Only 1.1 million Homeowners with Negative Equity. Average homeowner gained $63,600 in equity since last year

OfTheCross

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Negative equity, also referred to as underwater or upside-down mortgages, applies to borrowers who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are currently worth. As of the first quarter of 2022, the quarterly and annual changes in negative equity were:

• Quarterly change: From the fourth quarter of 2021 to the first quarter of 2022, the total number of mortgaged homes in negative equity decreased by 5.3% to 1.1 million homes, or 2% of all mortgaged properties.

• Annual change: In the first quarter of 2021, 1.4 million homes, or 2.6% of all mortgaged properties, were in negative equity. This number decreased by 23%, or approximately 300,000 properties, in the first quarter of 2022.

Because home equity is affected by home price changes, borrowers with equity positions near (+/- 5%) the negative equity cutoff are most likely to move out of or into negative equity as prices change, respectively. Looking at the first quarter of 2022 book of mortgages, if home prices increase by 5%, 130,000 homes would regain equity; if home prices decline by 5%, 167,000 properties would fall underwater.

CoreLogic® ... today released the Homeowner Equity Report (HER) for the first quarter of 2022. The report shows U.S. homeowners with mortgages (which account for roughly 62% of all properties) have seen their equity increase by 32.2% year over year, representing a collective equity gain of $3.8 trillion, and an average gain of $63,600 per borrower, since the first quarter of 2021.
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“Price growth is the key ingredient for the creation of home equity wealth,” said Patrick Dodd, president and CEO at CoreLogic. “Home prices were up by 20% in March compared to one year earlier in CoreLogic’s national Home Price Index. This has led to the largest one-year gain in average home equity wealth for owners and is expected to spur a record amount of home-improvement spending this year.”
 

Pressure

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mfs here offering at LEAST 50K over asking for small 1500-1600 sqft homes. with prices already inflated, foreclosures in the next 5 years will be a goldmine
shyt crazy out here. Not only are they paying that, but then they're going to have to put in another 20-40k in upgrades for a lot of these homes. :picard:
 

Geek Nasty

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Total BS number just like valuing CEOs by the market cap of their portfolios. How do you leverage this new found wealth? If you sell, you're paying even more money wherever you move to so it's a wash. The only times your home price increasing is a good thing is if you're about to downsize or you're dead and your kids want to sell your house. All an increasing home price does is make you pay more property tax while you're living in it.

EDIT: I learned this lesson the hard way. I got all giddy seeing my house going up 20% every year. Then I noticed that all the houses I wanted to upgrade to were going up just as much so it was a wash.
 
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NkrumahWasRight Is Wrong

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mfs here offering at LEAST 50K over asking for small 1500-1600 sqft homes. with prices already inflated, foreclosures in the next 5 years will be a goldmine

My house is currently pending sale and my plan is to wait for that wave of foreclosures to buy again

I'll have a ton of capital from the sale [which I bought off foreclosure originally] to invest and leave frugally in the meantime. I'd probably be ready to settle down with a family in 5 years so by then I'll be able to get something great at reasonable value and an upgrade over what I was living at.
 

Lord Beasley

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My house is currently pending sale and my plan is to wait for that wave of foreclosures to buy again

I'll have a ton of capital from the sale [which I bought off foreclosure originally] to invest and leave frugally in the meantime. I'd probably be ready to settle down with a family in 5 years so by then I'll be able to get something great at reasonable value and an upgrade over what I was living at.
if things trend like they normal do (and the government doesn't completely collapse of course) you're gonna be sitting very comfortably. if you're able to get multiple properties for the cheap, sheeeeesh :whoo:
 

NkrumahWasRight Is Wrong

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if things trend like they normal do (and the government doesn't completely collapse of course) you're gonna be sitting very comfortably. if you're able to get multiple properties for the cheap, sheeeeesh :whoo:

Yeah. I may live with my parents for a year to save even more money. Pay off all my credit debt for a clean slate too. My current place was bought very cheap and I put like 50% down on it so the cash influx I'll have at close will be a significant margin. Not significant to all the well off gentlemen and ladies on the board but probably equivalent to two years of my current earnings through work.
 
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