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MBA: Delinquency Rate Rises in First Quarter. Foreclosures Running At Record Pace
The Mortgage Bankers Association today released the First
Quarter 2010 National Delinquency Survey (NDS) results.
Seasonally
adjusted mortgage delinquency rates increased again during the first quarter of
2010, but a decrease in non-seasonally adjusted data is giving the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reason
for a little cautious optimism.
The
survey's seasonally adjusted figures showed a 59 basis point increase in total delinquencies from the fourth quarter of 2009 to a rate of 10.06 percent of all loans
outstanding. This represents an increase of 94
basis points from one year ago. However, non-seasonally adjusted delinquencies decreased 106 basis points from 10.44 percent at the end of 2009 to 9.38 percent at the end of March.
The
delinquency rate includes loans that are at least one payment behind but
does not include loans in the process of foreclosure. Loans in foreclosure represented 4.63 percent
of all loans, an increase of five basis points from the fourth quarter of 2009
and 78 basis points higher than one year earlier. This is a record high foreclosure rate. In addition, foreclosure actions were started
on 1.23 percent of loans compared to 1.20 percent last quarter, however, this
metric was down from 1.37 percent in the first quarter of 2009.
Taken
together, loans in foreclosure and loans at least one payment late make up
14.01 percent of all loans compared to 15.02 percent last quarter.
Jay Brinkmann, Chief
Economist for MBA says, "The issue this quarter is that the
seasonally adjusted delinquency rates went up while the unadjusted rates went
down. Delinquency rates traditionally peak in the fourth quarter and fall in
the first quarter and we saw that first quarter drop in the data. The
question is whether the drop represents anything more than a normal seasonal
decline or a more fundamental improvement. Most importantly, the normal
seasonal drop is coming right at the point where we believe delinquencies could
potentially be declining and the problem for the statistical models is
determining which is which."
"The seasonal models say it
is not a fundamental improvement and that the seasonal drop should have been
larger to represent a true improvement, hence the increase in the seasonally
adjusted numbers. Yet there is reason to believe the seasonally adjusted
numbers could be too high. Simply put, fundamental market factors may be
having a greater influence on the delinquency rates than is normally the case,
but mathematical models have difficulty discerning the difference over a short
period of time.
"Since discerning what
represents a fundamental improvement versus a simply seasonal improvement is
probably more of an art than a mathematical science at this point, the
seasonally adjusted numbers should be viewed with a degree of caution."
Loans
that were 30+ days delinquent increased from 3.31 percent to 3.45 percent; those
60+ days late increased from 1.54 percent to 1.59 percent, and seriously
delinquent loans, those 90+ days in arrears, increased from 4.62 percent to
5.02 percent.
"Overall, we see a
continuation of the pattern of declines in short-term delinquency rates, at
least on a non-seasonally adjusted basis," Brinkmann said. "The continued historically high share
of delinquencies that are 90 days or more past due, and a leveling off in the
pace of foreclosures.
"The economy has begun to
generate jobs and layoffs have declined, although new claims for unemployment
insurance remained higher in the first quarter than we expected. The percent
of loans behind one payment had been declining as first-time claims for
unemployment began falling in March 2009. Those new claims stopped
falling during the first quarter of this year, which likely halted the decline
in the underlying 30-day delinquency rate. If mortgage delinquencies are
not yet clearly improving, it also appears they are not getting worse. However,
a bad situation that is not getting worse is still bad.
Prime
loans overall had a delinquency rate of 7.32 percent (seasonally adjusted) compared
to 6.73 percent in the fourth quarter, however Prime ARMs had a rate nearly
twice that of Prime fixed-rate loans; 13.52 percent compared to 6.17
percent. These rates were up 142 basis
points and 57 basis points respectively from their fourth quarter levels. 27.21
percent of all subprime loans are in some stage of delinquency, up from 25.26
percent. Subprime FRM loans increased from 23.83 percent to 25.69 percent and
subprime ARMs jumped from 26.69 percent to 29.09 percent. Delinquencies of FHA
loans decreased slightly, from 13.57 percent in the fourth quarter to 13.15
percent while VA loan delinquencies increased from 7.41 percent to 7.96 percent. All types of loans showed declines on a
non-seasonally adjusted basis.
