Letβs face it β life can throw some curveballs. Whether itβs a job loss, unexpected…
Why the Forbearance Program Changed the Housing Market
When the pandemic hit in 2020, many experts thought the housing market would crash. They feared job loss and economic uncertainty would lead to a wave of foreclosures similar to when the housing bubble burst over a decade ago. Thankfully, the forbearance program changed that. It provided much-needed relief for homeowners so a foreclosure crisis wouldnβt happen again. Hereβs why forbearance worked.
Forbearance enabled nearly five million homeowners to get back on their feet in a time when having the security and protection of a home was more important than ever. Those in need were able to work with their banks and lenders to stay in their homes rather than go into foreclosure. Marina Walsh, Vice President of Industry Analysis at the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), notes:
βMost borrowers exiting forbearance are moving into either a loan modification, payment deferral, or a combination of the two workout options.β
As the graph below shows, with modification, deferral, and workout options in place, four out of every five homeowners in forbearance are either paid in full or are exiting with a plan. Theyβre able to stay in their homes.
What does this mean for the housing market?
Since so many people can stay in their homes and work out alternative options, there wonβt be a wave of foreclosures coming to the market. And while rising slightly since the foreclosure moratorium was lifted this year, foreclosures today are still nowhere near the levels seen in the housing crisis.
Forbearance wasnβt the only game changer, either. Lending standards have improved significantly since the housing bubble burst, and thatβs one more thing keeping foreclosure filings low. Todayβs borrowers are much more qualified to pay their home loans.
And while the majority of homeowners are exiting the forbearance program with a plan, for those who still need to make a change due to financial hardship or other challenges, todayβs record-level of equity is giving them the opportunity to sell their houses and avoid foreclosure altogether. Homeowners have options they just didnβt have in the housing crisis when so many people owed more on their mortgages than their homes were worth. Thanks to their equity and the current undersupply of homes on the market, homeowners can sell their houses, make a move, and not have to go through the foreclosure process that led to the housing market crash in 2008.
Thomas LaSalvia, Chief Economist with Moodyβs Analytics, states:
βThereβs some excess savings out there, over 2 trillion worth. . . . There are people that have ownership of those homes right now, that even in a downturn, theyβd still likely be able to pay that mortgage and wonβt have to hand over keys. And there wonβt be a lot of those distressed sales that happened in the 2008 crisis.β
Bottom Line
The forbearance program was a game changer for homeowners in need. Itβs one of the big reasons why we wonβt see a wave of foreclosures coming to the market.
Content previously posted on Keeping Current Matters