Almost one in three mortgaged homes in the U.S. — representing 15.2 million loans — now has negative equity, according to a new report issued by First American CoreLogic. FACL says 32.2% of mortgages have negative equity (under water loans) compared to 32.5% in March. However, just because a loan is under water that doesn't necessarily mean it will go into default. The improvement, the company said, reflects, "the recent flattening of monthly home price changes." The homes that are underwater have an aggregate property value of $3.4 trillion, which represents the total property value at risk of default. California leads the nation in at-risk negative equity ($969 billion in home values), followed by Florida ($432 billion), New Jersey ($146 billion), Illinois ($146 billion) and Arizona ($140 billion).
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Technology and customer service were the two largest categories within operational expenses last year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
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Bright partnered with real estate data and analytics platform HouseCanary to deliver exposure on Google at no additional cost or operational efforts.
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The move may have been related to the government-sponsored enterprise's duration gap but could also have resulted from many other considerations.
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The lawsuit is the third against a California-based mortgage company this month after revelations of another early-2026 incident at a wholesale lender.
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The Bank of International Settlements compared the recent AI investment frenzy to the canal mania of the 1830s, the British railway craze of the 1840s and the dot-com boom of the late 90s.
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Fake jumbo mortgages are helping non-agency securitization growth, but these loans could have higher than expected delinquency rates, an analysis said.
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