The June
Housing Scorecard, a joint publication of the U.S. Departments of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) and Treasury, was released this afternoon and once
again makes the statement that "Market data show important progress in
homeowner equity and home sales, but continued fragility overall."
Home equity rose $457.1 billion in
the first quarter of 2012, a 7.4 percent increase from the previous quarter and
its highest level since the second quarter of 2010. Sales of previously owned
homes posted sharp gains in May of 9.6 percent compared with a year ago and new
home sales in May recorded their highest level in more than 2 years. However,
foreclosure starts and completions turned up in May, underscoring continued
fragility in the housing market.

The Housing Scorecard is essentially a
summary of data on housing and housing finance released by public and private
sources over the previous month and/or quarter.
Most of the data such as new and existing home sales, permits and starts,
mortgage originations, and various house price evaluations have been previously
covered by MND.
The Scorecard incorporates by
reference the monthly report of the Making Home Affordable Program (HAMP), the
Obama Administration's effort to mitigate foreclosures through loan
modification. HAMP, which began in April
2009, has been joined by related programs such as the Second Lien Modification
Program (2MP), Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA), the Unemployment
Program (UP) and the Principal Reduction Alternative (PRA), all of which are
covered in the HAMP report.
During the month of May there were
17,590 new permanent modifications started through the HAMP program. This brings the total number of permanent
modifications to 1,026,279. As of the
end of May there were 810,443 permanent modifications still in force. Of these active modifications, 453,666 are
for loans belonging to or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (the GSEs),
288,252 are private label mortgages, and 140,788 are portfolio loans.
HAMP administrators say that
homeowners entering HAMP demonstrate a high likelihood of long-term success
with the program. Eighty-six percent of homeowners
who have entered the program in the last 23 months (following a major revamp of
the program's intake and eligibility processes) have received a permanent
modification after an average trial period of 3.5 months. About 215,800 permanent modifications have
been cancelled, most for delinquency although about 4,400 loans were paid off.
Distressed borrowers continue to
enter the program. There were 18,322 new
trial modifications started in May for a cumulative total of 1.87 million; 72,263
borrowers remain in the trial portion of the program.
The HAFA Program which provides
transition alternatives to foreclosure through short sales or deeds-in-lieu
completed 5,968 transactions during May for a total of 50,717 since the program
began. All but a handful of the
transactions were short sales where the mortgage holder agrees to take less
than the amount owed to facilitate sale of the property to a third party. There are 11,389 HAFA agreements started but not
yet completed.
UP provides a minimum 12 months of temporary
mortgage principal forbearance to unemployed borrowers while they are looking
for a new job. This relatively new
program has provided forbearance with partial payment to 20,134 borrowers and
with no payment to 3,106.
The 2MP program provides
modifications and extinguishments on second liens where there has been a HAMP
modification on the first lien. Modifications
have begun on 83,577 second liens out of a total of 118,928 found to be
eligible so far. The liens have been
fully extinguished in 18,279 cases and modified in 62,010 others. Modifications of second liens resulted in a
median payment reduction of $159 per month.

The secondary HAMP program that has
elicited the most attention is the Principal Reduction Activity or PRA. While HUD has encouraged principal reductions
as a modification tool and the Treasury department has offered cash incentives
to servicers for doing them, the Federal Housing Finance Agency has refused to
allow principal reduction for GSE loans, insisting forbearance be used instead.
Despite this, there have been 85,595 HAMP
modifications initiated using the PRA program. Of these, 63,342 have been converted to
permanent status and 57,786 permanent modifications remain active while 15,591
PRAs are still in a trial period. The
median principal reduction for those permanent modifications that are still
active was $69,000 and median principal reduction was 31.4 percent. An additional
34,360 modifications have been started under HAMP using programs other than
PRA.
HUD Acting Assistant Secretary Erika
Poethig said, "We're making important progress in providing relief to
homeowners under the Obama Administration's programs. With almost half a
million families taking advantage of our enhanced Home Affordable Refinance
Program - standing to save on average $2,500 per year - and more than 51,000
applications for the FHA Streamline Refinance Program in the first ten days
alone, it's clear that the Administration's efforts continue to
provide significant positive benefits."