Mortgage Crisis: 12% Are Late, Foreclosed

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J.W. ELPHINSTONE | May 28, 2009 06:16 PM EST | AP

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A foreclosed home is shown in Mountain View, Calif., Thursday, May 28, 2009. A record 12 percent of homeowners with a mortgage are behind on their payments or in foreclosure as the housing crisis spreads to borrowers with good credit. And the wave of foreclosures isn't expected to crest until the end of next year, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Thursday. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

NEW YORK — The mortgage crisis is spreading and hitting new heights: Borrowers with good credit now make up the largest share of foreclosures as job losses and pay cuts exact their toll.

A record 12 percent of homeowners with a mortgage were behind on their payments in the first quarter, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Thursday. And the trend is predicted to continue until the end of next year, about six months after unemployment is expected to peak.

The genesis of the recession _ risky adjustable-rate loans made to borrowers with bad credit _ remains a significant factor in foreclosures. Today, almost half of all subprime ARMs are past due or in foreclosure. In Florida, New Jersey and New York the number is above 55 percent.

When those borrowers started defaulting in droves in late 2006, it forced dozens of lenders out of business and sparked a credit crisis in the summer of 2007. Businesses nationwide couldn't get short-term loans to finance new orders or even cover their payrolls. Economic production began shrinking at the end of 2007 in what has become the longest recession in the United States since World War II.

The impact has now filtered out, consuming homeowners who until recently had a good track record of paying their bills on time. Nearly 6 percent of these prime borrowers with fixed-rate mortgages were past due or in foreclosure, nearly doubling in the last year.

"These (borrowers) are the best of the best out there," said real estate analyst Mike Larson with Weiss Research in Jupiter, Fla. "Clearly, borrowers far and wide are getting hit by this."

The worst of the trouble continues to be focused in California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida, which accounted for 46 percent of new foreclosures in the country and reported the worst delinquency and foreclosure rates on prime fixed-rate loans. The four have suffered massive job cuts in the housing industry. There were no signs of improvement.

But experts expect the pain to spread throughout the country as job losses mount. MBA's chief economist Jay Brinkmann estimates the unemployment rate will top out in mid-2010 and foreclosures to abate about six months afterward.

Story continues below

The number of newly laid off people requesting jobless benefits fell last week, the government said Thursday, but the number of people receiving unemployment benefits reached 6.78 million in mid-May, the highest on record.

The continuing rise in unemployment, which economists say could reach double digits, means more trouble for the ailing financial system and the economy. Lower incomes and lost jobs are the No. 1 reason people lose their homes through foreclosure. Higher unemployment also means people have less money to spend on basic necessities, let alone luxuries.

And borrowers without jobs are harder for lenders to help with loan modifications.

Nadine Harris in Bakersfield, Calif., is hoping to modify her 30-year fixed-rate mortgage under President Barack Obama's loan modification and refinancing program introduced earlier this year.

The 55-year-old was laid off two years ago by Sears after working there 34 years. Harris found another job, but she makes $20,000 less a year. The $925 she takes home every two weeks doesn't cover her $1,522 mortgage and other living expenses. She's used all her savings to stay current on her payments, but next month the reserves will run dry.

"I'll have to scrimp to make up the payment in June," she said.

Jodi Woodsmith, a housing counselor at Self-Help Enterprises in Visalia, Calif., said in the last eight weeks she's seen more and more homeowners with similar stories walk through her door.

"Those who had savings, they've exhausted their savings hoping they could ride it out," she said.

Woodsmith said a recent change to the president's program allows borrowers to use unemployment benefits as a source of income for a loan modification. Income from spouses who are not on the mortgage also is taken into account.

Though the plan might stem some foreclosures, it might not be enough to significantly alter the crisis.

"It may be too much to say that the numbers will fall because of the plan," Brinkmann said. "It's more correct to say that the numbers won't be as high."

