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Refinance loans spur 14-year high in lending activity

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A total of 3.51 million residential mortgages were originated during the fourth quarter of 2020 across the U.S., according to a new report from Attom Data Solutions. That number yielded a 5.5 percent increase from the previous quarter and a 48 percent increase from the year before to the highest number of residential mortgage originations in nearly 14 years.

The fourth quarter saw a flurry of buying and refinancing activity as interest rates stayed below 3 percent on most loans. During the fourth quarter alone, lenders distributed $1.06 trillion in mortgages, up 6 percent from the previous quarter and 55 percent from one year earlier to the highest quarterly amount since at least 2000. That surge in loans and dollar volume quarter over quarter was the largest gain seen during any fourth quarter since 2011.

Todd Teta | Attom Data Solutions

“Lenders continued working overtime across the United States in the fourth quarter or 2020, with increases in loans and dollar volumes rarely seen during a time of year when activity normally slows down,” Todd Teta, chief product officer at Attom Data Solutions, said in a statement.

“The rising numbers left another in a long string of markers showing how the housing market has mostly avoided economic damage stemming from the virus pandemic. As with other housing market measures, the appetite for loans among homeowners and home seekers in the coming months remains uncertain, depending on interest rates and multiple factors connected to the pandemic. But the fourth-quarter data shows continued strong demand for new mortgages, especially among homeowners looking to refinance.”

A surge in refinance mortgages drove fourth-quarter activity overall, although regular home-purchase lending and home equity lines of credit (HELOC) were strong as well. Lender refinances increased 12 percent from the previous quarter and 71 percent from the previous year to a total of 2.23 million home mortgage refinances.

Refinances made up the vast majority of loans during this quarter, at 63 percent of all home loans, up from 60 percent during Q3 2020 and up from 55 percent during Q4 2019.

Home-purchase lending took its typical dip during the fourth quarter, though to a lesser degree than usual. Purchase loans decreased 4 percent quarter over quarter while HELOCs dropped by 3 percent. It is not unusual for those numbers to decline by 10 and 5 percent, respectively, during the fourth quarter of a normal year.

Credit: Attom Data Solutions

Mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) both dropped during the fourth quarter of 2020. The FHA backed a total of 362,326, or 10.3 percent of all residential property loans, down from 10.5 percent the quarter before and down from 13.1 percent in Q4 2019.

The VA, meanwhile, backed 290,116 loans during the fourth quarter, or 8.3 percent of all resident property loans. That number was down from 8.8 percent of all loans during Q3 2020 and down from 9.3 percent in Q4 2019.

Median down payments and amounts borrowed hit new highs during the fourth quarter, amid a period of skyrocketing home price growth. On single-family homes and condos purchased with financing during the fourth quarter, the median down payment was $24,500, up 19.2 percent from $20,556 during the third quarter, and up 82.3 percent from $13,441 during Q4 2019 — a new high since at least 2000.

The median loan amount also hit a new high since 2000 at $280,000. That number was up 3.4 percent from the previous quarter and 24.7 percent  from the previous year.

Email Lillian Dickerson