6.7 Million Seriously Underwater Properties in Q2 2016 Down 776,000 From a Year Ago, Down 6.1 Million From Q2 2012 Peak

Q2 2016 Home Equity and Underwater info graphicClick here for high-resolution version · Marketwired

IRVINE, CA--(Marketwired - August 11, 2016) - ATTOM Data Solutions, the nation's leading source for comprehensive housing data and the new parent company of RealtyTrac, today released its Q2 2016 U.S. Home Equity and Underwater Report, which shows 6,666,622 seriously underwater properties representing 11.9 percent of all U.S. properties with a mortgage as of the end of the second quarter 2016 -- down from 12.0 percent in the previous quarter and down from 13.3 percent in Q2 2015.

For the report, ATTOM analyzed recorded mortgage and deed of trust data from more than 1,400 U.S. counties accounting for 88 percent of the U.S. population along with automated valuation models (AVMs) for more than 56 million properties with mortgages in those counties (see full methodology below).

"Rising home prices are lifting all home equity boats: bailing out seriously underwater homeowners and enriching homeowners who already have positive equity," said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at ATTOM Data Solutions (the new parent company of RealtyTrac). "Nationwide home prices reached a new all-time high in June on the heels of 52 consecutive months of annual increases. While that national trend is consistent in most markets across the country, there are still some local markets and sub-markets that have been largely left behind by the housing recovery and which still have a high percentage of underwater homeowners."

The number of seriously underwater properties (those with an LTV of 125 percent or more) decreased by 37,235 compared to the first quarter and decreased by 776,958 compared to a year ago. Since the peak of 12.8 million in Q2 2012, the number of seriously underwater properties has decreased by more than 6.1 million.

There were a total of 12,383,345 equity rich properties (LTV of 50 percent or less) representing 22.1 percent of all U.S. properties with a mortgage at the end of Q2 2016 -- up from 22.0 percent in the previous quarter and 19.6 percent in Q2 2015. The number of equity rich properties increased by 47,694 compared to the previous quarter and increased by more than 1.4 million compared to a year ago.

Qtr-Year

Percent
Seriously
Underwater

Total
Underwater

Equity
Rich

Pct
Equity
Rich

Q1 2012

27.8%

12,533,155

Q2 2012

28.6%

12,824,279

Q3 2012

27.6%

12,472,262

Q1 2013

25.8%

10,894,743

Q2 2013

25.7%

11,336,033

Q3 2013

23.2%

10,714,924

Q4 2013

18.8%

9,274,126

9,097,325

18.5%

Q1 2014

17.5%

9,065,741

9,935,939

19.1%

Q2 2014

17.2%

9,074,449

9,945,646

18.9%

Q3 2014

15.0%

8,135,648

10,812,968

20.1%

Q4 2014

12.7%

7,052,570

11,249,646

20.3%

Q1 2015

13.2%

7,341,922

11,053,055

19.8%

Q2 2015

13.3%

7,443,580

10,963,041

19.6%

Q3 2015

12.7%

6,917,673

10,476,259

19.2%

Q4 2015

11.5%

6,436,381

12,621,274

22.5%

Q1 2016

12.0%

6,703,857

12,335,651

22.0%

Q2 2016

11.9%

6,666,622

12,383,345

22.1%

Cleveland, Las Vegas, Akron post highest underwater rates

Among 88 metropolitan statistical areas analyzed for the report with a population of 500,000 or more and sufficient data, those with the highest share of seriously underwater properties were Cleveland, Ohio (27.5 percent); Las Vegas (25.7 percent); Akron, Ohio (24.9 percent); Dayton, Ohio (24.1 percent); and Toledo, Ohio (23.6 percent).