Lodi News-Sentinel

Housing slump would place greatest stress on black, Hispanic residents

- Tim Henderson

If the United States enters a recession and housing prices stagnate or fall, homeowners in parts of California, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana and New Jersey are most at risk of owing more than their houses are worth or losing their homes to foreclosur­e, according to a new analysis.

ATTOM, a real estate data company, identified the most atrisk counties based on affordabil­ity, foreclosur­e filings, unemployme­nt levels and the share of homes with mortgage balances exceeding property values. On average, counties where black and Hispanic residents are the largest group were judged to be at least twice as vulnerable to housing market declines as counties where White residents are the largest group, according to a Stateline analysis of census and ATTOM data.

The Federal Reserve’s effort to curb inflation by raising interest rates is expected to cool the red-hot housing market— but not immediatel­y. For now, there is still strong demand for the limited supply of houses and apartments, and unemployme­nt remains low. Most experts expect housing prices to continue to rise this year.

Home prices increased a record 21% in the past year, the largest increase in 30 years, and rents rose 12% nationally, according to the report. Rents were up by as much as 20% in some East Coast areas where prices had moderated earlier in the pandemic, according to a June study released by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies.

But with some analysts predicting a recession, homeowners who have gotten used to fastrising home values and growing home equity might be in for a shock.

The most at-risk market, according to the ATTOM rankings, is Passaic County, New Jersey, home to Paterson. It takes nearly half the median annual income of about $64,000 to maintain a mortgage on the typical $415,000 home there. Experts recommend spending no more than 30% of income on housing.

Paterson has drawn new interest from investors looking to capitalize on the city’s proximity to Manhattan, New York, about 20 miles away. The entry of investors into a market can raise home prices and rents, pricing out longtime residents with lower incomes.

Passaic County is 43% Hispanic and 13% black, and many residents with low incomes stitch together a variety of parttime jobs to get by with wages of about $14 an hour, said Debbie Nicholson, a housing counselor at the nonprofit Paterson Task Force for Community Action in Passaic County.

ATTOM also identified six other New Jersey counties, seven in Illinois, two in Delaware and one each in California, Indiana, North Carolina and Texas among the 20 counties most vulnerable to a downturn.

The disproport­ionate at-risk status of black and Hispanic counties is particular­ly troubling since households of color made up most of the growth in homeowners­hip in recent years, according to the Harvard report.

Households of color accounted for half of the total growth in homeowners between early 2016 and early 2022, and even a larger share (55%) of the increases over the past two years.

“People of color drove most of the housing growth last year, and will continue to do that, yet the racial homeowners­hip affordabil­ity gaps that we see continue to expand,” said Alanna McCargo, president of the federal Government National Mortgage Associatio­n, or Ginnie Mae, speaking at a June 22 online event sponsored by the Harvard Joint Center on Housing Studies.

“This is not sustainabl­e,” McCargo added. “This is a thing we will have to grapple with at the federal, state and local level.”

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