Black Knight: As Interest Rates Hit 22-Year Highs, 51% of Homebuyers Face $2,000+ Monthly Mortgage Payments; Nearly a Quarter Face $3,000 Payments or More
- The average monthly principal and interest payment for homebuyers has increased by 60% over the past two years to reach a record high of $2,306 in July 2023.
- More than half of homebuyers in July had monthly payments of over $2,000, compared to just 18% two years ago.
- Nearly one in four homebuyers in July had monthly payments of over $3,000, up from 5% in 2021.
- Mortgage holders withdrew $39B in equity in Q2 2023, up slightly from Q1 but only half the volume of Q1 2022 before rates began to rise.
- Equity withdrawals have declined by roughly 55% since rates began to rise 15 months ago, resulting in nearly $200B less equity being injected into the economy.
- None.
- In July 2023, the average monthly principal and interest (P&I) payment for borrowers purchasing a home using a 30-year fixed-rate loan was
– before taxes and insurance are even included$2,306 - That's the highest average P&I payment on record and has risen by
60% (+ ) over the past two years; it's also poised to push even higher given recent rate increases$871 - More than half of such July purchase originations had a payment of more than
a month, up from just$2,000 18% 2 years ago, with nearly a quarter (23% ) having payments of more than – up from$3,000 5% in 2021 - Beyond purchase affordability, rising interest rates are also having a clear and decisive impact on how much equity mortgage holders are willing to withdraw from their homes, and by what means
- Mortgage holders tapped
in equity in Q2 2023 via cash-out refis as well as home equity loans and lines of credit, up modestly from the first quarter but just half the volume of Q1 2022 ($39B ) before rates began to rise$79B - From 2010-2021, mortgage holders withdrew an average
0.92% of available tappable equity each quarter; that share has fallen to just0.4% over the past three quarters, resulting in a roughly55% decline in equity withdrawals - Put simply, since rates began their climb roughly 15 months ago, nearly
in equity that might have otherwise been withdrawn and injected into the broader economy has remained untapped$200B
"The average principal and interest payment among borrowers purchasing a home using a 30-year fixed-rate loan hit its highest point ever in July at
"Rates aren't just hampering prospective homebuyers, though. While tappable equity levels have returned to near- record highs, rising rates are having a clear impact on how – and how much – equity mortgage holders are willing to withdraw from their homes. All in – including first-lien cash-out refis and second-lien home equity loans and lines – we saw mortgage holders withdraw
Data on home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) suggests further headwinds. Pegged to the prime rate, which rose later in the cycle than first-lien rates, HELOCs were the beneficiaries of Q2/Q3 2022 30-year rate movements, with borrowers at times able to get lower rates on HELOCs than a cash-out refinance – a historically rare occurrence. In the time since, HELOC rates have risen along with aggressive Fed rate hikes, with the average HELOC offering now above
Much more information on these and other topics can be found in this month's Mortgage Monitor.
About the Mortgage Monitor
The Data & Analytics division of Black Knight manages the nation's leading repository of loan-level residential mortgage data and performance information covering the majority of the overall market, including tens of millions of loans across the spectrum of credit products and more than 160 million historical records. The combined insight of the Black Knight HPI and Collateral Analytics' home price and real estate data provides one of the most complete, accurate and timely measures of home prices available, covering
Black Knight's research experts carefully analyze this data to produce a summary supplemented by dozens of charts and graphs that reflect trend and point-in-time observations for the monthly Mortgage Monitor Report. To review the full report, visit: https://www.blackknightinc.com/data-reports/
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SOURCE Black Knight, Inc.
FAQ
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