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5/5/2020

Obama Administration Releases April Housing Scorecard

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Press Center

Obama Administration Releases April Housing Scorecard
5/10/2013

New York metropolitan region sees strong local recovery in the housing market despite impact of Hurricane Sandy
WASHINGTON- The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the U.S. Department of the Treasury today
released the April edition of the Obama Administration's Housing Scorecard – a comprehensive report on the nation's housing market.
The latest data show important progress across many key indicators—as home values continue to rise and home sales remained strong in
April—although officials caution that the overall recovery remains fragile. The full Housing Scorecard is available online at
www.hud.gov/scorecard.
"The Obama Administration's efforts to speed the housing recovery are showing continued progress as the April scorecard indicators
highlight ongoing improvements throughout the housing market," said HUD Deputy Assistant Secretary for Economic Affairs Kurt Usowski.
"The annual increase in home prices is the highest in nearly seven years and sales of existing and new homes are both up over 10
percent from one year ago. But with so many households still struggling to make ends meet, we have important work ahead."
"The Administration's programs have improved outcomes for homeowners by setting new standards for mortgage assistance and putting
into place unprecedented consumer protections," said Treasury Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability Tim Massad. "HAMP continues
to offer struggling families meaningful relief to avoid foreclosure and strengthen local communities."
The April Housing Scorecard features key data on the health of the housing market and the impact of the Administration's foreclosure
prevention programs, including:
The Administration's foreclosure mitigation programs are providing relief for millions of homeowners as we continue to recover from an unprecedented housing
crisis. Nearly 1.6 million homeowner assistance actions have taken place through the Making Home Affordable Program, including more than 1.1 million permanent
modifications through the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), while the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has offered more than 1.7 million loss mitigation and
early delinquency interventions. The Administration's programs continue to encourage improved standards and processes in the industry, with HOPE Now lenders offering
families and individuals more than 3.5 million proprietary mortgage modifications through February.
Homeowners in HAMP continue to benefit from deep payment relief, helping them sustain their mortgage payments over time. As of March, more than 1.1 million
homeowners have received a permanent modification through the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), saving approximately $546 on their mortgage payments each
month, and an estimated $19.1 billion to date. Eighty-seven percent of homeowners starting the program in the past two and a half years have received a permanent
modification of their mortgage through HAMP. Payment relief is strongly correlated to sustainability of modified payments over time. As a result, HAMP modifications continue to
exhibit lower delinquency and re-default rates than industry modifications as reported by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. View the Making Home Affordable
Program Report with data through March 2013.

Also featured this month in the Administration's Housing Scorecard is a regional spotlight on market strength in the New York metropolitan
area. The foreclosure crisis in the Metropolitan area developed later and differently than in other areas of the nation. While home price
appreciation during the housing bubble progressed more rapidly than it did nationally, home prices in the region did not fall as sharply.
"The New York housing market is seeing the same signs of greater stability that the national data show for the broader housing market,"
said Usowski. "As this Regional Spotlight reports, the Administration's efforts have helped nearly 231,600 New York metropolitan area
households avoid foreclosure. A strong local economic recovery is underway despite the impact of Hurricane Sandy, but we have much
more to do to reach the many households who still face trouble and to help the New York market recover more broadly."
The Housing Scorecard Regional Spotlight features data on the health of the New York metropolitan housing market and impact of efforts
to help homeowners at the local level, as well as a summary of the added impacts on the local housing market from the devastation
brought by Hurricane Sandy including:
Economic and housing market conditions in the New York metropolitan area are improving. The unemployment rate for the region peaked at 9.3 percent in February
2010 and has since fallen to 8.4 percent as of March 2013. Although the share of distressed mortgages remains high, the foreclosure completion rate has remained well below
the national rate.

The Administration's Hardest Hit Fund and Neighborhood Stabilization Programs have fueled local foreclosure prevention efforts and market stability, while nearly
231,600 households have received mortgage modifications, many directly through Administration programs. Treasury provided $300 million to the State of New Jersey
to provide assistance to struggling homeowners through the Hardest Hit Fund. The number of homeowners benefitting from the program has continued to increase due to

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5/5/2020

Obama Administration Releases April Housing Scorecard

growing demand. Moreover, approximately $110 million has been awarded to the New York metropolitan region through HUD's Neighborhood Stabilization Program to help
purchase or redevelop residential properties and address the effects of abandoned and foreclosed housing. Both programs have helped provide increased stability to the New
York housing market.
While the impacts of Hurricane Sandy on individual homeowners and affected communities were devastating, the overall economic impacts on the job market and
employment in the region show an immediate spike in initial jobless claims and a drop in total employment after the storm, both of which rebounded quickly. Total
employment in the New York metropolitan area, which fell by 32,000 jobs in November, increased by 53,200 in December to exceed total employment just before the storm.

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