Mortgage Woes
Mortgage delinquencies
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Mortgage woes push foreclosures to record high
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Mortgage Woes push foreclosures to record high.
Subprime loan problems seen hitting homeowners.
Homeowners, struggling to deal with sharp increases in their
adjustable mortgage payments, got hit with a record number of
foreclosure notices in the spring as the crisis in subprime lending
intensified.
The problem was the most severe in the industrial Midwest and former
housing boom areas such as California and Florida, but economists warned
the situation will get worse in coming months as an estimated 2 million
adjustable rate mortgages taken out with low introductory interest rates
reset to much higher rates.
The crisis is most severe in subprime mortgages, loans provided to
borrowers with weak credit, but it is now spreading to other types of
mortgages, according to a quarterly report released Thursday by the
Mortgage Bankers Association.
That report showed the number of homeowners who got foreclosure notices
in the April-June quarter hit an all-time high of 0.65 percent, up from
0.58 percent in the first three months of the year. It marked the third
consecutive quarter that a new record has been set.
The rising defaults in subprime mortgages have roiled global financial
markets in recent weeks, sending stock prices on a roller-coaster ride
as investors wonder which big bank or hedge fund will be the next to
report huge losses from subprime mortgages that were bundled into
securities and resold to investors.
Both President Bush and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke tried to
calm fears late last week. Bernanke pledged the central bank would “act
as needed” to limit any adverse economic effects from the market
turmoil.
Bush announced changes in the Federal Home Administration insured-loan
program to help combat the expected wave of foreclosures and also answer
attacks from Democrats that his administration has been slow to respond
to a growing crisis in mortgage foreclosures.
Democrats criticized Bush for not going far enough and vowed to push
more aggressive legislation through Congress, not only to help
homeowners facing foreclosure but also to attack predatory lending
practices they contend led to the crisis.
Sen. Charles Schumer, the chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, said
the new mortgage delinquency numbers should serve as a wake-up call to
Congress and the administration that urgent help is needed. Schumer is
seeking $300 million in federal support for nonprofit mortgage
counseling groups which he said were “the best defense against the
coming storm of foreclosures throughout the country.”
Private economists warned the worst slump in housing in 16 years and the
turbulence in financial markets from a resulting serious credit squeeze
could push the economy into a recession as more borrowers fall into
default, dumping even more homes onto an already glutted market.
“You have a lethal combination of higher mortgage payments, lower house
prices, a weaker job market and more cautious lenders,” said Mark Zandi,
chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com. “That is a very noxious mix and
it is the reason for this surge in foreclosures.”
Zandi put the possibility of a recession at 40 percent, almost four
times the possibility he had estimated in July, before the current
credit crisis hit.
He said defaults will not peak until next year, reflecting a wave of
introductory mortgages that are just now resetting from low “teaser”
rates. Those resets can in many cases mean an extra $250 to $300 in
higher monthly payments on the typical $1,200 monthly mortgage.
The MBA survey found that the delinquency rate, which tracks the number
of people who are behind in their payments but have not yet entered the
foreclosure process, was also up sharply during the spring. It rose to
5.12 percent of all loans, the highest level in five years and up from
4.84 percent in the first quarter.
The delinquency rate for subprime loans increased more sharply to 14.82
percent — up from 13.77 percent — in the first quarter. That marked the
second-highest subprime delinquency rate on record after a 14.96 percent
rate in the spring of 2002.
The delinquency rate for prime loans, offered to borrowers with good
credit histories, also increased, but by a much smaller amount. It rose
to 2.73 percent, up 2.58 percent in the first quarter.
Doug Duncan, the MBA’s chief economist, said the worsening performance
was the result of two major factors — heavy job losses in the Midwest
states of Ohio, Michigan and Indiana, a region hard hit by heavy losses
in the auto industry and other manufacturing industries, and the
collapse of previously booming housing markets in California, Florida,
Nevada and Arizona.
“The percent of mortgages in Ohio that are 90 days or more past due or
in foreclosure is still more than twice the national average and 1
percent of all the mortgages in Michigan had foreclosure actions started
on them during the last quarter,” Duncan said.
He said there were also significant problems in the neighboring states
of Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee and Pennsylvania.
Analysts said the problems in the formerly red-hot housing markets of
California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona reflected, in part, speculators
walking away from mortgages they can no longer afford. They had jumped
into the market during the boom, hoping to take advantage of rapidly
rising prices by quickly reselling.
But now with the inventory of unsold homes at record levels, many
speculators are defaulting on their mortgages. Those defaults are
dumping more homes on an already glutted market.
“With so much supply out there to compete against, borrowers who can’t
pay their mortgages are behind the eight-ball,” said Mike Larson, a real
estate analyst at Weiss Research. “They can’t sell to get out from under
their obligations. As a result, more end up tumbling into foreclosure.”
During the five-year housing boom, which ended last year, prices in the
hottest areas surged as investors bid up the price of homes hoping to
quickly resell them for a profit. Now with home sales falling, the
inventory of unsold homes rising and prices stagnant, some speculators
are choosing to default on their mortgages.
Democrats on Wednesday blamed predatory lending practices for a large
part of the current problems and said they planned to introduce bills
aimed at halting such practices as aggressive marketing of subprime
loans to unqualified borrowers.
Federal and state banking regulators issued guidance this week
encouraging lending institutions to work with borrowers to restructure
loans at more favorable terms rather than foreclosing on the existing
mortgages.
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