Mortgage delinquency drop forecast for '12

A foreclosure sign on Long Island. (July 2011) Credit: AP
If the U.S. economy does not suffer more setbacks, the rate of mortgage holders behind on their payments should decline significantly by the end of next year, according to credit reporting agency TransUnion.
Mortgage delinquency rates -- the ratio of borrowers 60 or more days behind on their payments -- will likely rise to about 6 percent through the first three months of 2012, TransUnion said in its annual delinquency forecast issued Wednesday.
But by the end of next year, it could drop to 5 percent, TransUnion said. That's well off the peak of 6.89 percent seen in the fourth quarter of 2009.
Chicago-based TransUnion's forecast takes into consideration several factors, including expectations that consumer confidence and the economy will improve next year.
Also, banks are expected to get a good portion of pending foreclosures off their books next year, said Charlie Wise, TransUnion director of research and consulting.
Banks are still working through a backlog of foreclosures created by issues including the robo-signing scandal, in which bank officials signed mortgage documents without verifying the information they contained. Banks had to review foreclosures across the country to make sure their paperwork was in order. That slowed the process, temporarily boosting delinquency rates.
Helping to cut the mortgage delinquency rate are a slowly improving job market and a stabilizing housing market.
While the drop will be significant, the rate will remain well above the pre-recession average of 1.5 percent to 2 percent.



