Fitch: US Home Equity Loan Asset Quality Showing Resilience
The threat of HELOC delinquencies is noteworthy because the explosive wave of HELOCs that were underwritten by US banks in the 2003-2007 period. In 2004 alone, HELOCs outstanding increased nearly 42%. The product remained tremendously popular over the following several years, and HELOCs today account for the vast majority of overall home-equity portfolios at US banks.
The prevailing HELOC product during the 2003-2007 timeframe had an interest-only period for 10 years, followed by a 10-year repayment period that included both interest payments as well as principal repayment. As borrowers transition from relatively affordable interest-only payments to a more costly fully amortizing payment, Fitch expects some stress for a certain segment of borrowers, especially those with little or no equity in their home or low FICO scores.
On a national level, FDIC data shows that of the \$484 billion of home equity line balances outstanding at the end of first-quarter 2015, the 90-day past due level is about 2.72%, virtually unchanged from one year ago. Ninety-day past due HELOCs have remained relative stable since reaching a peak of 2.88% in third-quarter 2012. There has also been considerable improvement in net charge offs over the past several years (also seen in the chart). Despite this improvement, 90-day past due and nonaccrual HELOCs, as well as US residential mortgages generally, still remain well above precrisis levels.
Some of the performance to date of these resetting HELOCs is likely attributable to generally improving economic conditions, home price appreciation, consumer deleveraging and more prudent spending. Home valuations nationally have eclipsed 2004 and 2005 levels and are even above the precrisis peaks in many parts of the US. This means that many HELOC borrowers may have at least as much equity in their homes today as they did in 2004 and 2005 when the loans were drawn. With equity available, these borrowers may be eligible for loan restructurings or be more inclined to remain current on their mortgage-related obligations.
Fitch originally flagged HELOC reset risks in a April 2013 report titled, "U.S. Banks - Home Equity Reset Risk Hitting the Reset Button in 2014."
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