Home Equity Numbers Not As Sobering As Thought
February 16th, 2010 categories: Chicago Info/News, Economic Recovery, For Homeowners, Housing Market, Mortgage Info
Late last year, data company First American CoreLogic released a report saying that one in every four homeowners were underwater on their mortgage loans in the third quarter of 2009. These homeowners owed more on their mortgage loans than what their homes were worth.
It was a sobering statistic, especially considering how important home equity is to the wealth of most U.S. homeowners. You’d think from news like this that the total value of U.S. homeowners’ home equity would have plummeted during the recession and housing slump.
Surprisingly, though, you’d be wrong.
Syndicated real estate columnist Ken Harney recently reported on the fact that the net equity of U.S. homeowners actually grew from the first quarter of 2009 through the third quarter of that same year. It grew, in fact, by nearly $1 trillion during this period. Harney also reports that it grew by $418 billion from June 30 of 2009 through Sept. 30 of the same year.
These numbers pale in comparison to the way home equity grew during the boom years of the housing industry. But Harney points out that the most recent data suggest something positive: Prior to this report, the net equity of U.S. homeowners fell for three straight years. Perhaps the rising numbers, even if they aren’t rising as quickly as some would like, are more proof that the worst of the U.S. housing slump is over.
As far as I’m concerned, the numbers are positive. And these aren’t the only positive ones I’ve seen lately suggesting that the housing market, both locally and nationally, is finally on a rebound. Home sales continued to rise during the second half of 2009, both in Chicago and across the United States. At the same time, Crain’s Chicago Business recently wrote that even downtown Chicago condo sales rose in the fourth quarter of 2009, and that market had suffered greatly during the housing slump.
I’m not suggesting that the country’s housing market has recovered fully. But I do believe that numbers such as those showing that home equity has risen are a good sign that not only has the recovery begun, but that it’s picking up steam.
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