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Why the Housing Boom is Good for Minority Homeownership

Fourteen years ago, improving minority homeownership was front burner issue.  In 2002, the Bush Administration even set a goal of expanding the number of minorities who owned their own homes by 5.5 million—approximately the number of existing homes sold in a very good year.

The subprime crash and housing depression put a sudden end to that effort.  Minority homeownership plummeted and, surprisingly, never achieved the attention from top policy makers in two Obama administrations that it enjoyed under their predecessor.

For homeownership in general, the housing depression was depressing.  For minorities, it was a disaster.  For African-American households, the homeownership rate peaked at 49.4 percent in 2004 and bottomed out at 41.9 in the first quarter of this year, a decline of 7.5 points.  Hispanic American homeownership reached a high of 49.8 percent in 2006 and fell to 44.1 percent in the first quarter of this year, down 5.7 points.  By comparison, white non-Hispanic homeownership peaked at 76 percent in 2004 and fell to 73.4 percent by 2013 when the housing recovery officially began, a decline of only 2.6 points.

Do Higher Prices Help Minorities?

Conventional wisdom maintains that rising prices are bad for minorities because they are priced out of affordable housing, especially in gentrifying urban neighborhoods where today young Millennial whites are driving prices sky high.  However, a new study by two economists at the Federal Trade Commission published in the Journal of Housing Economics this month suggest the exact opposite is the case.  Higher prices mean better times for minorities.

Rising prices are good for minorities, the economists argue, because they are accompanied by a loosening of lending standards.  Rising values alter lenders; judgments about acceptable levels of risk and expected rates of return on housing-related assets.  “This variation may then translate into changes in the out-comes experienced by minority borrowers relative to non-minorities,’ they concluded

The FTC economists, Christopher H. Wheeler and Luke M. Olson, studied data gathered for the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) from 1990 to 2013 to estimate the relationship between annual metropolitan area-level house price inflation and the extent to which African American borrowers are denied mortgages relative to comparable White borrowers. The results suggest that, during housing booms, differences in the conditional denial rates between Whites and African Americans become smaller.  Booms are also associated with decreases in the fraction of a lender’s denials in a metro area coming from majority Black Census tracts, on average.

 

As prices rise (red line) the difference between loan denials for Whites and Blacks declines (blue line) and vice-versa.

 

A 10 Percent Rise in Prices Lowers Denials Gap by 1 percent  

Wheeler and Olson found that increases in house price inflation are significantly associated with differences between Black and White loan denials.  As the rate of inflation within a metropolitan area increases, the gap between Blacks and Whites shrinks, suggesting that, in times (or places) in which real estate is booming, mortgage lending appears to be more equal across individuals of these two racial groups than in times (or places) in which real estate is declining.  A 10 percentage point increase in the rate of house price inflation, for example, tends to be accompanied by a 0.5 to 1 percentage point decrease in the gap between the Black denial rate and the White denial rate, on average. These magnitudes amount to approximately 5–10% of the overall mean Black–White denial difference.

In down times. the findings may suggest that redlining—the systematic avoidance of lending to certain neighborhoods—may be at work.  “We believe these findings raise an important consideration for agencies engaged in fair lending enforcement, as well as mortgage lenders that attempt to monitor their own fair lending compliance. The (apparent) systematic variation of underwriting standards with local house price inflation implies that perceived inequality in lending outcomes between races also varies over the housing cycle,” they wrote.

Lending Standards Are Looser, Minority Homeownership is up

The study stopped at 2013, just as the current recovery was starting. However, a quick review of minority homeownership data suggests that the study is right.  Consider:

  1. Lending standards, especially for FHA purchase loans, which are widely used by minority buyers, have loosened significantly since November 2012, before the recovery began and October 2015, the most recent Ellie Mae Origination Insights report.  Median FICO scores are down from 704 to 654; loan-to-value rations are also down from 95 percent to 81 percent; and debt-to-income ratios are up from 28/41 to 29/46.
  2. After bottoming out in the first quarter of this year, homeownership rates for both African American and Hispanic Americans shot up in the following two quarters.  The African American rate rose from 41.9 to 42 percent in the second quarter, then fell back to 42.6 percent in the third quarter. The Hispanic American rate rose from 44.1 percent to 46.1 percent.  During the same period, the White rate fell from 72 to 71.9 percent.

If these trends continue, perhaps the gap between white and minority homeownership will continue to shrink as the gap between denial rates declines.

 

 


 

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