Americans take on more mortgage debt as housing recovers
WASHINGTON — More Americans are buying houses and taking on mortgage debt at a time when higher home prices are also boosting their ownership stakes.
The trends, revealed in a Federal Reserve report Friday, reflect the healing of the U.S. housing market nearly a decade after the real estate bubble burst.
The Fed’s quarterly report on household wealth showed that Americans’ net worth climbed 1.2 per cent during the April-June quarter, to $89.1 trillion. Stock and mutual fund portfolios increased 2.3 per cent to $21.2 trillion. Housing wealth rose 1.9 per cent to $25.6 trillion. The value of checking and savings accounts, as well as pension entitlements, also climbed.
Household wealth, or net worth, reflects the value of homes, stocks and other assets minus mortgages, credit card debt and other borrowing. The Fed’s figures aren’t adjusted for population growth or inflation.