Compared
on a year-over-year basis, the non-seasonally adjusted delinquency rate increased 151 basis points
for prime fixed loans, 172 basis points for prime ARM loans, 343 basis points
for subprime fixed loans, and 244 basis points for subprime ARM loans from the
first quarter of 2009. The delinquency rate was 48 basis points lower for FHA
loans and 12 basis points for VA loans relative to the same quarter a year ago.
The states with the highest
overall delinquency rates were Nevada (14.03 percent), Mississippi (12.70
percent), and Georgia (12.10 percent).
The highest inventory of foreclosures are in Florida (13.97 percent,)
Nevada (10.40 percent,) and New Jersey (6.17 percent); and the highest rates of
foreclosure were in Nevada (3.23 percent,) Florida (2.41 percent,) and Arizona
(2.24 percent.) Brinkmann noted that Florida,
Arizona, Nevada, and California have dominated the national picture for several
years and that, while California is improving, Florida is getting worse. Washington, Maryland, Oregon, and Georgia
showed the greatest overall increases in foreclosure starts compared to Q4
2009.
The foreclosure starts rate
increased for all loan types with the exception of subprime loans. The
foreclosure starts rate increased six basis points for prime fixed loans to
0.69 percent, 17 basis points for prime ARM loans to 2.29 percent, 18 basis
points for FHA loans to 1.46 percent, and eight basis points for VA loans to
0.89 percent. For subprime fixed loans, the rate decreased nine basis points to
2.64 percent and for subprime ARM loans the rate decreased 39 basis points to
4.32 percent.
The delinquency survey
covers about 85 percent of the first-lien mortgages outstanding in the
U.S. During the first quarter the survey
covered 44.4 million first mortgages on one-to-four family properties, a number
that has decreased about 620,000 loans since the first quarter of 2009 and
63,000 loans since the fourth quarter.
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MBA: Delinquency Rate Rises in First Quarter. Foreclosures Running At Record Pace
The Mortgage Bankers Association today released the First
Quarter 2010 National Delinquency Survey (NDS) results.
Seasonally
adjusted mortgage delinquency rates increased again during the first quarter of
2010, but a decrease in non-seasonally adjusted data is giving the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reason
for a little cautious optimism.
The
survey's seasonally adjusted figures showed a 59 basis point increase in total delinquencies from the fourth quarter of 2009 to a rate of 10.06 percent of all loans
outstanding. This represents an increase of 94
basis points from one year ago. However, non-seasonally adjusted delinquencies decreased 106 basis points from 10.44 percent at the end of 2009 to 9.38 percent at the end of March.
The
delinquency rate includes loans that are at least one payment behind but
does not include loans in the process of foreclosure. Loans in foreclosure represented 4.63 percent
of all loans, an increase of five basis points from the fourth quarter of 2009
and 78 basis points higher than one year earlier. This is a record high foreclosure rate. In addition, foreclosure actions were started
on 1.23 percent of loans compared to 1.20 percent last quarter, however, this
metric was down from 1.37 percent in the first quarter of 2009.
Taken
together, loans in foreclosure and loans at least one payment late make up
14.01 percent of all loans compared to 15.02 percent last quarter.
Jay Brinkmann, Chief
Economist for MBA says, "The issue this quarter is that the
seasonally adjusted delinquency rates went up while the unadjusted rates went
down. Delinquency rates traditionally peak in the fourth quarter and fall in
the first quarter and we saw that first quarter drop in the data. The
question is whether the drop represents anything more than a normal seasonal
decline or a more fundamental improvement. Most importantly, the normal
seasonal drop is coming right at the point where we believe delinquencies could
potentially be declining and the problem for the statistical models is
determining which is which."
