The number of insured mortgages in default reached a record high in November, according to data released Monday by the Mortgage Insurance Companies of America. The trade group, which represents most of the nation’s mortgage insurers, said that number of insured borrowers falling more than 60 days late on payments jumped to 61,033 last month — up from from 45,325 one year ago and 59,308 in October. The cure rate, defined as the number of cures relative to the number of defaults, rose slighly in November to 60.8 percent from 56.1 percent one month earlier. That number is still far below the cure rate recorded for November 2006, at 75.7 percent. Some important points, made in an earlier post here at HW: cure rates below 60 percent are rarely seen; and the MI industry has never recorded an annual cure rate below 79 percent, according to available data. With today’s report, the 12-month moving average now stands at just 68.6 percent. MI application activity dropped in November, as well, with MICA members reporting 173,259 applications, 5.6 percent less than the 183,659 received in October. The dollar volume of primary insurance written on newly originated 1-to-4 family conventional mortgage loans totaled $24,163.1 million in November, a 7.9 percent decrease from the previous month’s $26,260.5 million. For more information, visit http://www.privatemi.com.
Paul Jackson is the former publisher and CEO at HousingWire.see full bio
Most Popular Articles
Latest Articles
From resilience to antifragility: Rethinking cybersecurity for real estate and mortgage professionals
In information security, we’ve long spoken about resilience. The goal has been to withstand an attack, recover quickly, and return to business as usual. But in today’s environment—where attackers adapt and evolve daily—resilience is no longer enough. We must go further. We must embrace antifragility.
-
From local to global: RE/MAX’s Chris Lim on the next era of real estate relationships
-
Stop marketing like it’s 2008: You’re invisible
-
RE/MAX accelerates real estate innovation with AI and technology
-
Retirement plans for small-business owners have visible generational gaps
-
VA loans rise as housing market shifts toward buyers
Paul Jackson is the former publisher and CEO at HousingWire.see full bio
