Mortgage fraud risk ticked up this summer when mistakes were more costly because of the high rate, purchase-heavy market, CoreLogic found.
The firm's National Mortgage Fraud Report showed the risk was up 1.6% between the first and second quarter this year, but experienced a 3.1% annual decline. At large, 1 in every 134 mortgage applications between April and June, or 0.75%, had indications of fraud.
"The current environment makes errors, delays and repurchases more costly," said Bridget Berg, senior leader of Loan Solutions at CoreLogic in a press release. "Ultimately, these factors have spurred many lenders to enact more careful loan screening procedures."
Those expenses compound
The CoreLogic report shows changes in risk indicator frequencies for types of fraud rather than based on instances of it. The information comes from its LoanSafe Fraud Manager software.
The company's findings add to the industry woes amid
The data also follows a FundingShield report in July showing elevated
Fraud rose annually in five of six CoreLogic categories, including double-digit rises in identity fraud (12%) and occupancy risk fraud (11.8%), which the firm tied to
The only fraud segment to fall annually was undisclosed real estate debt risk, dropping 17% overall and 21.8% for purchase transactions. The report attributed an expected continual decline to a
New York had the highest mortgage application fraud risk, driven by its rate of riskier 2-4 unit loans, Federal Housing Administration purchases and investment buys, CoreLogic said. The Empire State was followed by Florida, Connecticut, California and New Jersey, which were exposed to similar factors including higher rates of jumbo loans.
Massachusetts saw the largest year-over-year increase of fraud risk due to its concentration of 2-to-4 unit loans, five times the national average, the report found.
Home loans backed by the Department of Veterans Affairs are traditionally safe, CoreLogic noted, and the lowest risk of mortgage application fraud.