What Effect Do Foreclosures Have on the Nation’s Existing-Home Supply?

foreclose bank owned house signFor the last five to six years, the number of foreclosures has been steadily declining since hitting a peak. December 2015’s total of 32,000 completed foreclosures represented a decline of nearly 73 percent from their monthly peak of 118,000 reached in September 2010, according to the latest data from CoreLogic.

The elevated foreclosure numbers in the last few years have been supporting existing-home inventory for the last few years. Now that foreclosures are returning to more “normal” levels (pre-crisis), that support for existing-home sales is dwindling. Instead of thinking of the foreclosure decline as a contributing factor to the drop in existing-home sales inventory, however, it is more accurate to say that existing-home inventory levels in the years immediately following the crisis were boosted by unusually high foreclosure levels, according to a recent U.S. Housing Market Update by Capital Economics (CE).

CE Chief Economist Matthew Pointon said in the study that although shrinking foreclosure activity in recent years has meant a drop in existing-home inventory for sale, foreclosures were not a sustainable way to boost existing-home inventory, anyway.

“A rise in the number of existing homeowners moving home or selling vacant properties is required to provide a sustainable improvement in housing market liquidity,” Pointon said.

Data shows that between 1990 and 2005, foreclosures accounted for less than 10 percent of the flow of existing homes on the market. When the financial crisis occurred in 2008, foreclosures surged, and as a result, foreclosed homes as a percentage of existing-home inventory reached a peak of 80 percent in early 2011. Since then, it has returned to between 15 and 17 percent, Pointon said.

“A rise in the number of existing homeowners moving home or selling vacant properties is required to provide a sustainable improvement in housing market liquidity.”

Matthew Pointon, Capital Economics Chief Economist

However, data shows that along with a decline in the number of foreclosures, the share of delinquent borrowers (30 days or more late on their mortgage payments) has also declined, recently hitting a 10-year low. The decline in delinquent borrowers may have more to do with the current low inventory numbers than declining foreclosures do, according to Pointon. In a hypothetical scenario that assumes the number of foreclosure starts remained closed to their peak levels from 2009 and 2010, existing homes for sale would have returned to slightly less than two million per quarter—their pre-crisis level.

“Given that, it is tempting to ascribe the current low numbers of homes for sale to the drop in mortgages experiencing payment difficulties,” Pointon said.

Unfortunately for the housing market, existing-home inventory may remain at low levels for the foreseeable future.

“While the drop in foreclosures to normal levels has not helped matters, low numbers of existing homes for sale are due to a reluctance on behalf of current owners to sell-up or move,” Pointon said. “With no sign of that changing anytime soon, market conditions are set to remain tight.”

Source: dsnews.com