EQUITY DOWN: As the housing market heads toward a freefall, it will take owner equity with it. For the first time since 1945, U.S. homeowners could collectively owe more than they own by December 2008.
Homeowners most at risk are those who bought over-priced homes in recent years with no-money down, adjustable rate, subprime mortgages, and then immediately leveraged any equity gains from the home into lines of credit and/or cash-out loans to fund spending sprees.
Guess what: They're going down in financial flames. As equity and property values fall, credit dries up, the bills come due, and the homeowner actually owns nothing and owes a whole lot.
Squatters, anyone? See story below.
Home equity falls in 3rd quarter, homeowners own just 50 percent of equity, Fed says
NEW YORK (AP) — The amount of equity homeowners hold in their homes slipped in the third quarter to the lowest level on record, just above 50 percent, according to a report from the Federal Reserve hursday.
In its quarterly U.S. Flow of Funds Accounts, the central bank reported that homeowners’ percentage of equity dipped to 50.4 percent from 51.1 percent from the previous quarter. On average, housing is Americans’ single largest asset.
Economists expect this figure, equal to the percentage of a home’s market value minus mortgage-related debt, to tumble even further as falling home prices eat into equity. It could easily drop below 50 percent by the end of next year, some experts say, marking the first time homeowners will owe more than they own since the Fed started recording the data in 1945.
Home equity has steadily decreased even as home prices jumped earlier this decade due to a surge in cash-out refinances, home equity loans and lines of credit and an increase in 100 percent or more home financing. This decline could curb retail spending as homeowners stop tapping home equity and, instead, save money.

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