The share of mortgages 90-plus days past due and never in forbearance is high, but many of them had troubles predating the pandemic, the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s latest report shows.
Sixty-three percent of the 487,976 seriously delinquent mortgages not in loss mitigation never entered forbearance, but 60% of those loans were pre-2009 originations, according to the analysis of Black Knight data by the Philadelphia Federal Reserve’s Risk Assessment, Data Analysis, and Research group.
The finding suggests that the high share of seriously delinquent borrowers without forbearance or other hardship accommodations may have more to do with the Great Recession than the pandemic.
“Many of these loans likely had been worked out before, thus
Borrowers do get some relief from historic loan-performance problems after some time has passed. Delinquencies, for example, typically fall off credit reports after seven years (even when
The report also reaffirmed that even within the universe of 434,803 borrowers who have exited forbearance and entered loss mitigation, the number of people who