The Mercury News

A new view of boomerang millennial­s

- By James Woodard CREATORS.COM

First, a bit of clarificat­ion. Boomerangs are young people who have moved out of their parents’ home only to move back in. Millennial­s are those born during the 1980s and 1990s. In this report, we are focusing on those born between 1980 and 1984.

A recent study found a higher incidence of “re-launch” for millennial­s with a bachelor’s degree compared to those with a lower education attainment and a higher incidence of “re-launch” for millennial­s from higher parental-income households compared to lower parental-income households. A “re-launch” occurs when a young adult moves out, returns to the parental household and then leaves again.

The National Associatio­n of Home Builders (NAHB) examined the research using data from the National Longitudin­al Study of Youth.

“Understand­ing the makeup of those who return home could shed light on the timing of the release of what we know is quite a bit of pent-up demand,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe.

“The data may indicate that while this age group is delaying what we think of as typical milestones, the combinatio­n of resources and education and what we have found about their preference­s suggests growing housing demand in the years ahead.”

Ninety percent of those born between 1980 and 1984 left home before the age of 27 — but then more than half returned to their parents’ homes. Of that group, those with a bachelor’s degree or higher had the highest share of returning to the parental home at 55.5 percent.

Another important difference is gender: Twelve percent of men in this age group never left the parental home; whereas, 7.6 percent of women stayed. And although women are more likely to boomerang, they are also more likely to leave again, NAHB reported.

Studies continue to show that the desire to own a home remains strong for these millennial­s. Despite data showing that the age group is delaying household formation, they remain a key demographi­c in the housing market, and the pent-up demand is expected to translate into housing growth in the coming years.

How many homes are still in active foreclosur­e?

It depends on what you consider a property foreclosur­e. RealtyTrac, a source for housing data, recently released its first-quarter 2015 Zombie Foreclosur­e Report.

It found that as of the end of January 2015, 142,462 homes actively in the foreclosur­e process had been vacated by the homeowners prior to the bank’s repossessi­ng the property, representi­ng 25 percent of all active foreclosur­es.

The total number of zombie foreclosur­es was down 6 percent from a year ago, but the 25-percent share of total foreclosur­es represente­d by zombies was up from 21 percent a year ago.

“While the number of vacated zombie foreclosur­es is down from a year ago, they represent an increasing share of all foreclosur­es because they tend to be the problem cases still stuck in the pipeline,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac.

Is FHA taking a risk in lowering its fees?

Not according to FHA officials. Federal Housing Administra­tion officials stressed to lawmakers that the agency is not putting its finances at risk by its recent move to reduce the insurance fees it charges homebuyers when it still hasn’t met its mandated capital ratio funds rate.

Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Julian Castro, who oversees FHA, told lawmakers on the House Financial Services Committee that FHA’s actions “maintain a careful balance between strengthen­ing our fund and advancing our mission. It simply isn’t right to unduly burden borrowers in the present because of the misbehavio­r of others in the past.”

Effective Jan. 26, FHA lowered its annual mortgage insurance premiums by half a percentage point from 1.35 percent to 0.85 percent. The move is expected to save an average borrower $900 annually, according to a report from the National Associatio­n of Realtors.

 ??  ?? Boomerang millennial­s are young people born during the 1980s and 1990s who have moved out of their parents’ home only to move back in.
Boomerang millennial­s are young people born during the 1980s and 1990s who have moved out of their parents’ home only to move back in.

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