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Home Forclosures On Rise

home forclosures on Home Forclosures On Rise

Millions of Americans stand to face enormous financial strain or foreclosure when their adjustable-rate mortgages reset this year. The number of mortgage holders slipping behind in monthly payments rose steadily throughout the winter, according to major foreclosure tracking companies. As federal interest rates continue to increase, the number of borrowers defaulting on their mortgages is certain to grow.

In the short term, higher interest rates are the most direct source of strain on mortgage holders. There are several types of unconventional loans that proliferated in the late 1990s after lending standards were relaxed. These loans served to decrease initial mortgage payments, but at the expense of greater risk for much higher payments in the future. The most popular are interest-only and adjustable-rate mortgages (option ARMs).

Option ARMs have been attractive during the low-interest rate period of the past few years because with these loans mortgage payments follow the prevailing rates, varying from month to month. The introductory rates tended to be extremely low, sometimes half that of the traditional 30-year mortgage rate, which itself reached historic lows last year.

But when interest rates increase, as has been the case in the last quarter of 2005 and into this year, many homeowners are confronted with much higher mortgage payments.

Interest-only loans allow borrowers to pay only the interest for a set period, leaving the principal payments as optional. The most common type of interest-only loan is called a 2/28, with a two-year interest-only period on a 30-year mortgage. Millions of buyers relied on this type of loan in the last two years.

For interest-only mortgage holders who made only the minimum payments during the past two years, the principal has actually grown enormously. Now the initial interest-only period is ending for many of these borrowers. According to Economy.com, more than $2 trillion in US outstanding mortgage debt, nearly a quarter of all mortgage debts, are of the interest-only variety passing the two-year introductory period in 2006 and 2007. The Wall Street Journal reported March 11 that these borrowers will face drastically higher interest rates that may cause their monthly payments to rise by up to 50 percent.

The fluctuations in the housing market are exacerbating the problem. In most areas of the country, average home prices ballooned by thousands of dollars, far outpacing inflation and wages over the past five years. Average monthly payments rose from the already high $779 to more than $1,000. Meeting the average monthly prime mortgage payments in 2003 required an income of around $37,000, according to National Association of Realtors data. By 2005, buyers needed a qualifying income of nearly $50,000, well above the national median income.

For this reason, first-time or poor credit buyers relied on nontraditional loans in order to afford monthly payments because they would pay only the interest during the introductory period. Meanwhile, the remaining principal on such mortgages grew on interest, presenting an insurmountable burden to borrowers. As home prices in some areas now begin to deflate, many homeowners will find themselves locked into a mortgage worth more than the home’s resale value.

The Journal cited a study conducted by First American Real Estate Solutions, a subsidiary of home title insurer First American Corporation, which projected that one in eight households with adjustable-rate mortgages that originated in 2004 and 2005—when home sales and home prices both peaked—will default on their loans in the near future. Because the housing market is slowing, reselling a home without taking a loss will be less likely as time goes on.

Most at risk are the so-called sub-prime borrowers, those with weak credit histories, both because they depended upon non-traditional loans and will now be charged the higher sub-prime interest rates, and because as these rates and bills mount they will face difficulty gaining refinancing approval because of their sub-prime status.

Released March 17, 2005, fourth-quarter foreclosure and mortgage delinquency data from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) underscore the reality of financial constriction. Mortgage payments were behind on an average of 4.7 percent of all residential homes, up from 4.44 percent in the third quarter and 4.38 percent in the fourth quarter of 2004. One in every hundred mortgage loans was in some stage of the foreclosure process—more than 4 million homes.

“The increase in delinquencies is not surprising,” MBA vice president and chief economist Doug Duncan remarked in the press release announcing the figures. “We have been expecting an up-tick in delinquencies due to a number of factors: the seasoning of the loan portfolio, the increased shares of the portfolio that are ARMs and sub-prime mortgages, as well as the elevated level of energy prices and rising interest rates.”

Regulators have been well aware of the trends, their painful consequences, and the risks predatory lending poses to home-buyers. For this reason, the banking industry has pressed the Federal Reserve Board to impose tighter lending standards. These would restrict refinancing from those borrowers who fall behind, leaving them wide open for foreclosure and seizure of property.