NEW YORK — The mortgage crisis is spreading and hitting new heights: Borrowers with good credit now make up the largest share of foreclosures as job losses and pay cuts exact their toll. A reco...
NEW YORK — The mortgage crisis is spreading and hitting new heights: Borrowers with good credit now make up the largest share of foreclosures as job losses and pay cuts exact their toll. A reco...
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This ReThug prosperity at it's best, one man Bill Gates is worth 100 billion (give or take a billion or 2)
and i'm not hating on Bill but this is the basis of trickle down, it alway's trickle up, yet many of the
people that don't get any benefits (cause the CEO has to make his billions) still vote for this nonsense.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 PM on 05/28/2009
- YWC I'm a Fan of YWC 7 fans permalink

Bad example!

Bill Gates actually created a large amount of wealth alongside his own. I went to school with twin brothers who's parents were millionaire's from working at MicroSoft as a secretary and mailroom clerk. Not to mention we wouldn't be debating this had windows not been invented!

Bill Gates is the type of rich guy that America needs more of and less of the Bernie Madoffs!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 AM on 05/29/2009
- DFL I'm a Fan of DFL 40 fans permalink
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This is what we call "republican prosperity" -if their way of doing things was so good then why do we have stories like this one in the news?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 05/28/2009
- mazzetta I'm a Fan of mazzetta 14 fans permalink
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citizens are bankrupt, banks are bankrupt, houses are sold for nothing

so why simply not to give homes' property to people, while taxpayer's money is going to banks?

what's the rationale in giving banks both the money lost by bankers and the houses lost by howners?

I think it would be rightful and should be done at least for people that have already paid half of their debt, in the end they were sold overpriced houses

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 05/28/2009
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Yes, you see what's happening: We don't have to worry about the gov't owning the banks -- the banks own the gov't.

They have proven they can manipulate Congress and Obama enough to TAKE OVER ALL houses in arrears with taxpayer dollars. They'll try to reflate housing prices, but will fail, costing the taxpayer trillions, and the economy, w. gov't run rental/sale programs and never-ending looting of the taxpayer.

The problem? Big banks

The solution? Creative private financing like in the 80's. (Plus lots of canned goods and ammunition for the next few years of chaos)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 AM on 05/29/2009
- Jond0 I'm a Fan of Jond0 11 fans permalink
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A nice World War will help us all forget this mess!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 05/28/2009

I just saw a house close to foreclosure. It was a cheaply built McMansion, the shoddy build quality was obvious to the naked eye. The current owner was "improving" it by putting in a fourth bathroom... which was right next to the third bathroom... which was one room away from the main bathroom which was the size of my living room... except that it didn't have a view because it was in the basement. He wasn't even halfway finished when he ran out of money. There was a sign on a wall saying "New owner to finish project and check permits!". Well, well, well, wasn't that flipper nice... he didn't even get a permit! He didn't care to explain why he had to drill a sequence of holes into the ceiling all the way from one end of the home to the other... and what that piece of drywall did that cut off a substantial portion of one of the rooms without any access to the newly created partition... He was, however, so friendly as to rip out everything in the kitchen, hoping that the sale of a used fridge and some scratched cooktops would help him to pay the mortgage three days longer...

I.d.i.o.t.s.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:00 PM on 05/28/2009
- Jond0 I'm a Fan of Jond0 11 fans permalink
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But it looked like a good idea on TV...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:30 PM on 05/28/2009
- LitDr2B I'm a Fan of LitDr2B 4 fans permalink
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Little boxes on the hillside,
Little boxes made of ticky-tacky,
Little boxes, little boxes,
Little boxes, all the same.
There's a green one and a pink one
And a blue one and a yellow one
And they're all made out of ticky-tacky
And they all look just the same.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:32 PM on 05/28/2009
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hey my mom used to sing that to me

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 PM on 05/28/2009
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yeah, freaked me out too......and i've always been working poor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 05/28/2009
- PlasmaX I'm a Fan of PlasmaX 4 fans permalink

