View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

The Obama Administration’s Efforts
To Stabilize the Housing Market
and Help American Homeowners
June 2015

U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development | Office of Policy Development and Research

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

hcraeseR dna tnempoleveD yc

nempoleveD yciloP fo ecif fO | tnempole
The Administration’s goal remains to stabilize the housing market and provide
security for homeowners. To meet these objectives in a challenging market, the
Administration developed a broad approach implementing state and local housing
agency initiatives, tax credits for homebuyers, neighborhood stabilization and
community development programs, mortgage modifications and refinancing,
housing counseling, continued Federal Housing Administration (FHA) engagement,
support for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and increased consumer protections.
In addition, Federal Reserve and Treasury Mortgage-Backed Securities purchase
programs have helped to keep mortgage interest rates at record lows. More detail
on the Administration’s efforts can be found in the Appendix.
•

Purchases of new homes passed the 500,000 mark again in
May. Purchases of new homes rose 2.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted
annual rate (SAAR) of 546,000 in May, after sales were upwardly revised
to 534,000 in April. New home purchases were 19.5 percent higher than
a year earlier and have been above 500,000 for four of the five months
in 2015. Data on new home sales can be volatile and are often revised.
(Source: HUD and Census Bureau.)

•

May sales of previously owned (existing) homes were above
the 5.0 million mark for the third consecutive month. The
National Association of Realtors® (NAR) reported that sales of existing
homes—including single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums, and
cooperatives—climbed 5.1 percent to 5.35 million (SAAR) in May from an
upwardly revised 5.09 million in April. Excluding November 2009, when
sales were bolstered by a homebuyer tax credit that was scheduled to expire
that month, sales were the strongest since March 2007. May sales were 9.2
percent higher than one year ago (4.90 million) and the share of first-time
buyers, at 32 percent, matched the highest rate since September 2012.

•

Homeowners’ equity rose sharply in the first quarter of 2015.
Homeowners’ equity (total property value less mortgage debt outstanding)
was up more than $443 billion (3.9 percent) from the fourth quarter of
2014, for a total of over $11.7 trillion—the highest level since the first quarter
of 2007. The increase in owners’ equity was $298 billion in the fourth
quarter. The change in equity since April 1, 2009, when the Administration
initiated its broad set of actions to stabilize the housing market, now stands at
nearly $5.6 trillion (+89.9 percent). (Source: Federal Reserve.)

•

House prices rose again in April and year-over-year house
price changes continue to stabilize. The Federal Housing Finance
Agency (FHFA) seasonally adjusted purchase-only house price index for
April showed home values rose 0.3 percent over the previous month and
5.3 percent over the previous year. The year-over-year house price gain in
March was also 5.3 percent. The FHFA index shows that U.S. home values
are approximately on par with February 2006 prices and now stand just
2.3 percent below their previous peak in March 2007 and 23.2 percent
above their previous low in March 2011. Another index tracked in the
Scorecard, the non-seasonally adjusted (NSA) S&P/Case-Shiller 20-City
Home Price Index, posted a monthly increase in home values of 1.1 percent
in April and year-over-year returns of 4.9 percent compared to annual
returns of 5.0 percent in March. The Case-Shiller index showed home
values are now on par with prices in January 2005. (The Case-Shiller and
FHFA price indices are released with a 2-month lag.)

•

The Administration’s foreclosure mitigation programs
continue to provide relief for millions of homeowners as the
recovery from the housing crisis continues. In all, more than 9.6
million mortgage modifications and other forms of mortgage assistance
arrangements were completed between April 2009 and the end of May
2015. More than 2.4 million homeowner assistance actions have taken
place through the Making Home Affordable (MHA) Program, including
over 1.5 million permanent modifications through the Home Affordable
Modification Program (HAMP), while FHA has offered nearly 2.8 million
loss mitigation and early delinquency interventions through May. These
Administration programs continue to encourage improved standards and
processes in the industry, with lenders offering families and individuals more
than 4.4 million proprietary modifications through April (data are reported
with a 2-month lag). You can read the Treasury’s MHA report here.

Encouraging news notwithstanding, there is a need to continue with recovery efforts
to foster home sales, help those homeowners that remain under water, and reduce
mortgage delinquency rates that remain elevated. There is also considerable
geographic variation in market conditions not captured in the national statistics,
which suggests some markets are improving at different rates than others.

