More misery?

From the Wall Street Journal:

Home-Loan Report Portends More Pain
By RICK BROOKS
September 13, 2007; Page D3

An analysis of federal data on nearly 14 million U.S. home loans made last year portends more misery for subprime borrowers, lenders and investors, as existing loans are pressured by falling home prices and lenders put tougher underwriting standards in place.

The study by the Federal Reserve, based on data collected each year under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, found that the percentage of U.S. mortgages carrying high interest rates (generally, subprime loans) climbed to about 29% last year from 26% in 2005.

In the report, Fed researchers said the data affirmed that the rise or fall of home prices is the biggest factor in predicting mortgage-loan performance, as opposed to the creditworthiness of borrowers and other variables. The study also linked higher concentrations of high-rate loans to rising rates of serious delinquency, or mortgages with payments overdue by at least 90 days.

The study examined loans issued by 8,886 lenders nationwide, which generate an estimated 80% of U.S. home mortgages. The lenders are required to disclose dozens of pieces of information about each mortgage made or applied for, including pricing information for loans with interest rates exceeding certain thresholds. For first-lien loans, lenders must report which loans have interest rates at least three percentage points higher than Treasury securities of comparable maturity.

The 2006 increase in high-rate loans was fueled partly by the flattened yield curve, or gap between long-term and short-term interest rates, which causes the number of loans exceeding the reporting thresholds to rise even if lenders don’t charge borrowers higher interest rates. Still, the data suggest frenzied competition for subprime loans, even as the housing market was weakening.

Market shares of the 10 largest high-rate lenders by volume declined to 35% from 59% in 2005, the Fed said. Banks and other depository institutions increased their penetration of the high-rate market, likely reflecting aggressive promotion of subprime loans to borrowers with blemished credit histories.

Market shares of the 10 largest high-rate lenders by volume declined to 35% from 59% in 2005, the Fed said. Banks and other depository institutions increased their penetration of the high-rate market, likely reflecting aggressive promotion of subprime loans to borrowers with blemished credit histories.

Dan Immergluck, an associate professor at Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, said the surge by traditional banks reinforces the need for regulators to intensify mortgage oversight as part of their supervision of the banking industry. “Half the market actually is the stuff the regulators could have had significant influence over, and maybe still can,” he said.

The overall denial rate for home loans climbed to 29%, from 27% in 2005. The report didn’t cite the likely reason for the increase, but it could reflect stricter underwriting by lenders as well as borrowers stretching for larger loans or sinking into financial trouble.

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1 Response to More misery?

  1. BC Bob says:

    Home prices not coming down? How do existing home owners compete with this? How’s your comp today?

    “Slumping builder slashes home prices
    Hovnanian offering 6-figure discounts”

    “:Prices this weekend will be slashed by up to six figures — $100,000, $149,000, in some cases $240,000.”

    “Crazy Eddie is back in the real estate business,”
    [Edit]Someone stole that line from this blog.

    http://www.nj.com/news/ledger/index.ssf?/base/news-12/1189658360216280.xml&coll=1

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