News and Events
February 12, 2010
Good Real Estate News: Home Equity is Rising Again
Good real estate news: Home equity is rising again
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By Kenneth R. Harney, The Washington
Post
Saturday, February 13, 2010
With all the bad news about underwater homeowners and strategic walkaways, you might think that American homeowners' equity holdings are in the tank. But the least-publicized recent statistic on real estate is that, despite these scary reports, home equity is again on the rise.
Is that some piece of rosy
propaganda put out by housing lobbyists to stimulate more home buying? Not
unless you consider Federal Reserve economists to be shills for the real estate
industry. The Fed conducts massive research into mortgage balances and
home-value changes in hundreds of local markets around the country and reports
its findings quarterly.
According to the Fed's most recent
"flow of funds" survey, homeowners' net equity grew by nearly $1
trillion from the recession's nadir in the first quarter of 2009 through the
third quarter. From June 30 to Sept. 30, net equity rose by $418 billion.
That's not all that impressive
compared with the quarterly increases during the hyperinflationary housing boom
years, but it could signal something important: After three years of
unprecedented shrinkage in home equity -- and three years of rapid expansions
in the number of underwater borrowers with negative equity -- there are signs
that the down cycle may be shifting.
Last week, online real estate
valuation researcher Zillow.com released its latest quarterly numbers on
negative equity in major markets. The findings were sobering, but the study
also offered some hints of modest improvements for housing. The overall
negative-equity rate among American homeowners remained flat in the fourth
quarter, at 21.4 percent. But like the Fed's numbers, that ratio represented a
slight decrease from the first two quarters of last year, when 22 percent and
23 percent of owners owed more on their mortgages than the estimated market
value of their real estate.
Zillow's study found that in dozens
of housing markets -- including the District, Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Detroit, Miami, San Jose, Seattle and Tampa-St. Petersburg -- the percentage of
homeowners with negative equity appears to be on the decline. In the Washington
area, 27.5 percent of homeowners had negative equity in the fourth quarter.
That was down from 29.6 percent in the third quarter and 33.5 percent in the
second.
Some of the largest declines
occurred in cities hardest hit by the recession and the housing bust: Ann
Arbor, Mich. (a decrease of 9 percentage points); Riverside, Calif. (-5.7); and
Phoenix (-2). Florida markets that have struggled with major price devaluations
also saw significant improvement in negative-equity rate in the fourth quarter,
such as Fort Myers (-5.4), Miami (-5.1), Naples (-4.5) and Tampa-St. Petersburg
(-1.4).
On the other hand, Zillow's study
found historically high rates of negative equity continuing to prevail in key
cities. In Las Vegas, for example, 81.3 percent of homeowners -- 256,000
households -- were underwater on their mortgages in the fourth quarter. This number
is down from 82.5 percent in early 2009, but that's no consolation to the
affected borrowers.
In Phoenix, 61.5 percent of
borrowers were in negative territory. That's two percentage points lower than
in the previous quarter but still scarily high.
Which major markets have the lowest
underwater rates? As you might guess, they tend to be areas where the equity
boom never quite boomed and where toxic mortgages and fog-the-mirror
underwriting by lenders were never the rage: Tulsa, Okla. (4.2 percent); Harrisburg,
Pa. (5.7 percent); Binghamton, N.Y. (5.6 percent); and Peoria, Ill. (8
percent).
Negative-equity rates are crucial
barometers of local housing markets' propensity to experience high rates of
mortgage default, foreclosure and strategic walkaways. Communities with
single-digit negative-equity rates tend to have fewer walkaways and
foreclosures.
The reverse is the case in areas
where large numbers of underwater homeowners see no economic rationale for
continuing to send in their monthly mortgage payments on properties worth tens
of thousands, even hundreds of thousands, of dollars less than the principal
balance owed to the bank. They feel they are throwing away money on real estate
that might take a decade or more to be worth what they paid for it during the
boom.
Mortgage market analyst Laurie
Goodman, senior managing director of Amherst Securities, recently warned
lenders to be especially vigilant about borrowers in markets where
negative-equity ratios are high because, in her view, they are prime candidates
to walk away from their loans. Once underwater borrowers miss a payment on
their mortgage, Goodman said, there is a 75 to 80 percent probability they will
chuck the whole deal.
Borrowers with even minimal positive equity, on the other hand, are far less likely to do the same.
Follow the link below to see the story as it was originally published.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/11/AR2010021105251.html