The volume of mortgages in active forbearance saw its greatest decline since the pandemic began, according to new data released by Black Knightâs McDash Flash Forbearance Tracker.
As of October 6, 2.97 million homeowners carried COVID-19-related forbearance plans, representing 5.6 percent of all active mortgages. This is down from 6.8 percent one week earlier.
For the week ending Oct. 9, Black Knight found there were 649,000 fewer active forbearances compared to the previous week, an 18 percent decline. This marked the first time since mid-April that the total number of forbearance plans were below the 3 million level.
Black Knight attributed this activity to the first wave of forbearance plans reaching the end of their initial six-month term. Furthermore, Black Knight noted this weekâs decline was significantly greater than the 435,000 weekly reduction that was recorded the first wave of forbearances hit the three-month mark back in early July.
This weekâs decline impacted all investor classes, with the greatest reduction in active forbearances occurring in portfolio-held and private labeled security loansâa drop of 228,000 (-24 percent). Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) and FHA/VA loans saw declines of 213,000 (-16 percent) and 208,000 (-15 percent), respectively.
Black Knight added that 5.6 percent of loans in private label securities or banksâ portfolios and 4 percent of all GSE-backed loans and 9.4 percent of all FHA/VA loans remain in active plans.
âSome 78 percent of loans in active forbearance have had their terms extended at some point since March,â Black Knight said in a blog posting. âGiven that there are another 800,000 forbearances reaching the end of their initial six-month terms over the next 30 days, itâs likely we will see heightened expiration/extension activity throughout October.â
Blackâs Knight new data report did not incorporate geographic considerations into forbearance activity. However, a separate report issued by ATTOM Data Solutions determined that the West and Midwest were less likely to experience COVID-related economic challenges while pockets of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions risked being more vulnerable during the third quarter of this year.
ATTOMâs report showed clusters in New York City, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. at greater risk in the third quarter, while 32 of the 50 most vulnerable counties were spread among Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Delaware.