iEmergent Announces 2012-2016 U.S. Mortgage Volume Forecasts

Provides mortgage lenders crucial data about shifting housing finance markets

DES MOINES, Iowa--()--iEmergent, a Des Moines, Iowa-based market research, forecasting and advisory services firm for the financial services, mortgage and real estate industries, issued its 2012 - 2016 U.S. Total Mortgage Volume Forecast today. The firm projects that 2012 U.S. total residential mortgage lending volume could fall as far as 23% below the estimated $1.1 Trillion in total volume currently expected for 2011, indicating that housing and home finance will continue to struggle even if the economy starts to turn slightly toward recovery. Highlights include:

     

-- 2012 Total Purchase Volume:

2.14 million loans for $406 billion

-- 2012 Refinance Volume Range:

2.00 million loans for $419.6 billion (low)

2.42 million loans for $508 billion (high)

-- 2012 Expected Total Mortgage Volume:

4.14 million loans for $825.6 billion (low)

4.56 million loans for $914 billion (high)

 

The projected 2012 purchase volume of $406 Billion represents a 1.49% decrease from estimated purchase volume for 2011, marking the sixth straight year in which purchase mortgage volume has been mired in recession. Furthermore, the 23% decrease in total volume is due to an expected drop in refinance activity. Although low mortgage interest rates and the expansion of refinance opportunities to include more homeowners through HARP may stimulate periods of greater refinance activity, elevated refinance volumes will be unsustainable.

The rates at which individual local markets and household segments generate purchase mortgages are the lowest in 20 years, as the banking and mortgage industry continues to be faced with a litany of reputational issues, and significant economic obstacles remain for U.S. households. As a result of the housing collapse that began in 2007, the total size of the available household pool has now fallen to levels last seen in 1994. Forty percent (40%) of all U.S. households are no longer part of the 2012 pool of potential homebuyers and homeowners who might be eligible, able, willing and ready to purchase or refinance a home.

“Many experienced economists and banking leaders believe that when GDP gets back on a modest growth track, pent-up home buying demand and a rapid growth in household formations will quickly trigger a home financing resurgence. Yet this year, even as mortgage rates have reached unprecedented low levels, purchase mortgage demand still languishes as home buyers are trapped by debt loads, a still-sluggish economy and persistent job anxieties,” said Dennis Hedlund, President of iEmergent. “American consumers no longer have the resources or the spending power to propel the economy out of danger. The longer that households struggle to stabilize the basic needs of their lives, the more their confidence in institutions and future economic opportunity will wane. As a result, mortgage loan transactions will diminish as household pools shrink faster than they can be replenished.”

“2012 and the next four years will continue to create considerable market, volume and revenue risks for lenders of all sizes,” said Hedlund.

About iEmergent
Founded in 2000, Des Moines, Iowa-based iEmergent provides mortgage lending forecasts, data, and market analytics to the mortgage lending, housing and real estate industries. The company offers an extensive variety of data products, including detailed market intelligence and planning tools that are designed to help lenders execute market-driven strategies that not only improve their front-end origination efficiencies, but also deepen their connections and commitments to American households and homeowners. For more information, visit www.iemergent.com.

Contacts

iEmergent
Media Contact:
Laird Nossuli, 515-327-0070

Release Summary

iEmergent forecasts that 2012 mortgage market volume could fall as low as $830 Billion. The rate at which markets generate purchase mortgage are the lowest in 20 years.

Contacts

iEmergent
Media Contact:
Laird Nossuli, 515-327-0070