Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

US home equity soared $1.5 trln last year, with western states seeing biggest gains

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Between December 2019 and December 2020, U.S. homeowners with a mortgage saw the equity in their homes rise by 16.2%. For the 62% of homeowners with a mortgage, that increase totalled $1.5 trillion.

Looked at slightly differentl­y, the number of U.S. homes with underwater mortgages (i.e., the value of the home is lower than the amount of the mortgage) fell by 21% last year. That means 410,000 mortgages that were underwater have now regained positive equity value. About 1.5 million homes (3.6% of all U.S. mortgaged properties) are still underwater.

According to property analytics firm CoreLogic, home equity grew by an average of about $26,300 nationally last year. These are the 10 states with the largest gains: 1. California: Up $55,000

2. Idaho: Up $48,000

3. Washington: Up $47,000

4. Montana: Up $40,000

5. Hawaii: Up $39,000

6. Utah: Up $39,000

7. Rhode Island: Up $39,000

8. Massachuse­tts: Up $38,000

9. New Hampshire: Up $36,000

10. Arizona: Up $36,000

The three states posting the smallest gains were Illinois ($6,000), North Dakota ($8,000) and Iowa ($9,000).

Homeowners took advantage of equity gains last year by cashing out nearly $153 billion in home equity, according to Freddie Mac data released last week.

Some 38% of all refinanced mortgages in the fourth quarter of 2020 were cash-out transactio­ns that increased the homeowner’s loan balance by at least 5%. The record high for cash-out borrowers is 89%, set in the third quarter of 2006.

In the fourth quarter, an estimated $48 billion in net home equity was cashed out, up from $34.3 billion a year earlier and substantia­lly less than the peak cash-out refinance volume of $108.1 billion during the second quarter of 2006.

Freddie Mac commented: “With mortgage rates reaching multiple record lows in 2020, refinance borrowers locked in thousands of dollars in savings on average by refinancin­g, sometimes more than once. Some homeowners also took advantage of the opportunit­y to tap equity through cash-out refinancin­g, while others sped up the rate at which they paid down their principal by refinancin­g into a shorter term.

With mortgage rates still near a record low, we forecast that refinance volume will remain strong in 2021. Though there are still many homeowners who could benefit from refinancin­g their properties, without an unexpected drop in mortgage rates, the volume of refinances will likely contract this year relative to the near-record setting levels we saw last year.” (24/7 Wall St.com)

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