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Mortgage Delinquency Rates Projected To Drop Significantly In 2012

Mortgage Payments

EILEEN AJ CONNELLY   12/ 7/11 10:40 AM ET   AP

NEW YORK — If the U.S. economy does not suffer more setbacks, the rate of mortgage holders behind on their payments should decline significantly by the end of next year, according to credit reporting agency TransUnion.

Mortgage delinquency rates – the ratio of borrowers 60 or more days behind on their payments – will likely tick up to about 6 percent through the first three months of 2012, TransUnion said in its annual delinquency forecast issued Wednesday.

But by the end of next year, it could drop to 5 percent, TransUnion said. That's well off the peak of 6.89 percent seen in the fourth quarter of 2009.

Chicago-based TransUnion's forecast takes into consideration several factors, including expectations that consumer confidence and the economy will improve next year.

Also, banks are expected to get a good portion of pending foreclosures off their books next year, said Charlie Wise, TransUnion director of research and consulting.

Banks are still working through a backlog of foreclosures created by issues including the robo-signing scandal, in which bank officials signed mortgage documents without verifying the information they contained. The issue surfaced last year in areas with large numbers of foreclosures, and banks had to backtrack and review foreclosures across the country to make sure their paperwork was in order.

That slowed down the process, Wise said, and left mortgages listed as delinquent for longer than they otherwise might have been, temporarily boosting delinquency rates.

Economic uncertainty has also contributed. In the third quarter of 2011, mortgage delinquencies saw their first uptick in six quarters, largely fueled by concerns over the economy as lawmakers were debating the U.S. debt ceiling and Europe's debt crisis was unfolding.

Helping to cut the mortgage delinquency rate are a slowly improving job market and a stabilizing housing market.

While the drop will be significant, the rate will remain well above the pre-recession average of 1.5 to 2 percent.

"We have a long way to go to get back," said Steven Chaouki, a TransUnion vice president.

The situation with credit cards is much stronger. Card delinquencies – payments late by 90 days or more – dropped to their lowest levels in 17 years during the spring, then saw a slight increase in the third quarter, but still remained near historic lows.

TransUnion expects further edging up in the current quarter and the first three months of 2012, but then late payments on bank-issued cards should fall again.

One reason card delinquencies are expected to remain so low is that credit is much tighter than it was before the recession. TransUnion data showed that nearly a quarter million new card accounts were opened by people with less-than-stellar credit scores during the third quarter, which contributed to the slight increase in late payments during the summer months. But banks are mainly still going after consumers with top-tier credit histories.

"Lenders are willing to lend, but are still pursuing the best customers," said Chaouki.

TransUnion predicts by the end of 2012, just 0.69 percent of cards will be considered delinquent, down from a predicted 0.74 percent in the current quarter. The rate has wobbled in the last few years, peaking at 1.36 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007, then dropping and bouncing back up to 1.32 percent in the first quarter of 2009.

The figures reflect a shift in which debt payments consumers consider most important, largely because home prices fell so far.

Chaouki said the conventional wisdom before the Great Recession was that homeowners would put their mortgages first because of concern about their reputation and the emotional attachment involved in owning a home. But what has become clear as housing prices have continued to fall, he said, is that bill payment is far more practical.

"People were protecting their home equity," he said. Credit cards were relatively easy to come by in years past, he said, so when money got tight, it was an easy decision to default on cards and maintain house payments. Now it's common to owe more on a mortgage than a house is actually worth, but credit cards are harder to get. So consumers are being practical and protecting what is more valuable to them.

He said he expects the equation will shift again if housing prices rebound and people go back to building home equity.

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NEW YORK — If the U.S. economy does not suffer more setbacks, the rate of mortgage holders behind on their payments should decline significantly by the end of next year, according to credit repo...
NEW YORK — If the U.S. economy does not suffer more setbacks, the rate of mortgage holders behind on their payments should decline significantly by the end of next year, according to credit repo...
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ReaItors Are Liars
NAR is corrupt
01:55 PM on 12/08/2011
Why are reaItors telling the public to buy housing when prices are falling?
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DismayedRepub
300km/s Not just common sense, it’s the law
04:57 PM on 12/08/2011
Why do realators tell the public to buy housing when prices are rising?
01:49 PM on 12/08/2011
Liars! It is going to get worse. They say it is going to get better to comfort and keep people status quo and spending what they can during holiday season.....but there is going to be a huge paradigm shift soon. People better get prepared.
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Alwayspissedoffatsomeone
Fighting for Common Sense
12:55 AM on 12/08/2011
All this was also said last year, and the year before. Wish in one hand and $*** in the other and see which one fills up quicker. Repeal Obama care and watch the economy soar.
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SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
12:13 AM on 12/08/2011
or other title......Most Foreclosures Will Have Been Filed or Completed By The First Quarter.....
12:03 AM on 12/08/2011
the ley to stopping the forclosure rate is to indict and get judgments on banksters - once they are going to jail this will change and stop - not until that time will it end
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BonnieDoon
Fool me once...
04:21 PM on 12/07/2011
I suggest reading an article posted within the past hour here in the Business Section on HP that is much closer to the truth about Fraudclosure and its devastating repercussions:

