CoreLogic Introduces Housing Credit Index To Track Mortgage Credit Risk Trends
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The current HCI shows mortgage loans originated in Q3 2016 continued to exhibit low credit risk versus the previous quarter and Q3 2015. In terms of credit risk, Q3 2016 loans are among the highest-quality home loans originated since the year 2001.
"Mortgage originations over the past 15 years have exhibited a huge swing in credit tolerance, as shown in our Housing Credit Index. The index incorporates six risk attributes, including the three C's of underwriting—credit, collateral, and capacity. Using 2001 originations as a base year, the HCI shows the significant loosening of credit running up to 2006. This was followed by a dramatic tightening of credit in response to the real estate crash and a decline in high-credit-risk applicants t beginning with the Great Recession," said Dr.
Nothaft also observed that one of the consequences of this prolonged trend is that many potential homebuyers appear to believe that they cannot get a mortgage. "When we compare applications to closed loans, what we find is that lenders are originating the bulk of the applications that they are receiving, but the applications that are coming in tend to be from relatively high quality, low-risk applicants."
HCI Highlights as of Q3 2016 (Figures 2-3):
- Credit Score: The average credit score for homebuyers increased 5 points year over year between Q3 2015 and Q3 2016, rising from 734 to 739. In Q3 2016, the share of homebuyers with credit scores under 640 had dropped by more than three-quarters compared with 2001.
- Debt-to-Income: The average DTI for homebuyers fell slightly between Q3 2015 and Q3 2016, falling from 35.7 percent to 35.4 percent. In Q3 2016, the share of homebuyers with DTIs greater than or equal to 43 percent was about the same compared with 2001.
- Loan-to-Value: The LTV for homebuyers decreased about 1 percentage point between Q3 2015 and Q3 2016, declining from 86.8 percent to 85.6 percent. In Q3 2016, the share of homebuyers with an LTV greater than or equal to 95 percent had increased by more than one-fourth compared with 2001.
Figure 1: CoreLogic National Housing Credit Index
Figure 2: Credit Score of Purchase-Money Borrowers: Average and by Percentile
Figure 3: Averages of Credit Risk Attributes of Purchase-Money Borrowers
Figures 1 through 3 include originations through
For ongoing housing trends and data, visit the CoreLogic Insights Blog: http://www.corelogic.com/blog.
Methodology
The CoreLogic Housing Credit Index (HCI) measures the variation in mortgage credit risk attributes and uses loan attributes from mortgage loan servicing data that are combined in a principal component analysis (PCA) model. PCA can be used to reduce a complex data set (e.g., mortgage loan characteristics) to a lower dimension to reveal properties that underlie the data set.
The HCI combines six mortgage credit risk attributes, including borrower credit score, loan-to-value (LTV) ratio, debt-to-income (DTI) ratio, documentation level (full documentation of a borrower's economic conditions or incomplete levels of documentation, including no documentation), occupancy (owner-occupied primary residence, second home, or non-owner-occupied investment), and property type (whether property is a condominium or co-op). It spans more than 15 years, covers all loan products in both the prime and subprime lending segments and includes all 50 states and the
Source:
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