Without comprehensive foreclosure reform the downward spiral of our economy will continue. How far down it sinks depends on when the Government finally gets the guts to take on greedy bankers in earnest.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:57 PM on 05/28/2009

Never fear. Obama will talk us out of this mess! He oratory is that good!
By the way, leave Geithner and Summers alone. Obama ordained both as INDISPENSABLES.
He labeled them as such for a reason, didn't he??????????????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:30 PM on 05/28/2009
- noaxe397 I'm a Fan of noaxe397 132 fans permalink

Where is CNBC's Rick Santelli when we need him? The housing crisis will never end unless we have the benefit of his cogent insight for the president to follow. I wonder if he will blame the deadbeats who bought too much house with too little income this time.

This is what happens when you adopt the capitalist dog-eat-dog mindset. It comes back to haunt you. I'm trying to figure out how the GOP will Luntz-speak the fact that it is now prime borrowers who are failing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 05/28/2009
- msjimmied I'm a Fan of msjimmied 53 fans permalink
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I think they ran out of dogs to eat this time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 PM on 05/28/2009

The crisis is definitely not over. We still have to deal with the 1 quadrillion dollar derivatives death star that is approaching.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 05/28/2009

Could we put all the bankers and mortgage brokers at the site where it will land?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 PM on 05/28/2009
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That would be fun, but.... They are the crew!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 PM on 05/28/2009
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The highest, most fantastic figure I've heard for the total value of toxic assets held by banks is $12 trillion. Where do you get $1 quadrillion?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:32 PM on 05/28/2009
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Notional value is not, in of itself, frightening.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:35 PM on 05/28/2009
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Excerpt from: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sheldon-filger/stress-test-for-us-banks_b_201835.html

"However, it is currently estimated that the combined value of all derivatives contracts in the world equals a sum of money that seems impossible to fathom: $1.2 quadrillion! That number exceeds the total GDP of the entire planet by many dozens of times."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:06 PM on 05/28/2009
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I wonder what will happen when we finally reach that tipping point when so many people will really need to start giving up their "necessities": you know...iPods, iPhones, Blackberries, Blue-Rays, DVDs, Netflix memberships, PartyLite Candle Parties, DirectTV with 2500 channels of garbage and HDVD options.....

wah. wah.

Can't come soon enough for me. This guy talking on his bluetooth behind me in the supermarket is really ticking me off as I'm trying to type in this rant on my Blackberry.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 05/28/2009
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 407 fans permalink
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I hope you don't lose YOUR job. Actually, I hope you do, so you can feel the pain and not be so insensitive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 05/28/2009
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Wouldn't bother in me the least if I lost my job.

I don't need much.

I feel bad for those who have come to believe that they do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:22 PM on 05/28/2009
- LitDr2B I'm a Fan of LitDr2B 4 fans permalink
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I don't think he's (she's?) being insensitive by merely pointing out the ridiculous materialistic, consumeristic o.r.g.y that everyone thinks they have to go into debt in order to participate in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 PM on 05/28/2009
- BlueZoo I'm a Fan of BlueZoo 46 fans permalink

When writers start using these percentage figures, it would be much more to the point if we knew what the regular rate of foreclosure was say, four years ago, versus today! Throwing out percentages means nothing unless we can compare them!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 05/28/2009
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Nothing in this news article is actually new. The economist who have made predictions of the recession ending in the 3rd quarter factored all of this into their analysis.

Anybody who read Obama's mortgage relief plan well knew that a great many homeowners would not qualify.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 05/28/2009
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no kidding, most folks are well above 105% so this plan helps very few

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 05/28/2009
- AmandaRuth I'm a Fan of AmandaRuth 8 fans permalink

Jobs are the answer. If they banks think it is bad now, hold your breath if the country has another "jobless recovery".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 05/28/2009
- Jond0 I'm a Fan of Jond0 11 fans permalink
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I know! Who will they lay off then?!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 PM on 05/28/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 79 fans permalink
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On my chat line/support groups on foreclosures, most bloggers complain about the banks not helping them with modifications, short sales, in lieu of, etc.. to save their homes.
FYI - Chase Morgan is the worst.