“In Foreclosure Capital, Meltdown And Poverty Feel Permanent”
- by Peter S. Goodman


Reality bites...
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DismayedRepub
300km/s Not just common sense, it’s the law
03:41 PM on 12/07/2011
What this article doesn’t talk about is that the real reason that the delinquency rate is down is due to the recent peak in the number of Option ARMs Recasts. These loans start with low “teaser” introductory rates and are then rememorized five years later often resulting in much more expensive monthly payments. The Recasts peaked in September and should taper down to nothing by the middle of next summer, five years after these types of loans were stopped being made in the summer of 2007. That’s the good news.

The bad news is that delinquency is the first step on the road to default and often ending in foreclosure. It is a leading indicator. If you figure it takes a year to work through the foreclosure process, we will not see a corresponding peak and decrease in the foreclosure rate until this time next year. Once they hit the market they will impact the supply side of the supply/demand dynamic and drive home prices down even further. Provided there are no more shocks to the housing market it’s going to be another two years to the bottom.
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Izzymeister
Crush & Flush the GOP 2012 !!!!
03:29 PM on 12/07/2011
Life and the world is like a roller coaster ride. Everything has ups and downs. We have to accept that things have to go up sooner or later. We all know they have been down for a long time.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
03:00 PM on 12/07/2011
by the end of next year !!

how about end it at the end of this year !!

By pass all those future tears
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themuse
02:47 PM on 12/07/2011
"Also, banks are expected to get a good portion of pending foreclosures off their books next year, said Charlie Wise, TransUnion director of research and consulting."

Of course, once everyone loses their house, there will be a very low rate of delinquencies.
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BonnieDoon
Fool me once...
01:03 PM on 12/07/2011
My bet is that Trans Union's crystal ball will be going into the shop for a tune-up.


Housing prices are not, by any means, poised for a "rebound". And, with the Occupy movement focusing on foreclosures, the State Attorneys General are not going to get the kind of "settlement" that will make Fraudclosure disappear.
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ruolivert
12:46 PM on 12/07/2011
Really, wait a year and it will all be fine? They scrapping the bottom of the barrel to inspire confidence in the middle class. Problem is we know its all lies
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fineartgalaxy
Speaking from the heart, always.
12:38 PM on 12/07/2011
I do not believe a word that comes out of Washington, the MSM and any corporate industry. Financial or otherwise. Since 2008 we have been "told", "predicted" and "adviced" by the same group of people that created this ponzi scheme that drove this economy into the ground. First rule to common sense is not to believe everything.
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cats530
Valar morghulis
03:25 PM on 12/07/2011
Exactly. And the statement in the article regarding robosigning being about banks signing without verifying is an utter whitewash of the fraud perpetrated by the banksters. Let's call it what it really is: Fraud upon the court and perjury. When you swear under penalty of perjury to something being true and it is not, that is called perjury, isn't it? The banksters are always "above the law" while the little people are held strictly to it. Corporatism at its "finsest".
12:15 PM on 12/07/2011
It might be the bottom of the housing market has been hit but you can crawl along the bottom for a very long time. And I doubt if these sunny outlooks are true for the really hard hit states like FL, AZ.NV and CA. It will take many years for that rebound just due to the sheer number and still high unemployment. It will take many years for homeowners to see appreciation in their properties to even keep up with inflation. That is the reason if are going buy you have make sure you pay a proper price and somewhat below the asking price to insulate yourself. Not good news for many sellers but it is the way it is.
ReaItors Are Liars
NAR is corrupt
12:29 PM on 12/07/2011
Housing prices are many many tens of thousands of dollars away from the bottom.
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Bibulus
On my way back from Hawaii with the long-form bio
03:16 PM on 12/07/2011
Depends on the market.
ReaItors Are Liars
NAR is corrupt
12:02 PM on 12/07/2011
The Problem: Grossly Inflated Housing Prices

The Solution: Dramatically Lower Housing Prices

"The Solution" is coming to every city state and town in America. Therefore, why buy a house today when you can buy later for 70% less?