Regardless of race and gender, the likelihood of a young adult becoming a homeowner depends significantly on how wealthy his or her parents are, according to a new study by The Urban Institute. The analysis found that parental homeownership alone increases a young adult’s likelihood of owning a home by 7 to 8 percent. The report found that compared to prior generations, millennials are less likely to be homeowners. Researchers also found persistent racial and ethnic disparities ...
Cracks began to appear in the housing market during the third quarter of 2018, leading to a modest decline in purchase-mortgage originations, but industry experts continue to predict a rebound next year. [Includes four data charts.]
Purchase loans accounted for over 80.0 percent of third-quarter production at Wells Fargo, PennyMac Financial, Caliber Home Loans, U.S. Bank and Amerihome…
OCC examiners noted greater use of asset dissipation underwriting, a practice used to qualify borrowers using a “hypothetical income stream from their asset liquidation rather than debt-to-income ratios.”