The housing crisis is not over for many borrowers. According to an article in the Wall Street Journal, the percentage of mortgages 60 days or more late rose to 5.65% in May, up from 5.48% in April. It is the highest level on record. In addition, the number of homes in the foreclosure process jumped, after remaining stagnant for a few months due to several moratoria. Around 257,000 homes entered the foreclosure process in May, up 5.7% from April, and 34% from a year ago.
What is perhaps most interesting about these statistics is that the number of subprime mortgages going into foreclosure has decreased 16% from a year ago. Yet the number of prime mortgages going into foreclosure is up 83%. This change may reflect the effect the recession has had on middle and upper-middle class borrowers. While many of these borrowers may have had the salaries and credit scores to qualify for a prime mortgage in the past, the market has shed many white collar jobs in recent months, affecting these borrowers, many of whom had money invested in the stock market and did not see this coming. Even so, these statistics are quite sobering.
It is important to remember that reverse mortgages can be one way for senior borrowers in these situations avoid foreclosure. For more information, see Foreclosure Prevention.
And let’s hope that next month’s numbers are better than these!