NEW YORK, NY -- According to the just-released Trepp June
2012 Pay-Off Report, the percentage of loans paying off on their balloon date
remained anchored near its 12 month low.
In May, the rate
plummeted to 29.4%, the lowest level since October 2010. In June, the rate
ticked up but the gain was marginal, indicating that despite historically low
interest rates, the ability for borrowers to refinance remains challenging.
In June, only 32.3% of loans reaching their balloon date
paid off. This is the second lowest total in 21 months. Only May 2012 was
lower.
The June total of 32.4% was well under the 12 month average
of 42.7%. (This number simply sums the averages of each month and divides by
12--there was no balance weighting across the months.)
By loan count (as opposed to balance), 55.2% of the loans
paid off. On the basis of loan count, the 12 month rolling average is now
51.8%. The disparity between the volume-based total and the count-based total
indicates that it was mostly small balance loans that managed to pay off in
June.
Prior to 2008, the pay-off percentages were typically well
north of 70%. Since the beginning of 2009, however, there have only been four
months where more than half of the balance of the loans reaching their balloon
date actually paid off.
For a complete copy of the company’s news release, please
contact:
Eric R. Gerard
Senior Vice President
Great Ink Communications
27 Union Square West, Suite 205
New York, NY 10001
(212) 741-2977
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