With new mortgages down 47%, US lenders are starting to go bankrupt — could this one factor trigger the worst surge of failures since 2008?

The real estate market just can’t catch a break, with inventory of resale homes remaining low and rising interest rates making it harder for buyers to justify making the leap.

And now we can add mortgage lender financial troubles — and the rise (and fall) of “non-qualified mortgages” — to the factors aggravating an already uncertain market.

A report from ATTOM reveals that new mortgage originations were down 47% in the third quarter of 2022 compared to the year before. That's a 19% decrease from the previous quarter and represents the biggest annual drop in 21 years. And while the chill in the market affects all lenders, non-bank lenders — especially those who deal in NQM — are bearing the brunt of it.

But what does the trouble around these NQM mortgages really mean? And what does it mean for non-traditional buyers trying to get a foothold in the market?

Chris Clark | Yahoo

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