June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 1

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

The Obama Administration’s Efforts To Stabilize the Housing Market and Help American Homeowners | June 2015

June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 2

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

The Obama Administration’s Efforts To Stabilize the Housing Market and Help American Homeowners | June 2015

June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 3

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

The Obama Administration’s Efforts To Stabilize the Housing Market and Help American Homeowners | June 2015

June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 4

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

U.S. Department of
Housing
Urban the
Development
Office of
Policy
Development
Research | June 2015
The Obama Administration’s
Efforts
Toand
Stabilize
Housing |Market
and
Help
American and
Homeowners

Indicator

HOUSING ASSISTANCE AND STABILIZATION PERFORMANCE METRICS
This Period
Last Period
Cumulative From April 1, 2009
Latest Release

Distressed Homeowners Assisted (thousands)
HAMP Trial Modifications
HAMP Permanent Modifications
FHA Loss Mitigation Interventions
HOPE Now Modifications
HARP Refinances

10.6
15.4
33.4
34.8
10.4

2,334
1,504
2,794
4,461
3,314

360.4

336.0

11,636

Borrower Annual Savings ($ millions)
HAMP Active Trial Modifications
HAMP Active Permanent Modifications
All Refinances

----

----

185
8,629
63,757

Activities Completed Under NSP (housing units)
New Construction or Residential Rehab
Demolition or Clearance
Direct Homeownership Assistance

----

----

41,021 [64,807]
23,667 [24,364]
11,224 [16,809]

443.2

297.8

Counseled Borrowers (thousands)

Change in Aggregate Home Equity ($ billions)

Indicator

Mortgage Rates (30-Yr FRM, percent)

11.2 (s)
10.6 (s)
33.3
29.0
11.7

Last Period

4.08

Year Ago

4.02

4th Q 14

(r)
(r)

1st Q 15
1st Q 15
1st Q 15

(b,s)
(b,s)
(b,s)

1st Q 15
1st Q 15
1st Q 15

5,553.8

(r)

HOUSING MARKET FACT SHEET
This Period

May-15
May-15
May-15
April-15
April-15

1st Q 15

As of Dec 2008

4.12

Latest Release

5.10

2-Jul-15

Housing Affordability (index)

164.9

171.6

(r)

168.6

162.9

Home Prices (indices)
Case-Shiller (NSA)
FHFA (SA)
CoreLogic–Excluding Distressed Sales (NSA)

177.0
221.7
182.7

175.1
221.1
178.6

(r)
(r)

168.7
210.5
171.0

150.5
195.8
159.9

Home Sales (thousands, SA)
New
Existing
First-Time Buyers
Distressed Sales (percent, NSA)

45.5
445.8
162.1
12

44.5
424.2
154.7
14

(r)
(r)
(r,s)
(r)

38.1
408.3
147.3
15

31.4
334.2
149.9
32

May-15
May-15
May-15
April-15

Housing Supply
Existing Homes for Sale (thousands, NSA)
Existing Homes–Months’ Supply (months)
New Homes for Sale (thousands, SA)
New Homes for Sale–Months’ Supply (months, SA)
Vacant Units Held Off Market (thousands)

2,290
5.1
206
4.5
3,840

2,220
5.2
206
4.6
3,774

(r)
(r)
(r)
(r)

2,250
5.5
194
5.1
3,888

3,130
9.4
353
11.2
3,542

May-15
May-15
May-15
May-15
1st Q 15

Mortgage Originations (thousands)
Refinance Originations
Purchase Originations

751.2
615.5

549.5
669.0

612.5
561.3

767.1
986.3

1st Q 15
1st Q 15

15.1
58.2
48.0

62.9
72.7
56.2

May-15
May-15
May-15

(s)
(p)

(r)

(s)

April-15

(r)
(r)

April-15
April-15
April-15

FHA Originations (thousands)
Refinance Originations
Purchase Originations
Purchases by First-Time Buyers

49.7
77.2
61.7

Mortgage Delinquency Rates (percent)
Prime
Subprime
FHA

2.4
27.2
9.3

2.3
26.6
8.5

2.8
29.6
9.8

4.4
34.3
14.3

May-15
May-15
May-15

453
820
479

481
831
483

624
988
562

915
1,632
333

May-15
May-15
May-15

5,116

5,370

(r)

6,349

--

51.4
44.9
14.2
28.5

51.8
45.2
14.9
36.4

(r)
(r)

49.2
28.4
17.8
42.8

148.6
78.9
14.0
74.8

Seriously Delinquent Mortgages (thousands)
Prime
Subprime
FHA
Underwater Borrowers (thousands)
Foreclosure Actions (thousands)
Foreclosure Starts
Foreclosure Completions
Short Sales
REO Sales

(p)
(p)
(p)

(p)
(p)

49.2
73.0
47.2

(r)
(r)
(r)

