Less Than 1 Percent of Seriously Underwater U.S. Properties Qualify for Principal Reduction Under New FHFA Program According to RealtyTrac Analysis of Recorded Loan Data

U.S. Home Equity TrendsClick here for high-resolution version · Marketwired

IRVINE, CA--(Marketwired - May 05, 2016) - RealtyTrac® (www.realtytrac.com), the nation's leading source for comprehensive housing data, today released its Q1 2016 U.S. Home Equity and Underwater Report, which estimates that less than 1 percent of all seriously underwater properties nationwide potentially qualify for principal loan forgiveness under a new mortgage modification program introduced in April by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees government-backed loan agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

For the analysis, RealtyTrac looked at publicly recorded mortgage and deed of trust data it collects and licenses along with eligibility criteria provided on the FHFA Fact Sheet for the new modification program, which loan servicers must offer to eligible borrowers by the end of the year. To be considered eligible in the RealtyTrac analysis, the seriously underwater properties (loan-to-value ratio of at least 125 percent) needed to also be actively in foreclosure, owner-occupied, and have an estimated loan amount no more than $250,000 on a loan that is guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

Out of 6,703,857 million seriously underwater U.S. properties as of the end of Q1 2016, the RealtyTrac analysis estimated that 33,622 (0.50 percent) would potentially qualify for the FHFA principal reduction program.

"This new principal reduction program is designed to reach a highly targeted group of borrowers, so it's not surprising that the share of seriously underwater borrowers who potentially qualify is razor-thin," said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at RealtyTrac. "To make a more serious dent in the 6.7 million seriously underwater loans, the program would need to be open to homeowners who are not seriously delinquent -- given that 98 percent of all seriously underwater loans are not actively in the foreclosure process -- or open to investors -- given that non-owner occupied properties account for 59 percent of all seriously underwater homes. But there may not be a strong fiscal or political case to help out those two categories of underwater homeowners, particularly in an election year."

States and metro areas with the highest share of loans eligible for principal reduction

States with the highest share of seriously underwater homes potentially eligible for the FHFA Principal Reduction Modification program were New Jersey (2.56 percent); Illinois (1.07 percent); Florida (0.67 percent); Pennsylvania (0.64 percent); Ohio (0.60 percent); New York (0.60 percent); Massachusetts (0.58 percent); Nevada (0.54 percent); and Wisconsin (0.54 percent).