Other policy changes are also contributing to the debt burden of average US households. Under a law that took effect January 1, minimum monthly payment requirements have doubled for many credit card users. This follows last October’s bankruptcy law changes, which make it more difficult for struggling debtors to hold on to homes or other assets, and with which the increase in foreclosures coincides.

As significant as the national data is, foreclosure and delinquency rates for regions most neglected, abandoned, or destroyed by consequences of capitalism are the most revealing. The MBA survey found nearly 76,000 households in Louisiana and Mississippi were seriously delinquent in late December of last year. A payment 90 days or more overdue constitutes serious delinquency.

In the month after Hurricane Katrina struck, nearly a quarter of all Louisiana mortgages and 17.4 percent of those in Mississippi were delinquent, or 30 days past due. Most of those have fallen into serious delinquency. At the end of the year, more than a fifth of Louisiana mortgages remained delinquent, and Mississippi’s proportion of delinquencies had fallen by only half a percent. A third of all sub-prime loans in both states were in this category. Clearly, thousands of families continue to suffer without adequate assistance, months into the supposed reconstruction process.

Foreclosure.com data for Michigan indicates that from February 2004 to 2006, the number of homes foreclosed doubled, making the state’s foreclosure rate two and a half times the national average. Michigan’s foreclosures currently make up 8.6 percent of the national total. The state’s share of the national population, however, is slightly less than 3.5 percent. The unemployment rate in the state is also substantially higher than the official US average, and is expected to continue climbing as the manufacturing sector continues to suffer.

In Wayne county, including the city of Detroit, foreclosed properties are extraordinarily high. The Associated Press recently reported that the county sheriff’s office oversaw the auction of 379 homes in a single day last month. Gary Meyers, a Venturi Realty foreclosure specialist present at the sales, told the AP that it was by far the worst he’d seen. “I’ve been all over the US, and the most I’ve ever seen in a day is 30.”

Latest data from Foreclosure.com indicate that western states such as California, Arizona, and Nevada—among the states which saw explosive growth in construction and inflated home prices in recent years—experienced a wave of new foreclosures in February. Foreclosures in California increased by 150 percent from January to February; Arizona saw a rise of 161 percent for the same period; Nevada experienced a 99 percent increase.


AFP

Fed Halts Mortgage Repos For First Time Since March
Bloomberg - 2 hours ago
6 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve didn’t purchase mortgage-backed securities to add reserves to the banking system for the first time since it began a ...
NY Fed begins purchasing mortgage securities The Associated Press
Fed starts program to buy illiquid mortgage assets MarketWatch
Mortgage Spreads Decline on Fed Buying Wall Street Journal Blogs
BusinessWorld Online - Bloomberg
all 238 news articles


Best Syndication

Report: Ga. mortgage rates among lowest
Bizjournals.com, NC - 7 hours ago
4, rates on 30-year fixed mortgages were lowest in Arizona (4.97 percent) and Georgia (4.99 percent), according to the Zillow Mortgage Rate Monitor. ...
Mortgage rates in Australia Meadow Free Press
Net Branch Offices of US Mortgage Reports Record Low Rates MediaSyndicate (press release)
Mortgage Rates Hover Around 5.00% PR Newswire (press release)
KEYC - CBS42
all 33 news articles


Cuomo’s Settlement Over Allegedly Discriminatory Mortgage Fees
Wall Street Journal Blogs, NY - 1 hour ago
Also yesterday, New York AG Andrew Cuomo announced that about 455 black and Latino borrowers will split $665000 in restitution from mortgage brokers HCI and ...
Cuomo: 2 firms settle mortgage bias charges Newsday
Two Suffolk-Based Mortgage Lenders Investigated for Discrimination LongIslandPress.com
Lenders overcharged Latinos, blacks New York Daily News
Housing Wire - Legal News Line
all 42 news articles


Allegheny County offers homeowners help with troubled mortgages
Bizjournals.com, NC - 3 hours ago
12, struggling Allegheny County home owners will be eligible for a little help with their troubled mortgages. A plan, established through a court order ...
Allegheny County program to help homeowners avoid foreclosure Pittsburgh Post Gazette
County tosses lifeline to homeowners Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Allegheny County plans court for veterans Pittsburgh Post Gazette
all 17 news articles


