LPS: Mortgage Delinquency Rate Increases in May

foreclosure3 300x199 LPS: Mortgage Delinquency Rate Increases in MayFrom Lender Processing Services: Increase in Rate of New Delinquencies; Decline in Number of Delinquent Loans Becoming Current

JACKSONVILLE, Fla., July 6 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — The May Mortgage Monitor report released today by Lender Processing Services, Inc. (NYSE: LPS), a leading provider of mortgage performance data and analytics, shows a 2.3 percent month-over-month increase in the nation’s home loan delinquency rate to 9.2 percent in May 2010, and that early-stage delinquencies are increasing as normal seasonal improvements taper off. This report includes data as of May 31, 2010.

According to the Mortgage Monitor report, the percentage of mortgage loans in default beyond 90 days increased slightly, while both delinquency and foreclosure rates continue to remain relatively stable at historically high levels. There are currently more than 7.3 million loans currently in some stage of delinquency or REO.

The report also shows that the average number of days for a loan to move from 30-days delinquent to foreclosure sale continues to increase, and is now at an all-time high of 449 days, resulting in an increase in “shadow” foreclosure inventory.

After a two-month decline, deterioration ratios increased, with 2.5 loans rolling to a “worse” status for every one that has improved. The number of delinquent loans that “cured” to a current status declined for every stage of delinquency, except in the “greater than six months delinquent” category.  This improvement was likely the result of trial modifications made through the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) that transitioned into permanent status.

Other key results from LPS’ latest Mortgage Monitor report include:

Total U.S. loan delinquency rate: 9.20 percent
Total U.S. foreclosure inventory rate: 3.18 percent
Total U.S. non-current* loan rate: 12.38 percent
States with most non-current* loans: Florida, Nevada, Mississippi, Georgia, Arizona, California, Illinois, New Jersey, Ohio and Indiana
States with the fewest non-current* loans: North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, Nebraska, Vermont, Colorado, Iowa and Minnesota

*Non-current totals combine foreclosures and delinquencies as a percent of active loans in that state.

Note: Totals based on LPS Applied Analytics’ loan-level database of mortgage assets.

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