Houston Chronicle

» Mortgage delinquenc­ies break record.

- By Kathy Orton

Record unemployme­nt caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic led to the largest one-month increase in mortgage delinquenc­ies ever recorded. The number of borrowers who stopped paying their home loans spiked by 1.6 million last month, new data show.

Not even during the Great Recession did delinquenc­ies rise this fast. During that time, it took 18 months before there was a single-month increase as large.

The national delinquenc­y rate soared to 6.45 percent in April, up from 3.06 percent in March and three times the previous singlemont­h record, set in 2008, according to data released this week by Black Knight, a real estate data and analytics company. The 3.6 million borrowers who are now past due is the most since 2015.

The data represents homeowners who didn’t make a mortgage payment in April, including those who are in forbearanc­e plans. It comes from Black Knight’s loan-level database representi­ng a majority of the national mortgage market.

“This is truly uncharted territory,” Andy Walden, economist and director of market research at Black Knight, wrote in an email. “During the last financial crisis, it took more than a year and a half before we saw the first 1.6 million homeowners fall past due on mortgages as a result. In the economic fallout from

COVID-19, that many people became past due in April alone.

“Given that just 21 percent of the now 4.75 million homeowners in forbearanc­e have made their May payments so far, this is a trend that is likely to continue.”

You only need to look at the job market to understand why so many people aren’t paying their mortgages. The U.S. economy shed 20 million jobs in April and the unemployme­nt rate soared to its highest level since the Great Depression as many businesses nationwide shuttered. The impact has been swift and severe: An additional 2.4 million Americans filed jobless claims last week, the Labor Department announced, pushing the nation’s nineweek total past 38 million.

“Since 2006, there has been a very clear correlatio­n between unemployme­nt and past dues,” said Marina Walsh, an economist with the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n.

The rapid rise in delinquenc­ies is in contrast with the Great Recession. Back then, they were more spread out over a longer period of time.

“When you think of the Great Recession it really

started in 2007, 2008, but delinquenc­ies didn’t peak until 2010,” Walsh said. “With the Great Recession, quite frankly, it dragged on quite a while. … It happened in waves. It’s not as if a whole industry went flat. Like you have hospitalit­y and tourism, there were whole industries that were put on hold.”

But unlike the Great Recession, the housing market is on better footing. Home values haven’t fallen dramatical­ly, and many homeowners have equity in their homes. Because of that, Walsh doesn’t expect foreclosur­es to be as devastatin­g as last time. Under the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, foreclosur­es of federally backed mortgages have been temporaril­y paused. Walsh also pointed out that borrowers have more alternativ­es to avoid foreclosur­e.

“It’s not as if all these homeowners are underwater and they had no incentive” to make a mortgage payment, she said. “Here, there’s an incentive to make mortgage payments.”

The Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n, which releases its delinquenc­y data quarterly, found that pastdue mortgages rose to 4.36 percent in the first quarter after being at an all-time low of 3.77 percent in the fourth quarter of 2019. The associatio­n also tracks the number of loans that have gone into forbearanc­e. When a loan goes into forbearanc­e, payments are reduced or postponed.

The number of loans in forbearanc­e is also increasing, albeit at a slower pace than previously. Black Knight found that 4.75 million homeowners, or 9 percent of mortgages, had entered into forbearanc­e plans, representi­ng $1 trillion in unpaid principal balances. MBA’s survey of lenders found that 4.1 million homeowners had requested a forbearanc­e plan, or 8.16 percent of loans. By comparison, less than 1 percent of loans were in forbearanc­e in early March. Under the CARES Act, homeowners can suspend their mortgage payments if they have a federally backed mortgage.

“The numbers are unfortunat­ely pretty dismal,” Walsh said. “The hope is with the stimulus coming to borrowers, unemployme­nt (benefits) will help in the short term. I think a lot of this is going to be regional.”

Black Knight’s data shows that states that are home to some of the hardest-hit industries are suffering the most. The states that had the biggest increases in delinquent mortgages include Nevada (5.2 percent increase), New Jersey (5.1 percent) and New York (4.9 percent). Miami (7.2 percent), Las Vegas (6.2 percent) and New York City (5.4 percent) topped the metropolit­an areas.

The pace of mortgages going into forbearanc­e has slackened recently, with 93,000 borrowers entering into it last week, down from 1.4 million in the first week of April. Black Knight also found that of the 4.25 million homeowners who were in forbearanc­e at the end of April, nearly half made their April mortgage payment.

Just as not everyone who is delinquent on their mortgage is in forbearanc­e, it is also true that not all borrowers who are in forbearanc­e have stopped making payments.

Some made full payments but are holding onto forbearanc­e as a safety net, while others made partial payments to lessen the amount they ultimately have to repay.

Black Knight pointed out that May is shaping up differentl­y. As of May 19, only 21 percent of those in forbearanc­e plans have made a May payment. The 1.4 million homeowners in forbearanc­e who made April payments are at risk of becoming past due in May. If the payments aren’t received by the end of the month, they would become delinquent, which could lead to another sharp increase in the national delinquenc­y rate.

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