WASHINGTON — Despite an overall housing recovery, it’s suddenly becoming more common in several of the nation’s largest cities for homeowners to owe more than their homes are worth. The national negative equity rate, which had declined for 2½ years, stalled in the fourth quarter of 2014 at 16.9 percent, according to a new report from Zillow.
Negative equity refers to when a homeowner owes more a mortgage than the value of the home if sold on the market. In the fourth quarter, the rate worsened in 21 of the nation’s top 50 housing markets, including Philadelphia, Boston and Houston.
Zillow estimated that more than a quarter of homeowners are underwater in the metropolitan areas of Virginia Beach, Va.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Las Vegas, Atlanta, Chicago and Memphis, Tenn.
During most of the recovery, rising home prices and the completion of foreclosures pushed down the number of homeowners with negative equity from a recession peak of 15 million.