One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We’re Near Bottom
Infinite forecasting
One in five American mortgages were deemed to be under water in the fourth quarter of 2009, according to Zillow.com today. This stat has many worried that this alone will halt the possible recovery of the real estate market as the percentage of underwater homes rose to 21.4% in the fourth quarter and the Zillow Home Value Index fell 5% year over year, down to $186,200.
“The good news is that, for those markets that will see a double dip in home values before reaching a definitive bottom, this second dip will not be a return to the magnitude of depreciation seen earlier, but rather will look more like a modest aftershock of the earlier downturn,” said Zillow chief economist Stan Humphries according to HousingWire.
Humphries continues, “The prevalence of markets in or near a double-dip situation shows that we are not yet at the bottom, in terms of home values.”
But wait a minute
Zillow calling their own data points definitive isn’t being bought by all industry insiders. Washington D.C. Realtor, Craig Barrett said, “It’s a tough business to call pinnacle points or definitive market movements. I’ve read several opinions that describe market recovery as a W, tilted L or a prolonged U. However, most agree recovery is not a quick rebound such as a V. It is interesting Zillow forecasts a definitive bottom in the 2nd quarter. With Government home buyer programs wrapping up as prices bottom, it may make for opportune conditions for some.”
With foreclosures at historic rates and upset on the Hill (like Barney Frank calling to abolish Fannie and Freddie), no one can be certain of how the market will shake out just as no one was certain that the bottom would fall out. Are you cautiously optimistic or are you going to brace yourself for another rough year?
Start spreading the news...
This article published on Thursday, February 11th, 2010 at 12:01 am | Contact the editor
About this Columnist (Full Profile)
AGBeat Editor-in-Chief: Lani, named one of Real Estate’s 100 Most Influential, as well as 12 Most Influential Women in Real Estate, is a business writer hailing from the great state of Texas in the city of Austin. As a digital native, Lani is immersed not only in advanced technologies and new media, but is also a stats nerd often burried in piles of reports. Lani is a proven leader, thoughtful speaker, and vested partner at AGBeat.
Email Lani RosalesComments (13)
Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed
Social Shares & Links Back
- Janie Coffey:
@agentgenius One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We’re Near Bottom http://bit.ly/aFGtpB
- CBRB_Alexandria:
RT @JanieC: @agentgenius One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We’re Near Bottom http://bit.ly/aFGtpB
- Dan Morgan:
One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We're Near Bottom: One in five American mortgages were deemed to be … http://bit.ly/bjvg6J
- Quick Sale Homes:
One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We're Near Bottom http://bit.ly/c7vf8v
- MortgageCroc:
One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We're Near Bottom http://bit.ly/d0HY4d
- Allen Murray:
RT @QuickSaleHomes One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We're Near Bottom http://bit.ly/c7vf8v
- topsy_top20k_en:
agentgenius.com NEW One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We’re Near Bottom http://bit.ly/cXLC34
- AgentGenius:
#agnow Even looking outside the housing market, the overall "fundamentals" paint a picture too grim for anything bu… http://bit.ly/ba38kr
- AgentGenius:
#agnow All markets are local. I think some markets will bottom out – but I'm not thinking mine will. It has anoth… http://bit.ly/ba38kr
- Are You Thinking of Walking Away From Your Underwater Mortgage? | Bucking The Real Estate Trend-Waynesville and Maggie Valley Real Estate:
[...] One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We’re Near Bottom (agentgenius.com) [...]
- AgentGenius:
#agnow [...] One in Five Mortgages Underwater, Zillow Says We’re Near Bottom (agentgenius.com) [...] http://bit.ly/ba38kr














Even looking outside the housing market, the overall “fundamentals” paint a picture too grim for anything but another ugly year for Real Estate. The Big Hanging Question Mark for me is: to what extent with the Federal government get it’s act together and start seriously addressing the problem? I don’t think 2009 was sufficiently ugly to get the Obama Admin to re-think the core tenet of their strategy, which is keeping home prices artificially high. 2010 might be another long year of homeowners in limbo.
All markets are local. I think some markets will bottom out – but I’m not thinking mine will. It has another leg down to go. Then it will be a long slow slog to go back up. I wish some of my sellers fully appreciated that fact. Many have be spurning good offers on the table because they could have gotten more a couple of years ago.