Skip to main content

Foreclosure Activity Rose in August As Moratoria End

Sep 21, 2021
Black Knight Logo

Black Knight: Delinquency Rate Falls To 4% For First Time Since Early 2020

KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The number of loans in active foreclosure increased from a month earlier for the first time in 2021.
  • Serious delinquencies fell by 108,000 from July, and by more than 1 million from last August.

The national delinquency rate on first-lien mortgages fell to 4% in August, the lowest rate since the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic caused mortgage delinquencies to spike in early 2020, Black Knight reported today.

Serious delinquencies — including those in active forbearance — fell by 108,000 from July. While they have fallen by more than 1 million from last August, they are still roughly 930,000 above pre-pandemic levels, the data and analytics company said.

Black Knight’s report is its first look at August 2021 end-of-month statistics, derived from its database representing the majority of the national mortgage market.

There were 7,100 foreclosure starts in August, the most in eight months after foreclosure moratoria on federally backed loans were lifted at the end of July, Black Knight said. Despite that increase —driven primarily by restarting the process on loans that were in foreclosure before the moratoria were imposed — start volumes remained 80% below the levels of a year earlier, the company said.

In addition, while — rising by 2,000 to 142,000 — volumes remained near record lows and are down 44% from pre-pandemic levels, Black Knight said.

Prepayment activity rose by nearly 9% in August, with interest rates — which have held below 3% in recent months — continuing to spur both refinance and purchase activity.

Overall, more than 2.26 million properties nationwide in August were 30 or more days past due on their loan payments or in foreclosure, Black Knight said. That was down by 82,000 from July, but down more than 1.6 million in August 2020.

The top five states by non-current percentage — combining foreclosures and delinquencies as a percentage of active loans — were Mississippi at 7.71%, Louisiana at 7.08%, Oklahoma at 5.81%, Hawaii at 5.75% and New York at 5.64%.

The bottom five states were Idaho at .207%, Colorado at 2.43, Washington and Utah at 2.55%, and Montana at 2.67%.

About the author
David Krechevsky was an editor at NMP.
Published
Sep 21, 2021
Home Sellers' Q1 Profit Margins Declined Quarterly, Annually

ATTOM reported decrease of 55.3% in the first quarter – the smallest level in more than two years.

Apr 25, 2024
Every Dollar A Fraudster Makes, A Financial Firm Loses $4.41

U.S. investment firms and credit lenders see a 9% annual increase in the financial impact of fraud.

Apr 24, 2024
Home Loan Applications See 2.7% Drop

The MBA's weekly mortgage applications survey shows decline in last week's application volume

Apr 24, 2024
Monthly, Yearly Jump In New Home Sales In March

The growth coincides with roughly a quarter of builders saying they cut prices last month.

Apr 23, 2024
Home Price Growth Expected To Remain Stagnant

Redfin Home Price Index shows 0.6% growth month-over-month

Apr 23, 2024
Hotter-Than-Expected Inflation Keeps Rates Higher

Fannie Mae forecasts fewer Federal Reserve rate cuts this year.

Apr 23, 2024