1st Q 15
May-15
May-15
April-15
April-15

SA = seasonally adjusted, NSA = not SA, p = preliminary, r = revised, b = brackets include units in process, s = see Additional Notes in Sources and Methodology.
June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 5

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

U.S. Department of
Housing
Urban the
Development
Office of
Policy
Development
Research | June 2015
The Obama Administration’s
Efforts
Toand
Stabilize
Housing |Market
and
Help
American and
Homeowners

A. Items in Tables

SOURCES AND METHODOLOGY

Description
Distressed Homeowners Assisted
HAMP Trial Modifications
HAMP Permanent Modifications
HARP Refinances
FHA Loss Mitigation Interventions
HOPE Now Modifications
Counseled Borrowers (thousands)
Borrower Annual Savings
HAMP Active Trial Modifications

Frequency

Sources

Notes on Methodology

Monthly
Monthly
Monthly
Monthly
Monthly

Treasury
Treasury
Federal Housing Finance Agency
HUD
Hope Now Alliance

As reported. Also see additional note in Section C below on HAMP Tier 2.
As reported. Also see additional note in Section C below on HAMP Tier 2.
As reported.
All FHA loss mitigation and early delinquency interventions.
All proprietary modifications completed.

Quarterly

HUD

Housing counseling activity reported by all HUD-approved housing counselors.

Quarterly

HUD, Treasury, and Freddie Mac

HAMP Permanent Modifications

Quarterly

HUD and Treasury

All Refinances

Quarterly

HUD, and MBA

HUD estimate of annualized savings based on Treasury reported active HAMP trial modifications and
Freddie Mac monthly savings estimates. Also see additional note in Section C below on HAMP Tier 2.
HUD estimate of annualized savings based on Treasury reported HAMP permanent modifications and
median monthly savings estimates. Also see additional notes in Section C below on HAMP Tier 2 and
change to reporting savings on all permanent modifications.
Refinance originations (see below) multiplied by HUD estimate of annualized savings per refinance.

Quarterly

HUD

Quarterly

HUD

Quarterly

HUD

Quarterly

Federal Reserve Board

Mortgage Rates (30-Yr FRM)

Weekly

Freddie Mac

Primary Mortgage Market Survey, as reported for 30-Year fixed rate mortgages (FRM).

Housing Affordability

Monthly

National Association of Realtors®

NAR’s composite housing affordability index as reported. A value of 100 means that a family
with the median income has exactly enough income to qualify for a mortgage on a median-priced
home. An index above 100 signifies that a family earning the median income has more than
enough income to qualify.

Home Prices
Case-Shiller (NSA)

Monthly

Standard and Poor’s

Monthly
Monthly

Federal Housing Finance Agency
CoreLogic

Case-Shiller 20-metro composite index, January 2000 = 100. Standard and Poor’s recommends
use of not seasonally adjusted index when making monthly comparisons. FHFA monthly (purchaseonly) index for US, January 1991 = 100. CoreLogic national combined index, distressed sales
excluded, January 2000 = 100.
(Only available as NSA).

Monthly

HUD and Census Bureau

Existing

Monthly

National Association of Realtors®

First Time Buyers

Monthly

NAR, Census Bureau, and HUD

Distressed Sales (NSA)

Monthly

CoreLogic

Housing Supply
Existing Homes for Sale (NSA)
Existing Homes - Months’ Supply
New Homes for Sale (SA)
New Homes for Sale - Months’ Supply (SA)
Vacant Units Held Off Market

Monthly
Monthly
Monthly
Monthly
Quarterly

National Association of Realtors
National Association of Realtors
HUD and Census Bureau
HUD and Census Bureau
Census Bureau

As reported.
As reported.
As reported.
As reported.
As reported in Census CPS/HPS Table 4. Estimates of Housing Inventory, line item “Year-round vacant, held off market for reasons other than occasional use or usually reside elsewhere.” Vacant
units can be held off the market for a variety of reasons.

Mortgage Originations
Refinance Originations

Quarterly

Purchase Originations

Quarterly

Mortgage Bankers Association
and HUD
Mortgage Bankers Association
and HUD

HUD estimate of refinance originations based on MBA estimate of dollar volume of refinance
originations.
HUD estimate of home purchase originations based on MBA estimate of dollar volume of home
purchase originations.

