Early-year rate movements led prepayments to a near four-year high in March, while delinquency trends also showed overall improvement typical of seasonal patterns, according to Intercontinental Exchange.
Mortgage prepayment speeds jumped 24 basis points to 1.06% from a level
A declining rate environment throughout the winter supported refinance trends to drive prepayments upward, according to
The rise of prepayment speeds came in a month that also saw overall delinquencies fall, even as foreclosure numbers went in the other direction reaching a six-year high mark.
"March brought the seasonal improvement we typically expect to see this time of year," Walden said in a press release. "Delinquencies moved lower, with improvement across the earlier stages of mortgage performance as fewer loans rolled into delinquency."
Latter-stage distress worsened, though, with 154,000 additional borrowers either added to the rolls of 90-days past due or falling into foreclosure compared to last year.
"While overall mortgage performance remains healthy for most borrowers, the continued buildup in late-stage delinquencies and foreclosure pipelines remains worth watching," Walden said.
Delinquencies by stage
The U.S. delinquency rate fell to an overall rate of 3.35% in March, down 37 basis points from February's 3.72%. The current share is still 14 basis points higher from one year prior, but numbers showed diverging themes between stages.
- The total volume of loans at least 30 days past due or in foreclosure came in at 2.12 million, dropping by 194,000 but still 8.2% higher year over year.
- Mortgages 30 days past due but not in foreclosure finished at 1.84 million.
- Mortgages 90 days past due but not yet in foreclosure totaled 588,000.
- New delinquency inflows pulled back 23% on a seasonal basis and were flat year over year, while rollovers into latter stages also improved, the report said.
- The cure rate was up 27% from February, totaling approximately 547,000 loans.
Foreclosure numbers continued to increase, though, with new starts up 16.7% from March 2025 to 39,000 units. Foreclosure sales also surged a notable 21.4% to 7,400,
The number of homes in foreclosure inventory hit a six-year peak in March, rising to 273,000 properties, an increase of 8,000 month over month, ICE Mortgage Technology said in its report. The number represented an increase from 213,000 a year ago.
States with the greatest share of non-current mortgages were concentrated in the Southern U.S., with Mississippi at the top of the list at 8.01%. It was followed by its neighbors, Louisiana and Alabama at 7.95% and 5.94%.
The most stable housing markets, based on delinquency trends, were Hawaii, with a 2.24% non-current rate, Colorado at 2.2% and Montana at 2.11%.