Home Equity Lines of Credit

Home equity lines of credit, also known as second liens, are part of the overall financial sector and part of the troubled housing sector as well. The bursting of the housing bubble in early 2008 started what became a worldwide financial crisis which is still destabilizing financial markets around the globe to this day. The housing market in the United States is still very unstable with an estimated 23% of mortgage holders owing more on their mortgages than the current value of the asset for which the loan was acquired (e.g. they are underwater). Of mortgaged properties that are underwater, approximately 40% also carry a home equity line of credit worth an average per property of $65,000. We should expect to see continued write-downs within the banking industry related to the housing crisis for some time to come.

Today’s market size is the value of bank holdings in home equity loans as of the first quarter of 2011.

Geographic reference: United States
Year: First quarter of 2011
Market size: $624 billion
Source: Gretchen Morgenson, “2nd Loan, 2nd Wave of Losses,”, The New York Times, July 17, 2011, page B1.

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