Completed Activities Under NSP
(housing units)
New Construction or Residential Rehab
Demolition or Clearance
Direct Homeownership Assistance
Change in Aggregate Home Equity

FHFA (SA)
CoreLogic - Excluding Distressed Sales
(NSA)
Home Sales (SA)
New

Housing units constructed/rehabilitated using Neighborhood Stabilization Program. Bracketed
numbers include units in process.
Housing units demolished/cleared using Neighborhood Stabilization Program. Bracketed
numbers as above.
Completed downpayment assistance or non-amortizing second mortgages by grantee to make
purchase of NSP unit affordable. Bracketed numbers as above.
Difference in aggregate household owners’ equity in real estate as reported in the Federal Reserve
Board’s Flow of Funds Accounts of the United States for stated time period.

Seasonally adjusted annual rates divided by 12. A newly constructed house is considered sold
when either a sales contract has been signed or a deposit accepted, even if this occurs before
construction has actually started.
Seasonally adjusted annual rates divided by 12. Existing-home sales, which include single-family,
townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, are based on transaction closings. This differs from the
U.S. Census Bureau’s series on new single-family home sales, which are based on contracts or the
acceptance of a deposit.
Sum of seasonally adjusted new and existing home sales (above) multiplied by National
Association of Realtors ® annual estimate of first time buyer share of existing home sales.
Short sales and REO (Real Estate Owned) sales as a percent of total existing home sales (current
month subject to revision).

FHA Originations
Refinance Originations
Purchase Originations
Purchases by First Time Buyers
Mortgage Delinquency Rates (NSA)
Prime
Subprime
FHA

Monthly
Monthly
Monthly

HUD
HUD
HUD

FHA originations reported as of date of loan closing. Estimate for current month scaled upward due
to normal reporting lag and shown as preliminary.

Monthly
Monthly
Monthly

LPS Applied Analytics
LPS Applied Analytics
HUD

Total mortgages past due (30+ days) but not in foreclosure, divided by mortgages actively serviced.
Total mortgages past due (30+ days) but not in foreclosure, divided by mortgages actively serviced.
Total FHA mortgages past due (30+ days) but not in foreclosure, divided by FHA’s insurance in force.

Seriously Delinquent Mortgages
Prime
Subprime
FHA

Monthly
Monthly
Monthly

LPS Applied Analytics, MBA, and HUD Mortgages 90+ days delinquent or in foreclosure, scaled up to market.
LPS Applied Analytics, MBA, and HUD Mortgages 90+ days delinquent or in foreclosure, scaled up to market.
HUD
Mortgages 90+ days delinquent or in foreclosure.

Underwater Borrowers

Quarterly

CoreLogic

As reported.

Foreclosure Actions
Foreclosure Starts

Monthly

Realty Trac

Monthly
Monthly
Monthly

Realty Trac
CoreLogic
CoreLogic

Foreclosure starts are reported counts of notice of default or scheduled foreclosure auction,
depending on which action starts the foreclosure process in a state.
Real Estate Owned (REO).
Count of Short Sales for the month as reported (current month subject to revision).
Count of REO (Real Estate Owned) Sales for the month as reported
(current month subject to revision).

Foreclosure Completions
Short sales
REO Sales

June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 6

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

U.S. Department of
Housing
Urban the
Development
Office of
Policy
Development
Research | June 2015
The Obama Administration’s
Efforts
Toand
Stabilize
Housing |Market
and
Help
American and
Homeowners

SOURCES AND METHODOLOGY
B. Notes on Charts.
1. Monthly house price trends shown as changes in respective house price indices applied to a common base price set equal to the median price of an existing
home sold in January 2003 as reported by the National Association of Realtors. Indices shown: S&P/Case Shiller 20-metro composite index (NSA), January
2000 = 100, FHFA monthly (purchase-only) index for US (SA), January 1991 = 100, and CoreLogic-Distressed Sales Excluded (Monthly) for US (NSA),
January 2000 =100.
2. S&P/Case-Shiller 10-metro composite index (NSA) as reported monthly. Implied Case-Shiller futures index figures report forward expectations for the level
of the S&P/Case Shiller index as of the date indicated, estimated from prices of futures purchased on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange reported by CME
Group. The January 2009 market trend projection reports forward expectations estimated from prices of futures contracts reported by Radar Logic. Also see
additional note in Section C below.
3. Reported seasonally adjusted annual rates for new and existing home sales divided by 12.
4. HUD estimate of refinance originations based on MBA estimate of dollar volume of refinance originations.
5. Cumulative HAMP permanent modifications started, FHA loss mitigation and early delinquency interventions, plus proprietary modifications completed as
reported by HOPE Now Alliance. Some homeowners may be counted in more than one category. Foreclosure completions are properties entering Real
Estate Owned (REO) as reported by Realty Trac. Also see additional note in Section C below on HAMP Tier 2.
6. Beginning with the September 2012 release, filings of a notice of default or scheduled foreclosure auction, depending on which action starts the foreclosure process
in a state, are reported for foreclosure starts. Foreclosure defaults previously had been reported as a proxy for foreclosure starts. Foreclosure completions are
properties entering REO. Both as reported by Realty Trac.
7. See “Borrower Annual Savings” above.
8. FHA market shares as FHA purchase and refinance originations divided by HUD estimates of purchase and refinance mortgage originations as noted in
“Mortgage Originations” above. See additional note below on FHA market share.

