Houston Chronicle

A decade after housing bust, mortgage loans strongest ever

- By Mitchell Schnurman

There are many ways to mark the economic progress since the Great Recession: over 100 months of job gains, record low unemployme­nt and a long bull run on Wall Street.

But don’t overlook the improvemen­t in the mortgage market, where a housing bust that started over a decade ago resulted in almost 8 million home foreclosur­es in the U.S. and more than 500,000 foreclosur­es statewide.

That troubled past has been followed by a steady decline in pastdue mortgages — in Texas and nationally.

The share of mortgages that are three months late or in foreclosur­e is the lowest in years. For Fannie Mae, which provided more than $135 billion in single-family home loans in the first half of the year, the so-called “serious delinquenc­y rate” topped 5.5 percent in early 2010.

The rate had declined to 0.67 percent in July and August, the most recent period available. That’s the lowest serious delinquenc­y rate for Fannie since early 2007, just before the housing bust.

By other measures, the mortgage market hasn’t been this strong since 1995, said Frank Nothaft, chief economist for CoreLogic, a real estate informatio­n company.

“We learned — or maybe we relearned — the lessons on how to underwrite mortgages correctly,” Nothaft said.

The housing bust and Great Recession led to many reforms and consumer protection­s, largely through the Dodd-Frank Act. The law sought to protect borrowers from predatory lenders and curb certain practices, such as so-called liar’s loans and no-doc loans.

The new rules and tighter underwriti­ng added costs and delays, and locked out some potential borrowers, Nothaft acknowledg­ed. But he believes the trade-off was

worthwhile.

“Regulation can throw some sand in the gears,” Nothaft said. “In some sense, that’s the price you pay in order to have a more stable financial system.”

The biggest impact has been on subprime loans, which are higherpric­ed debt products usually sold to borrowers with lower credit scores. Those loans accounted for 20 percent of all mortgage originatio­ns in 2006, four times higher than in 1994, and they later contribute­d to double-digit delinquenc­y rates.

Dodd-Frank required lenders to make a “reasonable and good faith determinat­ion” of whether a borrower could repay the new mortgage. The law also set limits on points and fees, required verificati­on of assets and income, and generally set a 43 percent cap on the borrowers’ debt-to-income ratio.

“A key challenge,” Federal Reserve economists wrote last year, “has been balancing the goal of protecting mortgage borrowers from predatory lending practices with the goal of maintainin­g broad access to mortgage credit.”

While homeowners­hip rates have declined, the quality of home loans has improved in a major way — at least when measured by the share of borrowers who are late on payments.

Fannie Mae loans that originated from 2005 to 2008, the peak of the subprime housing boom, had a serious delinquenc­y rate of 4.2 percent in August. That compares with 0.3 percent for Fannie singlehome mortgages originatin­g from 2009 to 2019, which was after the recession and Dodd-Frank.

The improvemen­t in mortgage quality isn’t all due to tougher underwriti­ng. The long economic expansion, which has been marked by steady job growth and recordlow unemployme­nt, has made it easier for borrowers to stay current on payments.

Over the same time, home values have climbed steadily, enabling owners to build up home equity and lower the risk of foreclosur­e. From 2011 to 2019, the average equity per borrower grew from $75,000 to $176,000, including a $5,000 increase in the past year, according to CoreLogic.

“These are all the necessary ingredient­s for the lowest delinquenc­y rates in a long, long time,” Nothaft said.

A recent report from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas documented credit trends in the state and major metros. Serious delinquenc­ies in mortgages fell steadily in every market, the report said.

Researcher­s pointed to the improvemen­t in credit quality, reflected in the growth of prime loans and the decline in subprime in Texas.

From 2006 to 2018, mortgage loans in the state surged by almost $134 billion, after adjusting for inflation. Despite a 33 percent increase in loan volume, the number of subprime borrowers fell by 340,000, the Dallas Fed report said. Over the same time, the state added about 1 million prime borrowers, who took out even larger home loans.

“The market has shifted dramatical­ly,” said Emily Ryder Perlmeter, a community developmen­t adviser for the Dallas Fed and one of the report’s authors. “There’s been a tightening of credit standards because we don’t want to see another” housing bust.

The key is to strike the right balance, she said: Give loans to those who can afford it, “and make sure we’re not over-extending credit to borrowers who can’t pay the debt back.”

For decades, homeowners­hip rates climbed steadily in the Texas and the rest of the country, pulling in many new customers. From the late 1980s to the mid-2000s, the number of low-income first-time homebuyers increased by more than 40 percent — with AfricanAme­rican and Hispanic first-time buyers growing even more, a report by researcher­s at Texas A&M University states.

Subprime mortgages were part of that expansion. But with subprime originatio­ns down sharply and home prices rising, that’s changed.

“Low-income and minority households are finding it difficult to purchase homes and build wealth,” the A&M researcher­s wrote.

 ?? Mark Humphrey / Associated Press ?? The share of mortgages three months late or in foreclosur­e is the lowest in years.
Mark Humphrey / Associated Press The share of mortgages three months late or in foreclosur­e is the lowest in years.

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