From Inman News:
If foreclosures are the earthquake, watch out for the credit crunch tsunami
The impacts of the current rise in mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures will be plain to see. Hundreds of thousands of families — even millions — are expected to lose their homes as they are unable to make payments on loans that, in many cases, will exceed the value of the homes that secure them.
The rise in foreclosures could depress housing prices in some regions by flooding the market with inventory. While those foreclosures will be painful for many, it’s possible that the greatest impact on the housing market will come from more complex repercussions already underway.
As the percentage of bad loans increases and home prices stagnate or decline, investors who have poured trillions into the U.S. housing market may look for other places to put their money. That could raise the cost of loans, especially subprime loans made to borrowers with marginal credit histories.
Local, state and federal lawmakers, motivated by a public outcry over foreclosures, are also moving to put in place stricter rules for lenders, which could severely curtail the use of some loans perceived as the riskiest. Many lenders have already tightened up their underwriting standards and are charging more for risky loans. Those moves have been prompted in part by regulators, and also by market forces.
If foreclosures are like an undersea earthquake, the ensuing credit crunch may be like the tsunami that sometimes follows — a disaster of even greater magnitude.
I’d suggest that you read the full article today, as older articles are only available to Inman subscribers.
Midway through the linked article above:
Although not a spokesman for the industry, Chicago-based mortgage planner Dan Green has firsthand experience with what was a well-intentioned effort to combat predatory lending, the Illinois Predatory Lending Database Pilot Program.
The program, launched in September 2006, required residents in 10 predominantly minority Chicago ZIP codes who fell short of certain credit and income thresholds to seek financial counseling. After the program went into effect, the Illinois Association of Mortgage Brokers circulated a list of about two dozen lenders the group claimed had stopped serving the neighborhoods affected by the program.
Green analyzed MLS data to see if the program was hurting sales in the neighborhoods affected by the program. He found sales were down in comparison to similar surrounding neighborhoods.
Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich suspended the program in January after a report by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign confirmed Green’s work. The report found housing sales in the 10 affected ZIP codes dropped by nearly half during the fall of 2006. The slowdown in the housing market had also hurt sales in comparable ZIP codes, but the drop was less severe — 20 percent.
“The part that I feel like is getting missed is everybody talks about the lenders, that they shouldn’t have made the guidelines so easy,” Green said of the current tightening of credit nationwide. “That’s just business. That’s capitalism, it happens.”
Now, Green said, “There is no loan product available as credit tightens up. These people are in the same position, with slightly lower credit scores, nonprovable incomes, and are now being frozen out. There are going to be some terrible, terrible stories coming out of this.”
So people who shouldn’t be getting loans aren’t and now sales are down.
So tell me Dan Green, how do foreclosures in the neighborhoods that had the program compare to similar surrounding neighborhoods without the program? How do the overall financial well-being of the people in these neighborhoods compare?
By the way, it IS a very good article.
I had to cut & paste it so I can read it at more leisurely pace this evening.
Rich
From the Sub-Prime to the Ridiculous.
With the meltdown in the sub-prime mortgage sector now laid bare, many on Wall Street desperately cling to the notion that the pain will be localized. The prevalent delusion is that the overall mortgage, housing and stock markets will be little impacted by the carnage ravaging the sub-prime sector. As such, renewed stock market weakness is seen as an over-reaction and a great buying opportunity. These assumptions represent wishful thinking in the extreme.
Those who think that the sub-prime market is unrelated to the broader economy do not understand that the problem is not just the fiscal responsibility of marginal borrowers, but the inherent weakness of the entire U.S. economy. It’s just that the sub-prime sector, being one of the most vulnerable spots, is where the problems are first surfacing.
Think of the U.S. economy as an unstable dam. The first leaks will be seen in the dam’s most vulnerable spot. But there will be many more leaks to follow. Before long the entire dam will collapse. It would be a fatal mistake for those living downstream to assume a leak is an isolated event, unrelated to the integrity of the dam itself. But that is exactly what those on Wall Street are doing with respect the horrific data emanating from the sub-prime market.
The bottom line is that far too many Americas, not simply those with low credit scores, have borrowed more money then they are realistically capable of repaying. The credit boom was created by initially low adjustable rate mortgages, interest only, or negative amortization loans, and an appreciating real estate market that allowed homeowners to extract equity to help make mortgage payments. Now that real estate prices have stopped rising, and mortgage payments are resetting higher, borrowers can no longer “afford” to make these payments.
Significantly, most sub-prime loans involved low “teaser” rates that lasted for only two years. In contrast, teaser rates for most prime ARMs typically last for five years. This difference, rather than any inherent distinction in the fiscal health or credit worthiness of the borrowers, explains why the delinquencies are so much higher in the sub-prime sector.
Of course, the vast majority of home loans in the last few years, sub-prime or otherwise, should never have been made in the first place. However, when real estate prices were rising, no one cared about the wildly optimistic assumptions or the out-and-out fraud inherent in the loan process. Everyone was making money. Borrowers, regardless of their ability to pay off their loans, thought they were getting rich as real estate prices rose. On the other side, home builders, real estate agents, appraisers, mortgage brokers, mortgage originators, Wall Street brokerages that securitized the loans and the hedge fund clients who bought them, were all getting rich as a result of booming credit. For the charade to continue, borrowers pretended they could pay and lenders pretended that they would be paid.
The fix now being suggested by some members of the U.S. Congress demonstrates how Washington completely misunderstands market dynamics. Their legislative proposals will require that lenders make potential borrowers verify their incomes and restrict credit only to those who can afford the payments after the teaser periods end. Washington fails to grasp that a return to traditional lending standards would precipitate a return to traditional prices, which are way below current levels. There is just no way to crack down on lenders without causing a crash in the real estate market. However, continuing to look the other way is no panacea either as the real estate market is already in the process of collapsing under its own weight.
It is also typical and very disingenuous for lawmakers to feign outrage, or to have waited until a collapse occurs before taking action. Just like with the Internet bubble of the late 1990’s, the government refused to act in advance of the crisis. Had the government taken preemptive action with regard to mortgage lending, the real estate bubble never would have been inflated to the degree that it has. However, a slower housing market would have resulted in a much weaker U.S. economy. More modest home valuations would not have allowed consumers to cash-out phony real estate wealth. Instead, home owners would have been forced to make higher mortgage payments and had even less money to spend on consumption. They might have actually considered saving some money for the future as their homes would not have been doing the “saving” for them.
In reality, the problem goes way beyond housing. Nearly every big ticket item that Americans consume is paid for with borrowed money, with foreign lenders supplying the credit. Without access to low cost credit, the spending stops. When the spending stops the service sector jobs associated with robust spending will disappear as well. Without paychecks, even those with low fixed-rate mortgages and high credit scores will not make their payments.
The bursting of the technology stock bubble of the 1990’s was simply the opening act. What we are about to experience with the real estate bubble is the main event. In that respect, though it may be March of 2007 it sure feels a lot like March of 2000. However, instead of a mild recession, this collapse will be followed by the most severe recession since the Great Depression. The main risk is that Ben Bernanke and his buddies at the Fed panic, producing something far worse; a hyper-inflationary bust similar to the one experienced by the Weimar Republic in Germany. Let’s hope that cooler heads prevail, but get your wheelbarrow ready just in case.
“More homeowners in danger of foreclosure”
http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070315/NEWS/703150352/1006/NEWS