C. Additional Notes.
Beginning with the February 2013 release, the House Price Expectations Chart was updated by replacing market expectations as they existed in January
2009 with expectations as of December 2011. Prices of futures purchased for the S&P/Case-Shiller 10-metro composite index, available on the web
from CME Group, were used to estimate expectations for December 2011 and for the current month. Market trend as of January 2009 is estimated from
percentage changes in house price futures based on a different house price index: RadarLogic RPX. This trend has been added back to the chart because it
imparts important information on how house price expectations have changed over time.
Beginning with the January 2013 release, mortgage aid under HAMP Tier 2 is included in the totals. Effective June 2012, HAMP Tier 2 expanded eligibility
requirements to further reduce foreclosures and help stabilize neighborhoods. For non-GSE loans, eligibility was expanded to allow for more flexible debt-toincome criteria and to include properties currently occupied by a tenant, as well as vacant properties which a borrower intends to rent.
FHA market share estimates are based on new methodology beginning with the October 2013 report; estimates were revised back through Q1 2013. See
the FHA Market Share report on their website for an explanation of the new methodology: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/program_offices/
housing/rmra/oe/rpts/fhamktsh/fhamktqtrly.
The Q1 2015 NSP projection count was revised for direct homeownership assistance.
The estimate for first-time buyers was revised downward from 38 percent to 33 percent beginning with the November 2014 release based on the NAR
Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers 2014.
Beginning with the January 2015 release, savings on permanent modifications are reported based on all permanent modifications instead of active
permanent modifications. This change was made because of a change in reporting by the Treasury Department, which now reports the median monthly
savings on all permanent modifications instead of active permanent modifications.

June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 7

U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development

U.S. Department of
Housing
Urban the
Development
Office of
Policy
Development
Research | June 2015
The Obama Administration’s
Efforts
Toand
Stabilize
Housing |Market
and
Help
American and
Homeowners

Appendix
The Administration has taken a broad set of actions to stabilize the housing market and help
American homeowners. Three years ago, stress in the financial system had severely reduced
the supply of mortgage credit, limiting the ability of Americans to buy homes or refinance
mortgages. Millions of responsible families who had made their monthly payments and had
fulfilled their obligations saw their property values fall. They also found themselves unable to
refinance at lower mortgage rates.
In February 2009, less than one month after taking office, President Obama announced the
Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan. As part of this plan and through other housing
initiatives, the Administration has taken the following actions to strengthen the housing market:
•

Supported Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to ensure continued access to affordable
mortgage credit;

•

The Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury purchased more than $1.4 trillion in agency
mortgage backed securities through independent MBS purchase programs, helping to
keep mortgage rates at historic lows;

•

Launched a modification initiative to help homeowners reduce mortgage payments to
affordable levels and to prevent avoidable foreclosures;

•

Launched a $23.5 billion Housing Finance Agencies Initiative to increase sustainable
homeownership and rental resources;

•

Supported the First Time Homebuyer Tax Credit, which helped more than 2.5 million
American families purchase homes;

•

Provided more than $5 billion in support for affordable rental housing through low
income housing tax credit programs and $6.92 billion in support for the Neighborhood
Stabilization Program to restore neighborhoods hardest hit by the concentrated
foreclosures;

•

Created the $7.6 billion HFA Hardest Hit Fund for innovative foreclosure prevention
programs in the nation’s hardest hit housing markets;

•

Launched the $1 billion Emergency Homeowners Loan Program, as part of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, to help unemployed and
underemployed homeowners pay a portion of their monthly mortgage.

•

Created an FHA Short Refinance Option that helps underwater borrowers refinance into
a new, stable, FHA-insured mortgage that is more aligned with actual property values.

•

Supported home purchase and refinance activity through the FHA to provide access to
affordable mortgage capital and help homeowners prevent foreclosures.

•

Implemented a series of changes to the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) in
an effort to attract more eligible borrowers who can benefit from refinancing their home
mortgages during this time of historically low mortgage rates.
###

June 2015 National Scorecard | Page 8