Why would the banks help anyone when we pay them to fail and to buy their negative assets.
The banks get paid to throw out the very tax payers that are bailing them out. Plus, they get to auction the homes, a good percentage at an overall profit.

The banks have even bought the Congress vote on letting bankruptcy judges re-negotiate mortgages.

This is no longer about poor minority people who recklessly bought too much home (never was). As the economy tanks and people lose income and jobs, and home foreclosures follow.

I wish homeowners got more support until the stimulus hit Main Street. Until then, its been trickle down failure as usual. .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 05/28/2009
- hipichick7 I'm a Fan of hipichick7 111 fans permalink
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Wachovia is the worst!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 05/28/2009
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This is most definitely all about the 5.5 million houses that George Bush had built for minority home buyers, most of whom are low income. Many of them were absolutely certain foreclosures.

When Bernanke became the chairman of the Fed he had his staff do an analysis of exotic subprime lending. They show him a stack of mortgages that went into default on the 2nd payment. He was shocked. They finished him off by showing him a similar stack that had gone into default on the 1st payment.

He immediately did what Greenspan had had the authority to do since the mid-1990s, which was to totally end exotic subprime lending practices. He killed it. He didn't need the permission of congress. That permission was given to the Fed more than a decade earlier. He did not have to call the President. All he had to do was write a memo that said, "This ignorant crap stops now."

Unfortunately, it was too late.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 05/28/2009
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no fan of the shrub here but i think that most of those low income minority home buyers were getting into existing homes.....at least that's what i saw while working out of tysons corner va ~ dc metro area .....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 PM on 05/28/2009
- noaxe397 I'm a Fan of noaxe397 132 fans permalink

What you are describing here is crony capitalism, which is the new welfare.

Capitalism=welfare.

Rove & Luntz could not have said it better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 05/28/2009
- Hailmaryyy I'm a Fan of Hailmaryyy 2 fans permalink

"Anecdotal evidence indicates the decline is still going on. On my block in Central Texas there are two very nice homes that have sat on the market for over a year. In March the asking price was $419,000. Now both homes are listed for $399,000. Still there are no takers. I was fortunate to be able to play golf on Monday and I met a young man around 30 named Joe. He is a much better golfer than I am. Joe just moved from our area due to a promotion with his company to Katy, Texas. This community is about 30 miles east of Houston on I-10. Joe told me he and his wife were looking at homes built in the 2000’s with 3,500 to 4,000 square feet with granite counter tops. This is comparable to my neighborhood. Joe told me they looked at 6 to 7 homes and they were priced in the $150,000 range and were going in the $40’s per square foot. I looked at the real estate offerings in Katy and discovered there are over 700 foreclosures on the market. Homes that cost over $100 to build a few years ago are now selling for less than half of construction costs near Houston."

http://www.escapethenewgreatdepression.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 05/28/2009
- bbrecht I'm a Fan of bbrecht 20 fans permalink
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Okay-- here's what I don't get-- is it really necessary to buy a 3500 foot home to begin with? We are sinking in our own greed....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 05/28/2009
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If it weren't still on going, we would be out of the recession right now.

Nobody has said we are out of the recession right now.

Most think we will be out in the 3rd quarter of this year. Dr. Doom says the 1st quarter of next year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 PM on 05/28/2009
- LitDr2B I'm a Fan of LitDr2B 4 fans permalink
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Short answer: No--we most certainly don't need houses of that size. It is ridiculous. Just how much is enough?

It's not sustainable, and it is not the best use of our resources.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 PM on 05/28/2009

I would advise your friend not to buy in such an unstable area , as tempting as those prices are.. Doesnt sound like the place anyone would want to settle "for life" anyway..Maybe renting would be better

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:55 PM on 05/28/2009
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I hate the place, but Katy is where most up and coming young Republicans, and their bosses, want to live. It's suburban H*LL.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 PM on 05/28/2009
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