A new report from CoreLogic says that 22.8%, or 11.1 million homes in the US were in negative equity by the end of the fourth quarter last year. This is an increase on the third quarter when 22.1%, or 10.7 million homes were in negative equity. Another 2.5 million homeowners had less than 5% equity during the fourth quarter, which is known as near negative equity.
This means the total percentage of homes in negative or near negative equity was 27.8% during the fourth quarter, up from 27.1% in the third quarter of 2011. The total debt for these properties in negative or near negative equity rose from $2.7 trillion in the third quarter to reach $2.8 trillion by the end of the fourth quarter.
The report found that Nevada had the highest percentage of homeowners in negative equity, with 61% of all mortgage properties falling into this category. The second worst state was Arizona with 48% of properties in negative equity, followed by Florida with 44%, Michigan with 35%, and Georgia with 33%.
When combined these five states have an average negative equity percentage of 44.3%, while the combined average of the remaining states is just 15.3%. The majority of homes in negative equity are at the lower end of the market and are valued at less than $200,000. Although these figures are affected by seasonal declines, it's expected this situation will take quite some time to improve. If the economic recovery falters it could mean an increase in the number of foreclosures.
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