Mar 6 2008

Delinquency Rate For Mortgage Loans Hits 23-Year High

Mortgage Delinquency

The delinquency rate for mortgage loans on one-to-four-unit residential properties stood at 5.82 percent of all loans outstanding in the fourth quarter of 2007 on a seasonally adjusted (SA) basis, up 23 basis points from the third quarter of 2007, and up 87 basis points from one year ago, according to MBA’s National Delinquency Survey. The delinquency rate does not include loans in the process of foreclosure. The percentage of loans in the foreclosure process was 2.04 percent of all loans outstanding at the end of the fourth quarter, an increase of 35 basis points from the third quarter of 2007 and 85 basis points from one year ago.The rate of loans entering the foreclosure process was 0.83 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis, five basis points higher than the previous quarter and up 29 basis points from one year ago.

The total delinquency rate is the highest in the MBA survey since 1985. The rate of foreclosure starts and the percent of loans in the process of foreclosure are at the highest levels ever.

The increase in foreclosure starts was due to increases for both prime and subprime loans. From the previous quarter, prime fixed rate loan foreclosure starts remained unchanged at 0.22 percent, but prime ARM foreclosure starts increased four basis points to 1.06 percent. Subprime fixed foreclosure starts increased 14 basis points to 1.52 percent and subprime ARM foreclosure starts increased 57 basis points to 5.29 percent. FHA foreclosure starts decreased 4 basis points to 0.91 percent and VA foreclosure starts remained unchanged at 0.39.

Since the fourth quarter of 2006, the foreclosure start rate for prime ARMs increased from 0.41 percent to 1.06 percent and the rate for subprime ARMs increased from 2.70 percent to 5.29 percent. The foreclosure start rate for prime fixed loans increased from 0.16 percent to 0.22 percent and the rate for subprime fixed loans increased from 1.09 percent to 1.52 percent.

As can be seen in the chart below, while subprime ARMs represent 7 percent of the loans outstanding, they represent 42 percent of the foreclosures started during the fourth quarter. Prime ARMs represent 15 percent of the loans outstanding, but 20 percent of the foreclosures started.

Percent of Loans

Percent of Foreclosures Started

 

 

 

Prime Fixed

65%

18%

Prime ARM

15%

20%

Subprime Fixed

6%

12%

Subprime ARM

7%

42%

FHA

7%

8%

California and Florida continue to represent a disproportionate share of the foreclosure starts in the country. Those two states represent 21 percent of all loans outstanding, but accounted for 30 percent of foreclosure starts in the US. More importantly, they accounted for 39 percent of all prime ARMs outstanding, but 47 percent of prime ARM foreclosure starts. Similarly, they represented 29 percent of all subprime ARMs, but 36 percent of subprime ARM foreclosure starts. The rate of foreclosure starts in Florida more than tripled between the fourth quarter of 2006 and the fourth quarter of 2007, while the rate in California more than doubled. While Michigan, Ohio and Indiana continue to have the highest percentages of loans in foreclosure, and are among the states with the highest rates of new foreclosures, those states experienced comparatively little increase over the last year or last quarter in their rates of new foreclosures started.

“Declining home prices are clearly the driving factor behind foreclosures, but the reasons and magnitude of the declines differ from state to state,” said Doug Duncan, MBA’s Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of Research and Business Development. “In states like Ohio and Michigan, declines in the demand for homes due to job losses and out-migration have left those looking to sell the homes with fewer potential buyers, particularly with the much tighter credit restrictions borrowers now face. In states like California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, overbuilding of new homes created a surplus that will take some time to work through.

“Of significance, however, is that the rate reset issue on adjustable rate mortgages is becoming less of an issue. The 6-month LIBOR rate, the index rate used for many subprime ARMs, has come down around 2.5 percentage points since last September, greatly reducing the payment shock on many ARM resets.”

Source: MBA National Delinquency Survey

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