Equity boom slows, but some pep remains

It’s official: The equity boom, which has added an estimated $1.6 trillion to the personal net wealth of American homeowners in the past year, has slowed dramatically. It’s not over by any means. It has just lost some of its previous pep.
In the latest quarterly data from the Federal Reserve, which tracks residential real estate, home-equity holdings across the country rose by $177 billion. That sounds massive but it’s actually down significantly from the previous quarter, when equity soared by $452 billion – nudging half a trillion.
So what’s going on and how does this affect you? First, some basics. Your equity is the difference between the current resale value of your home and the mortgage debt you’ve got on it. If your house would sell this weekend for $300,000 and your mortgage balance is $150,000, you’ve got $150,000 in equity, not counting transaction costs. This is wealth stored away in your own private real estate savings account.
You can sit on it, borrow against it to finance home improvements or college tuitions, and you can factor it into your retirement plans. According to the Federal Reserve, home-equity holdings in the latest quarter hit $10.84 trillion. That’s up from $6.4 trillion as recently as 2011. These are big, brain-numbing numbers no doubt, but equity is a crucially important subject for millions of people who are counting on it.
The rapid growth in equity has been powered primarily by post-recession gains in home-selling prices and by pay-downs of mortgage principal debts owed to banks. Total homeowner mortgage debt outstanding has continued to fall steadily, and is now well below what it was in 2009. Roughly one of three homes is mortgage-free, owned outright, according to industry estimates. Another approximately 11 million owners have equity stakes of at least 50 percent, reports housing data firm RealtyTrac in a study released last week.
The flip side of the upbeat equity picture is negative equity – underwater homes where debt exceeds resale value. Fifteen percent of all houses with mortgages are still in serious negative-equity territory. The RealtyTrac study defines “serious” as owing at least 25 percent more on the mortgage than the resale value of the home – an outstanding unpaid balance of $375,000 or more on a $300,000 property, $500,000 or more on a $400,000 house. Despite the increases in prices that many parts of the country have experienced since the recovery began in 2012, an estimated 8.1 million houses remain seriously underwater, making them difficult to resell or refinance.
Much of the negative-equity pain is concentrated in a handful of states where home values went into free fall during the housing bust years or where local economic growth has lagged the national recovery and unemployment remains high. In Nevada, nearly one of every three (31 percent) homes remains in negative territory; in Florida, it’s 28 percent, Illinois 26 percent, Michigan 25 percent, Rhode Island 22 percent and Ohio 20 percent. One surprise on the seriously negative equity list: Maryland, which contains some of the wealthiest counties in the country, has an 18 percent seriously negative rate. Virginia comes in at just 8 percent and Washington D.C. at 10 percent.
Arizona, which experienced among the steepest drops in prices during the recession, has rebounded with vigor and now has a serious negative equity rate of 18 percent, just slightly above the national average of 15 percent. California, where post-bust home price appreciation has far outpaced all other states in recent years, now has a below-average serious negative rate: 12 percent.
Where do the folks with high equity stakes live – those with 50 percent plus? Not surprisingly they tend to have owned their homes for well over a decade and live in higher-cost houses ($500,000 and up) in above-average priced markets. Hawaii has more equity-rich residents than any other state – 35 percent. New York and Vermont come in next at 33 percent, followed by California at 30 percent and the District of Columbia at 27 percent.
Bottom line on the latest equity numbers: They’re basically good news. Fewer people are underwater – back in the dark days of the bust more than half of owners in some of the worst-hit markets were underwater. Plus the slowdown in prices nationwide is healthy. More modest growth in list prices means more potential purchasers can afford your house when it’s time to sell. •


Ken Harney is a member of The Washington Post Writers Group. He can be reached at kenharney@earthlink.net.

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