"The seasonal models say it
is not a fundamental improvement and that the seasonal drop should have been
larger to represent a true improvement, hence the increase in the seasonally
adjusted numbers. Yet there is reason to believe the seasonally adjusted
numbers could be too high. Simply put, fundamental market factors may be
having a greater influence on the delinquency rates than is normally the case,
but mathematical models have difficulty discerning the difference over a short
period of time.
"Since discerning what
represents a fundamental improvement versus a simply seasonal improvement is
probably more of an art than a mathematical science at this point, the
seasonally adjusted numbers should be viewed with a degree of caution."
Loans
that were 30+ days delinquent increased from 3.31 percent to 3.45 percent; those
60+ days late increased from 1.54 percent to 1.59 percent, and seriously
delinquent loans, those 90+ days in arrears, increased from 4.62 percent to
5.02 percent.
"Overall, we see a
continuation of the pattern of declines in short-term delinquency rates, at
least on a non-seasonally adjusted basis," Brinkmann said. "The continued historically high share
of delinquencies that are 90 days or more past due, and a leveling off in the
pace of foreclosures.
"The economy has begun to
generate jobs and layoffs have declined, although new claims for unemployment
insurance remained higher in the first quarter than we expected. The percent
of loans behind one payment had been declining as first-time claims for
unemployment began falling in March 2009. Those new claims stopped
falling during the first quarter of this year, which likely halted the decline
in the underlying 30-day delinquency rate. If mortgage delinquencies are
not yet clearly improving, it also appears they are not getting worse. However,
a bad situation that is not getting worse is still bad.
Prime
loans overall had a delinquency rate of 7.32 percent (seasonally adjusted) compared
to 6.73 percent in the fourth quarter, however Prime ARMs had a rate nearly
twice that of Prime fixed-rate loans; 13.52 percent compared to 6.17
percent. These rates were up 142 basis
points and 57 basis points respectively from their fourth quarter levels. 27.21
percent of all subprime loans are in some stage of delinquency, up from 25.26
percent. Subprime FRM loans increased from 23.83 percent to 25.69 percent and
subprime ARMs jumped from 26.69 percent to 29.09 percent. Delinquencies of FHA
loans decreased slightly, from 13.57 percent in the fourth quarter to 13.15
percent while VA loan delinquencies increased from 7.41 percent to 7.96 percent. All types of loans showed declines on a
non-seasonally adjusted basis.
Compared
on a year-over-year basis, the non-seasonally adjusted delinquency rate increased 151 basis points
for prime fixed loans, 172 basis points for prime ARM loans, 343 basis points
for subprime fixed loans, and 244 basis points for subprime ARM loans from the
first quarter of 2009. The delinquency rate was 48 basis points lower for FHA
loans and 12 basis points for VA loans relative to the same quarter a year ago.
The states with the highest
overall delinquency rates were Nevada (14.03 percent), Mississippi (12.70
percent), and Georgia (12.10 percent).
The highest inventory of foreclosures are in Florida (13.97 percent,)
Nevada (10.40 percent,) and New Jersey (6.17 percent); and the highest rates of
foreclosure were in Nevada (3.23 percent,) Florida (2.41 percent,) and Arizona
(2.24 percent.) Brinkmann noted that Florida,
Arizona, Nevada, and California have dominated the national picture for several
years and that, while California is improving, Florida is getting worse. Washington, Maryland, Oregon, and Georgia
showed the greatest overall increases in foreclosure starts compared to Q4
2009.
The foreclosure starts rate
increased for all loan types with the exception of subprime loans. The
foreclosure starts rate increased six basis points for prime fixed loans to
0.69 percent, 17 basis points for prime ARM loans to 2.29 percent, 18 basis
points for FHA loans to 1.46 percent, and eight basis points for VA loans to
0.89 percent. For subprime fixed loans, the rate decreased nine basis points to
2.64 percent and for subprime ARM loans the rate decreased 39 basis points to
4.32 percent.
The delinquency survey
covers about 85 percent of the first-lien mortgages outstanding in the
U.S. During the first quarter the survey
covered 44.4 million first mortgages on one-to-four family properties, a number
that has decreased about 620,000 loans since the first quarter of 2009 and
63,000 loans since the fourth quarter.
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