LPS'
January 2010 Mortgage Monitor Report Shows Loan Delinquency Rates Have
Surpassed 10 Percent
More than 7.2 Million Loans Behind On Payments; Estimated 1 Million
Properties in REO Status
The January 2010
Mortgage Monitor report, released by Lender Processing Services, Inc.
(NYSE:
LPS), a leading provider of mortgage performance data and analytics, showed
that home loan delinquency rates in the U.S. have now surpassed 10 percent.
Factoring in foreclosures in process, according to the data in LPS’
database, the total non-current rate sits at 13.3%. When extrapolated to
reflect the entire mortgage industry, this rate indicates that more than 7.2
million mortgage loans are now behind on payments. In addition, an estimated
one million properties are now owned by banks. The January 2010 Mortgage
Monitor report is an in-depth summary of mortgage industry performance
indicators based on data collected as of December 31, 2009.
Within the population of
loans that were current as of year-end 2008, the percent of “new” serious
delinquencies is 4.64 percent – higher than any other year analyzed for the
same period. Of loans that were current as of December 31, 2008, by December
2009 there were 2.3 million new loans that were considered seriously
delinquent. Prime loans, including agency, non-agency and jumbo, have
experienced deterioration at a worse pace on a relative basis than subprime,
FHA and all loans as a whole. Within the prime loans category, loans with
current unpaid principal balances between $417,000 and $600,000 have
performed the worse.
The Mortgage Monitor
report also indicates that 2009 vintage loans are performing better than
loans from any of the prior five years and have been steadily improving as
more origination months are added to the pool of loans. This improvement is
attributed to more restrictive underwriting guidelines. The report also
noted that liquidity is still not available where it is needed most.
Other key results from
LPS’ January 2010 Mortgage Monitor include:
Total U.S. loan delinquency rate: 10.0 percent
Total U.S. foreclosure inventory rate: 3.2 percent
Total U.S. non-current* loan rate: 13.3 percent
States with most non-current* loans: Florida, Nevada, Mississippi, Arizona,
Georgia, California, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois and Ohio
States with fewest non-current* loans: North Dakota, South Dakota, Alaska,
Wyoming, Montana, Nebraska, Vermont, Colorado, Oregon and Washington
*Non-current totals combine foreclosures and delinquencies as a percent of
active loans in that state.
Note: Totals based on LPS Applied Analytics’ loan-level database of mortgage
assets.
LPS manages the nation’s
leading repository of loan-level residential mortgage data and performance
information from approximately 40 million loans across the spectrum of
credit products. The company’s research experts carefully analyze this data
to produce dozens of charts and graphs that reflect trend and point-in-time
observations for LPS’ monthly Mortgage Monitor Report.
To
review the full report, listen to a presentation of the report or access an
executive summary, visit
http://www.lpsvcs.com/NEWSROOM/INDUSTRYDATA/Pages/default.aspx