Sunday, Dec 22, 2024

US Homeowners Hold Near-Record Equity Even After Price Declines

The share of US homes that are equity-rich dropped slightly in the first quarter of this year, but remained close to historic highs, according to new data from ATTOM.

Some 47.2% of mortgaged homes were equity-rich — meaning that the borrower holds at least half the equity — in the January-March period, down from 48% the previous quarter, a report published Thursday by the property data provider shows.

The drop comes as home prices decline across much of the country, after a decade-long boom that gathered pace during the initial years of the pandemic. While housing markets have showed some signs of stabilizing recently, mortgage borrowing costs that have doubled since the start of last year will likely continue to curb demand and prices.

“Homeowners across the US continue to sit in a far better position than they were just a few years ago,” said Rob Barber, ATTOM’s chief executive officer. Even so, “the recent downturn in the housing market is chipping away at the bounty they reaped from a decade of price surges.”

Higher levels of equity help to shield homeowners from foreclosure risks, and could also protect the economy from the impact of a more severe housing downturn like the one that led to the 2008 crash. The ATTOM report shows that some 238,000 homeowners faced possible foreclosure in the first quarter of 2023, less than 0.5% of outstanding mortgages — and even among that at-risk group, more than 90% had at least some equity built up in their homes.

The biggest drops in equity positions last quarter came in the West. On a state level, the largest decline in the share of equity-rich homes came in Arizona, followed by Nevada and Idaho. The highest share of homes classified as “seriously underwater” — meaning the borrower owes at least 25% more than the property’s market value — was in Baton Rouge, Louisiana at 10.6%, followed by New Orleans.

Out of the five states where the equity-rich share of homes increased last quarter, four are in the South — a region that’s been one of the big winners from Covid-era population shifts. In South Carolina, for example, the figure rose to 49.7%, from 48.9% at the end of 2022. Florida ranks second in the nation with a rate of 61%, after overtaking California last year. Before the pandemic, California was some 15 percentage points ahead of the Sunshine State.

All of the 50 zip codes with the highest share of equity-rich homes were in California, Florida (four of them in Collier County), Massachusetts, New York and Texas. Top of the list was a district in Edgartown, Massachusetts, a wealthy enclave on Martha’s Vineyard, where 86.9% of mortgaged properties were equity-rich.

This article was written by Alex Tanzi from Bloomberg and was legally licensed through the Industry Dive Content Marketplace. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].

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Title: US Homeowners Hold Near-Record Equity Even After Price Declines
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Published Date: Tue, 09 May 2023 12:30:58 +0000

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