Some 4.2 million Americans are now using forbearance programs. However, the rate at which loans are going into forbearance is slowing, suggesting conditions are stabilizing.
Source: Inman News
Number of mortgages in forbearance keeps rising
More from CoronavirusMore posts in Coronavirus »
- The internet fell hard for real estate in 2021. But can the love affair last?
- Los Angeles apartment owners sue over COVID rent freeze
- Demand for urban homes will be ‘muted’ for years: McKinsey
- Chris Heller: Brokerages and teams are playing chicken. Who will win?
- Will migration fizzle out in 2023? History points to existential shift
More from coronavirus pandemicMore posts in coronavirus pandemic »
- Meet Inman’s 2023 ‘Person of the Year’: The Small Broker-Owner
- The internet fell hard for real estate in 2021. But can the love affair last?
- Los Angeles apartment owners sue over COVID rent freeze
- Chris Heller: Brokerages and teams are playing chicken. Who will win?
- Will migration fizzle out in 2023? History points to existential shift
More from COVID-19More posts in COVID-19 »
- After a big 2023, make no mistake: Artificial intelligence is here to stay
- High-income renters are top prize as ownership hurdles pile up: Poll
- Successful agents show up, Robert Reffkin says in remote-work rebuke
- Demand for urban homes will be ‘muted’ for years: McKinsey
- Chris Heller: Brokerages and teams are playing chicken. Who will win?
More from fannie maeMore posts in fannie mae »
- Biden’s relaxed new Freddie, Fannie refi requirements irk title industry
- New rules for scoring mortgage borrowers coming in Q4 2025
- Strength in home prices helped boost Fannie, Freddie 2023 profits
- New credit scores from FICO, VantageScore gaining traction
- Mortgage giants offering very low income homebuyers a spring break
More from freddie macMore posts in freddie mac »
- Biden’s relaxed new Freddie, Fannie refi requirements irk title industry
- New rules for scoring mortgage borrowers coming in Q4 2025
- Strength in home prices helped boost Fannie, Freddie 2023 profits
- New credit scores from FICO, VantageScore gaining traction
- Mortgage giants offering very low income homebuyers a spring break
More from ginnie maeMore posts in ginnie mae »
More from Housing and Urban DevelopmentMore posts in Housing and Urban Development »
More from hudMore posts in hud »
More from Industry NewsMore posts in Industry News »
- NAR (and now Compass) settled. Y’all had thoughts: The Download
- ICE on a signing spree for new ‘mortgage tech ecosystem’
- How commission chaos divided the real estate industry into 4 factions
- Agents storm TikTok with flood of complaints after NAR settlement
- WATCH LIVE: Ed Zorn, NextHome CEO on the $418M NAR settlement
More from lendingMore posts in lending »
- Inventory problems to stick around for a ‘very long time’
- WATCH: The right lender can make buyer love letters obsolete
- Majority of buyers lean on agents, not banks, for financing info: Poll
- JPMorgan CEO: Real estate is going to be a big problem for some banks
- Inside Zillow’s far-reaching bid to jolt its mortgage business
More from Mike FratantoniMore posts in Mike Fratantoni »
- Homebuyer mortgage demand down for 5th consecutive week
- Economic Outlook: Recession may be what drives rates down in 2024
- Economists agree rates have peaked. But will they come down?
- Hiring is on the rise, but also worse than once thought. What gives?
- Fed Chair Jerome Powell signals latest rate hike could be the last
More from MortgageMore posts in Mortgage »
More from mortgage bankers associationMore posts in mortgage bankers association »
More from News BriefMore posts in News Brief »
- Nepo Babies grow up as data points to new phenomenon: Nepo Buyers
- The Agency opened 12 new offices in Q1 amid rush of global expansion
- US home price growth accelerates in January at fastest pace since ’22
- Compass to pay $57.5M to settle commission lawsuits
- Trump son-in-law Kushner pursues overseas real estate deals
More from NoahMore posts in Noah »
More from pandemicMore posts in pandemic »
- Pandemic relocation boom wanes as remote work, cheap houses fade
- The internet fell hard for real estate in 2021. But can the love affair last?
- Successful agents show up, Robert Reffkin says in remote-work rebuke
- Los Angeles apartment owners sue over COVID rent freeze
- Demand for urban homes will be ‘muted’ for years: McKinsey
More from real estateMore posts in real estate »
- Do brokerages have right model for this business climate? Intel asked
- Over 60% of agents have been recruited so far this year: Intel
- Agents temper hopes for better 2024 as buyers sit out: Intel survey
- Agents have real concerns — but commission rates aren’t at the top
- Commercial deals offer a new post-Sitzer compensation model
More from Sahil GuptaMore posts in Sahil Gupta »
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
More from U.S. Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentMore posts in U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development »
Be First to Comment