Current:Home > MarketsBlack borrowers' mortgage applications denied twice as often as whites', report shows -MacroWatch
Black borrowers' mortgage applications denied twice as often as whites', report shows
View
Date:2025-04-23 15:20:15
Mortgage applications from borrowers of color are denied significantly more frequently than those from white borrowers, a recent analysis shows.
In 2023, 27.2% of Black applicants were denied a mortgage, more than double the 13.4% of white borrowers. That's a full 10 percentage points higher than borrowers of all races, according to the analysis of the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act from the Urban Institute’s Housing Finance Policy Center.
The application data confirms deep disparities in mortgage financing that show up elsewhere in the housing market: Black borrowers accounted for only 8.5% of all purchase mortgage borrowers in 2023, for example - also according to HMDA. Meanwhile, in 2024, the Black homeownership rate is 45.3%, a whopping 30 percentage points below that of white households, at 74.4%. For Latinx households, it’s 48.5%.
Read on:Residential real estate was confronting a racist past. Then came the commission lawsuits
Urban Institute researchers Michael Neal and Amalie Zinn were motivated to dig into the HMDA data, which many housing industry participants consider the most comprehensive data available to the public, when they saw overall denial rates shifting with recent changes in borrowing costs.
Learn more: Best personal loans
As the chart above shows, denial rates declined - meaning more mortgages were approved - in 2020 and 2021 - before ticking back up in 2022, when the Federal Reserve began hiking interest rates to cool inflation.
The Urban researchers' work shows that the racial gap doesn’t just block entry to homeownership. Black and Latinx homeowners are also denied interest rate refinances significantly more frequently: 38.4% and 37.5% of the time versus 21.8% for their white peers.
The data confirms other deep-seated inequities in the housing market, Zinn said. Among other things, borrowers of color often take out mortgages with smaller down payments, meaning they have less equity built up over time.
Cooling economy may impact vulnerable borrowers
Rates are likely on the way down again: in recent weeks, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage has averaged a full percentage point less than it did last year at the same time, likely in anticipation of an interest-rate cut from the Federal Reserve later this month. But anyone concerned about vulnerable borrowers should pay attention to a cooling economy, Neal said.
“When you start to think about where we are in the interest rate cycle, and where we are in the broader business cycle, if you already have a degree of vulnerability, it's just going to be amplified by exactly that.”
veryGood! (48798)
Related
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Truth Social reports $16M in Q2 losses, less than $1M in revenue; DJT stock falls 7%
- Officer faces murder charge in shooting of pregnant Black woman who was accused of shoplifting
- Confrontational. Defensive. Unnecessary. Deion Sanders' act is wearing thin.
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Dentist charged with invasion of privacy after camera found in employee bathroom, police say
- Baby formula recalled from CVS, H-E-B stores over high Vitamin D levels: See states impacted
- Warts can be stubborn to treat. Here's how to get rid of them.
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Marine who died trying to save crew in fiery Osprey crash to receive service’s top noncombat medal
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Victor Wembanyama warns opponents ‘everywhere’ after gold medal loss to USA
- US Rep. Ilhan Omar, a member of the progressive ‘Squad,’ faces repeat primary challenge in Minnesota
- Meet Grant Ellis: Get to Know the New Bachelor From Jenn Tran’s Season
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Matt Kuchar bizarrely stops playing on 72nd hole of Wyndham Championship
- Death of Ohio man who died while in police custody ruled a homicide by coroner’s office
- With over 577,000 signatures verified, Arizona will put abortion rights on the ballot
Recommendation
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
Below Deck Med's Captain Sandy Confronts Rude Guests Over Difficult Behavior—and One Isn't Having it
Chicago-area school worker who stole chicken wings during pandemic gets 9 years: Reports
Advocates want para-surfing to be part of Paralympics after being overlooked for Los Angeles 2028
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
Grant Ellis named the new Bachelor following his elimination from 'The Bachelorette'
Paris put on magnificent Olympic Games that will be hard to top
A Full Breakdown of Jordan Chiles and Ana Barbosu's Olympic Controversy That Caused the World to Flip