3% of homeowners are underwater, owing more than the home is worth. During the Great Recession, about 30% of homes were underwater or close to it.So even if homeowners have not recovered financially from the pandemic, they have a way to get out of mortgage debt that’s a lot easier than foreclosure -- by selling their homes to pay off their loans. Many will also see a hefty profit.And it won’t be difficult to sell those homes because of the inventory crunch. Vice President of the Mortgage Bankers Association, Marina Walsh, told Realtor.com: “There’s just not enough housing out there for the demand, which is a big, big change from the Great Recession.”That doesn’t mean that at-risk homeowners don’t face a tough road ahead, especially those in less desirable markets. Realtor.com mentions places in the Rust Belt or hurricane-prone communities in Louisiana, for example.Currently, the federal foreclosure moratorium for government-backed loans is June 30th. Even without forbearance, many homeowners have protection until then. For those in forbearance programs, they are protected for as long as 18 months.According to Black Knight, 4.4% of borrowers were in forbearance as of April 13th. That number has been decreasing steadily because the economy has been improving and people are getting jobs. But that’s still a high number of people in forbearance, putting all those homeowners at risk.In addition to that, 5% of borrowers are either seriously delinquent or have already entered the foreclosure process. That means they haven’t paid their mortgage for at least three months. And that number is higher than it was during the last foreclosure crisis, according to a report from the Urban institute.Urban Institute researcher, Jung Hyun Choi, says that even with those high numbers, she doesn’t think we’ll see another foreclosure crisis because of high home values. She says: “They have the option to sell the properties and move to a more affordable unit. Or in the worst-case scenario, they’ll have to switch to rental housing.”What she’s saying is that we probably won’t see a foreclosure crisis, but if all those homeowners sell their homes and can’t buy smaller, less expensive ones, they will become renters.ATTOM Data Sol
Released:
Apr 26, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Don’t get caught off guard by market crashes that can take all your money down with them. And don’t miss out on markets where you can build wealth practically overnight. Real Estate News for Investors with Kathy Fettke is the premiere source for savvy real estate investors who want the edge. Stay up-to-date on new laws, regulations, and economic events that affect real estate. Topics include: market trends, economic analysis that affects housing prices, updates on the best rental markets for investing in single-family rentals or multi-unit rentals, turn-key housing standards, the fate of the highly revered 1031 exchange and other tax law affecting investors, self-directed IRA investing and 401k changes, where rents and property values are rising or falling, flipping risks, new Dodd-Frank rules regarding private lending and financing standards, areas with job losses vs job growth, areas that are overbuilt or over-supplied versus areas with low supply and high demand, and how to avoid real estate scams. We'll bring you the latest reports from organizations like the National Association of Realtors, Realty Trac, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Zillow, Trulia, Redfin, Rent Range, Property Radar, the Norris Group, Peter Schiff, Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad, Suse Orman, Bigger Pockets, Dave Ramsey and more. And we'll help you interpret the data in terms that make sense for your real estate goals, and portfolio. Grow and protect your wealth by staying on the forefront of economic data analysis, expert opinions, innovative investing strategies and profitable investment opportunities. We'll share all the top real estate news stories and the best trade secrets investors should know, so you can stay ahead of the curve and make fully informed real estate decisions. Host Kathy Fettke is Co-CEO of the Real Wealth Network, author of Retire Rich with Rentals and host of the Real Wealth Show on iTunes. She brings decades of media and real estate investing experience, offers her own viewpoints on particular topics, and taps into her network of real estate experts for real world news updates created just for investors like you. Get the real news on real estate on The Real Estate News For Investors Show!