Leading Democrat offers US mortgage aid bill
Reuters - 37 minutes ago
A similar plan failed in the Senate last spring as President George W. Bush and many Republican lawmakers opposed it, but supporters of 'mortgage cram-down' ...
Democrats introduce bill to let judges adjust mortgage terms MarketWatch
Stimulus Package to Include Cram-Downs: Report Housing Wire
Lawmakers set new mortgage bankruptcy bill Reuters
all 10 news articles


Attorneys general push to ease bankruptcy rules on mortgages
Bizjournals.com, NC - 3 hours ago
Current federal law allows bankruptcy courts to adjust other debts and loans, but not home mortgages. Goddard and other state AGs contend the courts could ...
Goddard, other AGs, urge more help for hurting homeowners KTAR.com
AGs urge Congress to amend Bankruptcy Code Legal News Line
all 5 news articles


The Market Oracle

BOND REPORT: Treasurys Move Higher As Fed Buys Mortgage Bonds
CNNMoney.com - Jan 5, 2009
Short-term Treasurys gained Monday, pushing yields down after the Federal Reserve said it had begun buying mortgage-backed securities. ...
Fed Focuses on Consumer, Corporate Rate Spreads Over Treasuries Bloomberg
BOND REPORT: Treasurys Down Ahead Of Auctions, Fed Minutes EasyBourse.com
Treasury's Paulson Gets It Wrong Forbes
all 30 news articles


24dash

Mortgage rationing gets tougher
BBC News, UK - 15 hours ago
Mortgage lenders are continuing to demand larger deposits as they ration home loans to their customers. In the past month the proportion of new mortgage ...
Dramatic Decline In Higher LTV Mortgages Find a Property
Moneyfacts: Quarter of mortgages require 40% deposit Mortgage.org.uk
Moneyfacts.co.uk: Mortgage lenders not passing on interest rate cut Money News
The Press Association - Loans4
all 43 news articles


Conyers introduces mortgage legislation
Detroit Free Press, United States - 2 hours ago
Under current rules, bankruptcy judges can’t rewrite mortgage terms on primary residences – a fact that many Democrats have criticized as the foreclosure ...


BRIEF-Rep. Frank: Curbing mortgage foreclosures should be No. 1 ...
Forbes, NY - 21 hours ago
Says TARP program must be used to help reduce mortgage foreclosures and that other non-financial industries' potential use of TARP money 'depends on what ...

.mortgage. - Google News

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 Buying a Home  Home Buyers Tips  What is a Buyers Agent  Buying A HUD Home  woodlands texas homes for sale   Home Insurance  Realtor Advantages  Flood Insurance  Steps to Sell your Home  Selling Home HUD  First Time Home Buyer  Protecting Your Credit  Mistakes when buying a Home  Home Forclosures on The rise!!!!!!  Bad Mortgages  Sub prime mortgages   Mortgage collapse  Real Estate Recession is happening  US Economic collapse 

 


 

Home Forclosures on The rise!!!!!!

home

 Buying a Home  Home Buyers Tips  What is a Buyers Agent  Buying A HUD Home  Links 

 

 

 

Home Forclosures On Rise

home forclosures on Home Forclosures On Rise

Millions of Americans stand to face enormous financial strain or foreclosure when their adjustable-rate mortgages reset this year. The number of mortgage holders slipping behind in monthly payments rose steadily throughout the winter, according to major foreclosure tracking companies. As federal interest rates continue to increase, the number of borrowers defaulting on their mortgages is certain to grow.

In the short term, higher interest rates are the most direct source of strain on mortgage holders. There are several types of unconventional loans that proliferated in the late 1990s after lending standards were relaxed. These loans served to decrease initial mortgage payments, but at the expense of greater risk for much higher payments in the future. The most popular are interest-only and adjustable-rate mortgages (option ARMs).

Option ARMs have been attractive during the low-interest rate period of the past few years because with these loans mortgage payments follow the prevailing rates, varying from month to month. The introductory rates tended to be extremely low, sometimes half that of the traditional 30-year mortgage rate, which itself reached historic lows last year.

