Tappable equity, the amount a homeowner can borrow against while retaining a 20% equity stake in their home, is now declining after hitting its highest point at $11.5 trillion in the second quarter, peaking in May. Why it matters: A home’s equity is often the largest asset that most people own. Over the past few years, as prices have risen, homeowners have felt security in seeing their nest eggs grow. Now that the equity is declining along with median prices, homeowners may lose that sense of security. Annual home price growth moved from deceleration to decline in July when the median home price fell 0.77% from June, which is the largest single-month decline since January 2011, according to Black Knight’s July 2022 Mortgage Monitor. Home equity levels are an important leading indicator for the economic health of future generations: A home’s equity is a source of generational wealth that is passed down from one generation to the next. While rents increase annually along with the rate of inflation, a home’s mortgage payment stays the same. Homeowners’ incomes may rise over time, meaning they have more disposable income each year to use for other things such as children, travel, education, and home improvements. Meanwhile, tenants are on a hamster wheel of rising rents that have been outpacing their wage increases, preventing them from accumulating additional reserves like a homeowner can do.
The bottom line: Homeowners' savings have been growing while their mortgage balance drops. But it has no effect on renters who are treading water. Our thought bubble: Now that prices are dropping, pulling equity down with it, homeowners could start feeling more like renters, treading water. |
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