Current:Home > ScamsBlack borrowers' mortgage applications denied twice as often as whites', report shows -GrowthSphere Strategies
Black borrowers' mortgage applications denied twice as often as whites', report shows
View
Date:2025-04-15 01:40:41
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! (379)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Uncracking Taylor Swift’s Joe Alwyn Easter Egg at the Tortured Poets Department Event
- Actors Alexa and Carlos PenaVega announce stillbirth of daughter: She was absolutely beautiful
- Ukraine prime minister calls for more investment in war-torn country during Chicago stop of US visit
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Mike Tyson is giving up marijuana while training for Jake Paul bout. Here's why.
- Indiana sheriff’s deputy dies after coming into contact with power lines at car crash scene
- 'Scrubs' stars gather for a mini reunion: 'Getting the band back together!'
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Tuition and fees will rise at Georgia public universities in fall 2024
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Participant, studio behind ‘Spotlight,’ ‘An Inconvenient Truth,’ shutters after 20 years
- Mark Cuban shares his 9-figure tax bill on IRS due day
- Texas fined $100,000 per day for failing to act on foster care abuse allegations
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Ex-Piston Will Bynum sentenced to 18 months in prison in NBA insurance fraud scheme
- How Kansas women’s disappearance on a drive to pick up kids led to 4 arrests in Oklahoma
- Saint Levant, rapper raised in Gaza, speaks out on 'brutal genocide' during Coachella set
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Travis Kelce to host celebrity spinoff of 'Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?'
Chicago woman pleads guilty, gets 50 years for cutting child from victim’s womb
Internet customers in western North Carolina to benefit from provider’s $20M settlement
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Blake Griffin retires after high-flying NBA career that included Rookie of the Year, All-Star honors
Ex-Piston Will Bynum sentenced to 18 months in prison in NBA insurance fraud scheme
How Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones Hilariously Seduce Their Kids with Fancy Vacations