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Fannie Mae’s Research Shows Perceived Negative Equity is Hurting the Housing Market

underwaterFannie Mae's Economic, Strategic & Research Group has pointed out on multiple occasions that housing market growth has been slowed by tepid growth of household income.

In a new analysis released Monday, the Fannie Mae ESR Group announced that homeowners underestimating their home equity may also be a factor in weighing down housing markets.

The commentary was written by Steve Deggendorf, Director of Business Strategy for Fannie Mae's ESR Group, and Professor James A. Wilcox of the Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkley.

The National Housing Survey from Fannie Mae contains data that suggests that homeowners who are underestimating how much equity they have in their homes may also be underestimating in other areas, such as how large of a downpayment they could make with that equity; their chances of qualifying for a mortgage, assuming they need a large downpayment; and their opportunities for selling their house and buying another one.

Fannie Mae's National Housing Survey compared the percentage of homeowners who perceived they were underwater on their mortgages with the share of homeowners who were actually underwater as reported by CoreLogic. Fannie Mae offered survey respondents five choices for their total mortgage debt ranging from at least 20 percent more than the value of the home to at least 20 percent less than the value of the home, and found that through the end of 2011, the percentage of respondents with a mortgage who thought they were underwater was an average of 6 percentage points higher than the share estimated by CoreLogic.

The 20 percent spike in home prices from 2012 to 2014 reduced CoreLogic's estimate of the share of underwater borrowers from 21 percent down to 9 percent during that period, the authors said. But in the Fannie Mae NHS, the share of homeowners who perceived they had negative equity fell by only 3 percentage points from 26 percent down to 23 percent for that same period despite the large increase in home prices.

"Surprisingly, then, the significant rise in house prices was not perceived to lift many homeowners above water," the authors said.

Fannie Mae's NHS found that the percentage of borrowers who were "above water" also perceived lower equity gains than CoreLogic's estimates. For example, in June 2010, the first month Fannie Mae conducted the survey, the NHS reported that 32 percent of respondents perceived themselves to have significant home equity, compared to CoreLogic's estimate of 53 percent for the same month. That gap has widened as home prices have risen, according to Fannie Mae; by the end of 2014, only 37 percent of NHS respondents believed they had significant equity in their homes, compared to CoreLogic's estimate of 69 percent.

"CoreLogic’s estimates reflect that rising house prices not only lifted many homeowners above water, but also lifted many homeowners into having significant home equity," the authors wrote. "Despite the significant rise in house prices after 2011, the percent of homeowners who perceived they had significant home equity was almost unchanged—just as the percent who perceived they were underwater was almost unchanged. The 37 percent of homeowners who perceived at the end of 2014 that they had significant home equity had edged up only a little from its 2011 average of 35 percent."

The authors offered as a possible explanation for the divergence that a substantial group of homeowners may not recognize the rising value of their homes after 2011 – and even if they had recognized increasing home values, they have still underestimated how much the values and equity had increased during that time.

Other data from the NHS suggests misperceptions on the part of homeowners as to how much home prices had increased. Respondents in the NHS said during the third and fourth quarters of 2013 that they believed home values rose in the previous 12 months by 2.2 percent and 2.7 percent, respectively. The national FHFA home price index for that period showed that home prices rose by 8.2 percent and 7.6 percent, respectively.

"They perceived only about one-third of the actual percentage increases, in this case implying that, on average, they did not perceive additional home equity equal to 5 percent of their homes’ values," the authors wrote.

The authors said that the private sector or public sector could provide information and tools that would shrink the appreciation gap, which is geared to help homeowners have more accurate estimates of their home equity.

"Better appreciating how much their assets have appreciated ought to strengthen homeowners’ demand for housing, as well as their demands for other goods and services," the authors wrote. "Thus, in addition to the opportunity to help homeowners on an individual basis, shrinking the appreciation gap presents a potential opportunity to speed up the recovery of the housing and mortgage markets, better match workers with jobs, and strengthen the economy generally."

Click here to see the entire analysis.

About Author: Brian Honea

Brian Honea's writing and editing career spans nearly two decades across many forms of media. He served as sports editor for two suburban newspaper chains in the DFW area and has freelanced for such publications as the Yahoo! Contributor Network, Dallas Home Improvement magazine, and the Dallas Morning News. He has written four non-fiction sports books, the latest of which, The Life of Coach Chuck Curtis, was published by the TCU Press in December 2014. A lifelong Texan, Brian received his master's degree from Amberton University in Garland.
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