Mortgage fraud climbed 12.4 percent year over year in the second quarter of 2018, and about one out of every 109 mortgage applications has been found to contain false or misleading information, according to real estate data firm CoreLogic. “Because home prices are rising and demand is strong, most mortgage fraud in this type of market is motivated by bona fide borrowers trying to qualify for a mortgage,” says Bridget Berg, CoreLogic’s principal of fraud solutions strategy. “Undisclosed real estate liabilities, credit repair, questionable down payment sources, and income falsification are the most likely misrepresentations.”
Fraud is most common in conforming mortgages with loan-to-value ratios of 80 percent or less, according to CoreLogic. The metro areas with the highest increases of fraud risk year over year are Oklahoma City; El Paso, Texas; Springfield, Mass.; Albuquerque, N.M.; and Spokane, Wash. Overall, the states with the highest incidences of mortgage fraud are New York, New Jersey, and Florida, according to the report.
CoreLogic identifies the following as the most common types of mortgage fraud:
- Income fraud: An applicant misrepresents the existence, continuance, source, or amount of their income.
- Occupancy fraud: An applicant deliberately misstates the intended use of a property as a primary or secondary residence or an investment.
- Transaction fraud: The applicant misrepresents the nature of the transaction, such as an undisclosed agreement between parties, falsified down payments, non-arm’s-length sale, or use of a straw buyer.
- Property fraud: An applicant intentionally misrepresents information about the property or its value.
- Undisclosed real estate debt: An applicant fails to disclose additional real estate debt or previous foreclosures.
- Identity fraud: An applicant alters their identity or credit history, or uses a false identity.
Source:
“2018 Annual Mortgage Fraud Report,” CoreLogic (September 2018)