But when interest rates increase, as has been the case in the last quarter of 2005 and into this year, many homeowners are confronted with much higher mortgage payments.

Interest-only loans allow borrowers to pay only the interest for a set period, leaving the principal payments as optional. The most common type of interest-only loan is called a 2/28, with a two-year interest-only period on a 30-year mortgage. Millions of buyers relied on this type of loan in the last two years.

For interest-only mortgage holders who made only the minimum payments during the past two years, the principal has actually grown enormously. Now the initial interest-only period is ending for many of these borrowers. According to Economy.com, more than $2 trillion in US outstanding mortgage debt, nearly a quarter of all mortgage debts, are of the interest-only variety passing the two-year introductory period in 2006 and 2007. The Wall Street Journal reported March 11 that these borrowers will face drastically higher interest rates that may cause their monthly payments to rise by up to 50 percent.

The fluctuations in the housing market are exacerbating the problem. In most areas of the country, average home prices ballooned by thousands of dollars, far outpacing inflation and wages over the past five years. Average monthly payments rose from the already high $779 to more than $1,000. Meeting the average monthly prime mortgage payments in 2003 required an income of around $37,000, according to National Association of Realtors data. By 2005, buyers needed a qualifying income of nearly $50,000, well above the national median income.

For this reason, first-time or poor credit buyers relied on nontraditional loans in order to afford monthly payments because they would pay only the interest during the introductory period. Meanwhile, the remaining principal on such mortgages grew on interest, presenting an insurmountable burden to borrowers. As home prices in some areas now begin to deflate, many homeowners will find themselves locked into a mortgage worth more than the home’s resale value.

The Journal cited a study conducted by First American Real Estate Solutions, a subsidiary of home title insurer First American Corporation, which projected that one in eight households with adjustable-rate mortgages that originated in 2004 and 2005—when home sales and home prices both peaked—will default on their loans in the near future. Because the housing market is slowing, reselling a home without taking a loss will be less likely as time goes on.

Most at risk are the so-called sub-prime borrowers, those with weak credit histories, both because they depended upon non-traditional loans and will now be charged the higher sub-prime interest rates, and because as these rates and bills mount they will face difficulty gaining refinancing approval because of their sub-prime status.

Released March 17, 2005, fourth-quarter foreclosure and mortgage delinquency data from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) underscore the reality of financial constriction. Mortgage payments were behind on an average of 4.7 percent of all residential homes, up from 4.44 percent in the third quarter and 4.38 percent in the fourth quarter of 2004. One in every hundred mortgage loans was in some stage of the foreclosure process—more than 4 million homes.

“The increase in delinquencies is not surprising,” MBA vice president and chief economist Doug Duncan remarked in the press release announcing the figures. “We have been expecting an up-tick in delinquencies due to a number of factors: the seasoning of the loan portfolio, the increased shares of the portfolio that are ARMs and sub-prime mortgages, as well as the elevated level of energy prices and rising interest rates.”

Regulators have been well aware of the trends, their painful consequences, and the risks predatory lending poses to home-buyers. For this reason, the banking industry has pressed the Federal Reserve Board to impose tighter lending standards. These would restrict refinancing from those borrowers who fall behind, leaving them wide open for foreclosure and seizure of property.

Other policy changes are also contributing to the debt burden of average US households. Under a law that took effect January 1, minimum monthly payment requirements have doubled for many credit card users. This follows last October’s bankruptcy law changes, which make it more difficult for struggling debtors to hold on to homes or other assets, and with which the increase in foreclosures coincides.

As significant as the national data is, foreclosure and delinquency rates for regions most neglected, abandoned, or destroyed by consequences of capitalism are the most revealing. The MBA survey found nearly 76,000 households in Louisiana and Mississippi were seriously delinquent in late December of last year. A payment 90 days or more overdue constitutes serious delinquency.

In the month after Hurricane Katrina struck, nearly a quarter of all Louisiana mortgages and 17.4 percent of those in Mississippi were delinquent, or 30 days past due. Most of those have fallen into serious delinquency. At the end of the year, more than a fifth of Louisiana mortgages remained delinquent, and Mississippi’s proportion of delinquencies had fallen by only half a percent. A third of all sub-prime loans in both states were in this category. Clearly, thousands of families continue to suffer without adequate assistance, months into the supposed reconstruction process.

