- According to the Black Knight Home Price Index, median home
prices fell 0.52% in September, continuing a three-month streak of
declines -- but slowed at half the pace of the prior two months
- Annualized appreciation slowed to 10.7% -- still more than
twice long-term norms -- and, while indicative of continued
correction, the 1.2% decline from August is the smallest seen in
four months
- Despite price corrections, home values in the nation's 50
largest markets remain elevated by anywhere from 19% to 66% since
the start of the pandemic
- Still, $1.3T (-7.6%) in recently
added equity vanished from the market in the third quarter, the
largest quarterly dollar decline on record, and the largest on a
percentage basis since 2009
- Equity among mortgaged homes is now nearly $1.5T (-8.4%) off its May
2022 peak, with the equity of the average borrower down
$30K from earlier this year
- While additional declines may be on the horizon, equity
positions remain strong; at $5T (46%) above pre-pandemic levels,
the average mortgage holder still has more than $92K more equity than before
- Though the number of underwater homeowners has climbed nearly
275K over the past four months --more
than doubling the population -- fewer than 500K homes are currently underwater
nationwide
- Nationally, 3.6% of borrowers are either underwater or have
less than 10% equity, roughly half the pre-pandemic share; a
historically and extremely low share (0.84%) are in negative equity
positions
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Nov. 7, 2022
/PRNewswire/ -- Today, the Data & Analytics division of Black
Knight, Inc. (NYSE:BKI) released its latest Mortgage Monitor
Report, based upon the company's industry-leading mortgage, real
estate and public records datasets. With home price corrections
continuing across much of the country – albeit at a slower pace
nationally than seen over the prior two months -- the impact on
homeowner equity levels is becoming clear. As Black Knight Data
& Analytics President Ben
Graboske explains, after peaking in Q2 of this year,
homeowner equity saw record levels of contraction in Q3 2022.

"In the span of just three months, U.S. mortgage holders saw a
total of $1.3T in newly acquired
equity evaporate," said Graboske. "That is -- by far -- the largest
quarterly decline on record by dollar value and the largest since
2009 on a percentage basis. As we reported at the time, while
hitting a record high in Q2, total homeowner equity peaked
mid-quarter in May and has been pulling back ever since. All in,
equity among mortgaged properties is now down nearly $1.5T since that point. From a risk perspective,
we've already seen the number of underwater borrowers more than
double alongside the equity pullback. That said, it's important to
note that -- even with 275K falling
underwater since May -- fewer than half a million homeowners owe
more on their homes than their current values. Historically
speaking, that is still extremely low.
"Also, as we've covered in prior Mortgage Monitors, the vast
majority of homes at risk of falling underwater are those that were
purchased in 2022 and late 2021, at or near pandemic-era peak
prices. While these loans clearly deserve careful, ongoing
monitoring, to put that into context, just 3.6% of nearly
53M U.S. mortgage holders are either
underwater or have less than 10% equity in their homes -- roughly
half the share coming into the pandemic. While additional declines
may be on the horizon, homeowner positions broadly remain strong.
Overall mortgage holder equity is still $5T (+46%) above
pre-pandemic levels, for an average gain of more than $92K per borrower during that period. Of course,
this -- along with rising interest rates -- increases the potential
for even further headwinds in equity lending as well as heightened
default risk."
This month's Mortgage Monitor also draws upon Disaster Alerts
and McDash Flash daily mortgage performance data from Black Knight
to assess the impact from Hurricane Ian in Florida. The 2.5M mortgaged homes in FEMA-declared,
county-level disaster areas carry an aggregate unpaid balance of
more than $500B and together
represent a full 60% of all mortgaged homes in the state. While
this can suggest broad, high-level estimates of properties
potentially affected by a storm, parcel-level data from Black
Knight Disaster Alerts provides far more granular detail. Of those
2.5M total properties, just
355K were directly in the path of the
storm and face a higher risk of property damage and mortgage
delinquency. Another 100K were in the
Disaster Alerts buffer zone, representing moderate risk, while more
than 2 million (80% of) properties in FEMA-declared counties were
not in the direct path of the storm and are therefore at lower risk
of financial loss and mortgage default.
Combining pinpointed impact areas from Disaster Alerts with
McDash Flash daily loan-level performance data allows Black Knight
to compare payments received in affected areas through Oct. 19 to the share received as of the same
point in September. In Florida,
counties not declared disaster areas, 93.7% of October payments
have been made, only marginally off the 93.9% as of the same day in
September. However, for parcels directly in Ian's path, 3.3% fewer
borrowers -- with an additional 1.2% fewer borrowers in the buffer
zone -- have made their October payments. Most notably, in
FEMA-declared counties outside of the Disaster Alerts identified in
the direct path and buffer zone of the storm, all but 0.5% fewer
borrowers had made their mortgage payments, suggesting that those
directly in the storm's path were nearly 7 times more likely to
become past due than those in FEMA-declared counties outside of
that path. If those deficits should hold true through the end of
the month, approximately 20-25K
borrowers in Florida can be
expected to become delinquent as a result of the storm.
Much more information on these and other topics can be found in
this month's Mortgage Monitor.
About the Mortgage
Monitor
The Data & Analytics division of Black Knight manages the
nation's leading repository of loan-level residential mortgage data
and performance information covering the majority of the overall
market, including tens of millions of loans across the spectrum of
credit products and more than 160 million historical records. The
combined insight of the Black Knight HPI and Collateral Analytics'
home price and real estate data provides one of the most complete,
accurate and timely measures of home prices available, covering 95%
of U.S. residential properties down to the ZIP-code level. In
addition, the company maintains one of the most robust public
property records databases available, covering 99.9% of the U.S.
population and households from more than 3,100 counties.
Black Knight's research experts carefully analyze this data to
produce a summary supplemented by dozens of charts and graphs that
reflect trend and point-in-time observations for the monthly
Mortgage Monitor Report. To review the full report, visit:
https://www.blackknightinc.com/data-reports/
About Black Knight
Black Knight, Inc. (NYSE: BKI) is an award-winning software,
data and analytics company that drives innovation in the mortgage
lending and servicing and real estate industries, as well as the
capital and secondary markets. Businesses leverage our robust,
integrated solutions across the entire homeownership life cycle to
help retain existing customers, gain new customers, mitigate risk
and operate more effectively.
Our clients rely on our proven, comprehensive, scalable products
and our unwavering commitment to delivering superior client support
to achieve their strategic goals and better serving their
customers. For more information on Black Knight, please visit
www.blackknightinc.com/.
For more information:
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Michelle Kersch
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Mitch Cohen
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904.854.5043
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704.890.8158
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michelle.kersch@bkfs.com
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mitch.cohen@bkfs.com
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SOURCE Black Knight, Inc.