An Economic Letter from the Federal Reserve Bank
of San Francisco compares the housing market collapse and recovery since the
housing market began to turn south in 2006 and looks at how quickly defaulting
mortgage holders return to the housing market.
Looking back
through history, generally, over an economic cycle, between 0 and 2 percent of
mortgage holders default. This changed markedly as the housing market
began its downturn in 2006 with the total default rate climbing to 10 percent
of all mortgages and, on top of that, holders of subprime mortgages were
defaulting at rates that exceeded 25 percent. That's right, one in four
subprime borrowers found themselves defaulting on their mortgages! Even
now, over three years into "economic recovery mode", 20 percent of
homeowners find themselves with more mortgage than house, giving them an
increased incentive to default.
Mortgage
holders that default give themselves a bit of a financial break; many times,
the period of time between default and foreclosure means that borrowers can
remain in their homes without paying rent. As well, since the cost of
carrying a mortgage can range upwards from 30 percent of a household's income,
not making monthly mortgage payments can greatly increase a household's ability
to set money aside.
On the
downside, defaulting borrowers often see a big decline in their credit scores
and these declines appear to be long lasting. On top of that, borrowers
who default on mortgages tend to default on other types of credit, impacting
their ability to borrow.
Looking at
loan data between 1999 and the end of 2011, the authors of the research examine
how long it takes for a household to borrow again to buy a home after
defaulting on a mortgage. The decision regarding access to credit is
treated as it was a decision made by lenders, that is, when are banks etcetera
willing to lend to a borrower with a less than stellar credit history?
One of the restrictions on borrowers is the rule that prevents Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac from securitizing loans made to borrowers that have defaulted
or declared bankruptcy until four to seven years have passed unless the lender
is willing to take 100 percent of the risk and keep the mortgage on its own
books.
Here is a
graph summarizing the author's findings:
The blue
line shows the rate of returning to the mortgage market for borrowers that have
terminated their mortgages without foreclosures. These borrowers may have
terminated their mortgages because of a move or because they downsized and
required a smaller mortgage. By the time 50 quarters or 12 years have
gone by, 35 percent of these borrowers have taken out another mortgage.
This compares to just over 10 percent of borrowers that had a history of
mortgage delinquency as shown with the red line.
Here is a
graph showing the rate at which borrowers who have defaulted on their mortgages
in the 2001, 2003 and 2008 downturns returned to the mortgage market after
defaulting:
Notice that
the rate at which defaulting borrowers returned to the mortgage market after
the 2001 and 2003 economic downturns was far faster than after the 2008
downturn. Nearly three years (14 quarters) after the 2008 downturn, only
5 percent of defaulting borrowers had taken out a new mortgage compared to
between 15 and 20 percent in 2001 and 2003. This could reflect one of two
things:
1.) The
demand for housing in 2001 and 2003 was much stronger than it is now and the
post-2001 and 2003 economic recoveries were much stronger than the
"recovery" after the Great Recession.
2.) Credit
supply is tight and banks are leery of loaning to borrowers with low credit
scores. Keep in mind that the mortgage industry was only too willing to
loan to anyone with a pulse in the first half of the decade thus, the advent of
the subprime mortgage.
As shown
here, borrowers with less than stellar credit (i.e. a score of less than or
equal to 650) are much slower to return to the credit market with less than 10
percent returning in 10 years (40 quarters) compared to nearly 40 percent of
their more creditworthy counterparts:
By any standard, ten years is a
long time to remain out of the housing market.
How will all
of this impact the nation's housing market? Since 2007, an estimated 4
million foreclosures have taken place, greatly reducing the short-term demand
for housing. On top of that, this research shows that households that
have undergone the process of foreclosure, are very, very slow to return to the
housing market with only about 10 percent returning in a 10 year period.
This means that, over the long-term, the demand for housing will be
constrained by a lack of incentive for many badly burned buyers to re-enter
America's housing market.
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ReplyDeletesee you in the next bubble, sometime in ~30 years :-)
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