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CFPB: Rate Environment Dictated the Mortgage Market in 2022

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has released “Data Point: 2022 Mortgage Market Activity and Trends [1],” its annual report on residential mortgage lending activity and trends.

In 2022, mortgage applications and originations declined markedly from the prior year, while rates, fees, discount points, and other costs increased. The report found [1] that overall affordability declined significantly, with borrowers spending more of their income on mortgage payments and lenders more often denying applications for insufficient income. Most refinances during the reported period were cash-out refinances, and, in a reversal of recent trends, the median credit score of refinance borrowers declined below the median credit score of purchase borrowers. As in years past, independent lenders continued to dominate home mortgage lending, with the exception of home equity lines of credit (HELOCs).

"The higher interest rate environment had profound effects on the mortgage market in 2022, with borrowers paying much more in monthly payments,” said CFPB Director Rohit Chopra [2]. “These trends are likely to continue given further increases in interest rates in 2023.”

Key findings from this year’s analysis include:

“The home purchase origination volume clearly displays a strong seasonal pattern, as home sales typically fluctuate as the number of home sellers and buyers entering the market changes with the seasons,” stated the report [1].

This marked the fifth year that the data reflect changes implemented by the 2015 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) rule, which implemented statutory changes in the Consumer Financial Protection Act and provided greater information to the public about home mortgage lending.

Since 1975, the HMDA has required financial institutions to collect and make public certain loan-level information on mortgage applications and originations. In 2011, Congress transferred responsibilities for implementing the Act from the Federal Reserve Board of Governors to the CFPB. Since then, the CFPB has worked to improve public access to the data, including through an annual report analyzing the information received.