Here’s some housing cheer for the end of the year: The stock market may have taken your 401(k) and other funds on scary rides in 2015, but new data from the Federal Reserve suggest that if you’ve owned a house, you’ve probably seen steady, if not spectacular growth in your home equity.
Between the third quarter of 2014 and the same period in 2015, Americans’ home equity holdings grew by nearly $1.3 trillion, according to the Fed, thanks mainly to rising home prices. Between 2011 and this year, homeowner equity nearly doubled and now totals just under $12.4 trillion. That’s impressive, but it’s still below the $13.3 trillion it hit during early 2006, when the housing boom was at its manic zenith.
Your home equity is the difference between the market resale value of your house and the mortgage debt you’ve got against it. If your house is worth $400,000 and you’ve got a first mortgage balance of $220,000 and a $30,000 second mortgage or credit line balance outstanding, your equity is $150,000, exclusive of the costs you’d incur if you had to sell. If you bought your first house for $250,000 two years ago with a 5 percent ($12,500) down payment, and your local real estate market has seen average price growth of 5 percent per year since then, your house may now be worth more than $275,000 and your equity position may exceed $38,000, not counting any principal reduction you made. That’s nice.
Then there’s the flip side: You might have negative equity — you’re underwater, upside down — with mortgage balances that exceed your property value. Not all housing markets are seeing steady growth in prices and not all homeowners have recovered from their equity nightmares of the housing bust. But tens of thousands of owners are moving out of negative equity every month as home prices rise, according to researchers.