Foreclosure.com data for Michigan indicates that from February 2004 to 2006, the number of homes foreclosed doubled, making the state’s foreclosure rate two and a half times the national average. Michigan’s foreclosures currently make up 8.6 percent of the national total. The state’s share of the national population, however, is slightly less than 3.5 percent. The unemployment rate in the state is also substantially higher than the official US average, and is expected to continue climbing as the manufacturing sector continues to suffer.

In Wayne county, including the city of Detroit, foreclosed properties are extraordinarily high. The Associated Press recently reported that the county sheriff’s office oversaw the auction of 379 homes in a single day last month. Gary Meyers, a Venturi Realty foreclosure specialist present at the sales, told the AP that it was by far the worst he’d seen. “I’ve been all over the US, and the most I’ve ever seen in a day is 30.”

Latest data from Foreclosure.com indicate that western states such as California, Arizona, and Nevada—among the states which saw explosive growth in construction and inflated home prices in recent years—experienced a wave of new foreclosures in February. Foreclosures in California increased by 150 percent from January to February; Arizona saw a rise of 161 percent for the same period; Nevada experienced a 99 percent increase.


Boston Globe

Realtors Protest Increase in Fannie Mae Mortgage Fees
Wall Street Journal - 3 hours ago
For instance, for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage to buy a condominium, allowing for initial payments of interest only and with a 20% down payment, ...
FDIC Agrees to Sell IndyMac to Investor Group Washington Post
IndyMac deal slowed by Fannie mortgage issues-source Reuters
Fannie claim delays IndyMac deal CNNMoney.com
Forbes - Washington Post
all 623 news articles


Boston Globe

An Erratic Year for Mortgage Rates
New York Times, United States - 2 hours ago
By BOB TEDESCHI WHEN it comes to mortgage rates, 2008 may be remembered as the year the market went haywire. Near the start of the year, some long-term ...
Home-Mortgage Rates' Next Stop: Below 5% Wall Street Journal
As mortgage rates slide, refinancing applications take off Dallas Morning News
Realtor Q&A: Fixed mortgage rates explained The Union Leader
WOWT - KFDA
all 378 news articles


24dash

INSTANT VIEW-Mortgage approvals dive
Reuters - 21 hours ago
LONDON, Jan 2 (Reuters) - Mortgage approvals for house purchase fell to a record low in November, while a separate survey showed credit conditions looked ...
Fresh low for mortgage approvals BBC News
UK mortgage approvals hit record low Financial Times
Mortgage approvals hit record low ITV.com
WalesOnline - Times Online
all 414 news articles


Plan B for retirees who counted on home equity
The Associated Press - 13 hours ago
The good news is about 30 percent of homeowners have no mortgage at all. So even though their properties are probably worth less now than a few years ago, ...


AFP

Freddie Mac not issuing REMICs in January
Reuters - 17 hours ago
P: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Friday said it will not issue a reference REMIC (Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit) offering during the week of ...
Fed to start buying mortgage securities in early January MarketWatch
Troubled Mortgages Jump For Fannie In October Forbes
Fed Selects Four Firms to Manage MBS Purchase Plan Bloomberg
The Associated Press - Reuters
all 360 news articles


Reuters

‘Piggyback’ Mortgages May Cut Modifications, Fed Says
Bloomberg - Dec 31, 2008
30 (Bloomberg) -- Attempts to loosen terms on hundreds of thousands of delinquent home loans may be hindered by so- called piggyback second mortgages that ...
Fed move could bring rates even lower Seattle Post Intelligencer
Will mortgage rates drop again? Los Angeles Times
Fed to start buying mortgage securities next month MarketWatch
Money Management Letter - TPMMuckraker
all 104 news articles


Telegraph.co.uk

UK Pound Falls as Manufacturing, Mortgage Approvals Decline
Bloomberg - 18 hours ago
2 (Bloomberg) -- The pound fell against the dollar and the euro and UK two-year gilt yields dropped to the lowest on record after mortgage approvals slid to ...
-Dollar rises broadly in thin trade, sterling falls guardian.co.uk
Business leaders call for rethink on joining euro as plunging ... WalesOnline
Lending Drop Bloomberg
Bloomberg - Bloomberg
all 229 news articles


Rule change raises mortgage costs in Bay Area
Bizjournals.com, NC - 10 hours ago
The maximum size of conforming mortgages as of Jan. 1 declined 14 percent to $625500. The difference between the rate on conforming 30-year fixed rate loans ...
Drop in Conforming Limits Means More Jumbo Mortgages Housing Wire
all 5 news articles


Telegraph.co.uk

British house prices fell at record rate in 2008
The Associated Press - 20 hours ago
LONDON (AP) — House prices in Britain fell in 2008 at their fastest rate for at least 25 years, the country's biggest mortgage lender said Friday, ...
Outlook is ‘bleak’ after 16.2% fall in price of property WalesOnline
House prices fall by record £3000 a month and return to 2004 ... Telegraph.co.uk
Crunch wipes £30000 off families' homes Scotsman
AFP - Telegraph.co.uk
all 267 news articles


Daily Mail

Jeremy Warner: Forget mortgage borrowers, what about savers?
Independent, UK - 6 hours ago
Outlook: Even if bank rate falls to zero, the mortgage holder would still have to pay at least 1.5 per cent. One of my colleagues has a tracker mortgage ...
Derbyshire mortgage customers to lose out Derby Evening Telegraph
Nationwide ends tracker rate cuts BBC News
Nationwide building society halts mortgage tracker rate cuts FinancialAdvice.co.uk
Times Online - QCK
all 76 news articles

.mortgage. - Google News

Common Misspellings include actualy adecuate affort, efford allready alreayd, aready alsot, aslo adn, anbd aroud, arround, arund asociated, assoicated assocation bankrupcy, banruptcy baceause, beacuse, becasue, beccause, becouse, becuase beggin bu catagory, catagory ceratin, certian cheif claerly consequeseces consttruction, constuction, contruction coorperation ocuntry currenly difficulity, dificulty buring, durig, durring, duting eceonomy eigth endig enourmous enourmously eveyr expeced experianced extrordinarily extemely, extrememly, extremly, extremly familes, fimilies febuary, febuary, febyuary, febyuary fedral, fedral finacial fidn firt, firts foudn fouth fomr, frome grwo ahev, ahve, haev, hvae, hvea heigher, higer historie howver hunderd includng, incuding, inlcuding inclreased inudstry inital, intial intrest inot lastr, lsat levle lone maked amke, mkae, mkea amking, mkaing manufaturing michagan milion, millon minumum missisipi, missisippi mounth monts moreso, mroe, omre morage, morgage, morgtage, morgate, mortage nto, onot nowe offical lonly, onyl nother, otehr preiod, preriod populare popoulation pricipal probelm proccess, proces reched rela remaing recquired requred rised smae siezure severeal siginificant, signficant, signficiant, signifigant sose smoe, soem somtimes standars staes stuggling studdy subsidary, subsiduary, subsiduary suposed, suppoed suprising, suprizing, surprizing tkaing tahn, thna taht, tath, thast, thgat, thta, thyat hten, tghe, ther, thge, tjhe ther, theri, thier, thier themselfs, themslves their, ther theese htey, tehy, tyhe thrid htis, thsi, tihs ethose, thsoe thoughout, throught, througout tiem, timne, tiome tutle traditionnal twpo unconvential uopn, apon variey, varity, vreity, vriety varing wass, weas, ws vell wehn, whn hwihc, whcih, whic, whihc, whlch, wich iwll, wille, wiull winder owudl, woudl eyar, yearm, yera eyars, eyasr, yeasr, yeras, yersa
 Buying a Home  Home Buyers Tips  What is a Buyers Agent  Buying A HUD Home  woodlands texas homes for sale   Home Insurance  Realtor Advantages  Flood Insurance  Steps to Sell your Home  Selling Home HUD  First Time Home Buyer  Protecting Your Credit  Mistakes when buying a Home  Home Forclosures on The rise!!!!!!  Bad Mortgages  Sub prime mortgages   Mortgage collapse  Real Estate Recession is happening  US Economic collapse