The last couple of paragraphs are chilling.

Subprime bust forces families from homes

By ADAM GELLER, AP National WriterSun Mar 25, 12:17 AM ET
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070325/ap_on_bi_ge/house_of_cards;_ylt=AmVHzG8HUzGS7zpSHvGTjzfMWM0F

The lights are still on inside Foreclosure No. A200642668 — so while
there's time, have a look around.

Here's the living room, still covered in the worn blue shag Angela
Sneary always intended to replace with the sheen of hardwood. And
downstairs, through a curtain of plastic beads, is the basement where
husband Tim was going to knock out a wall and put in a foosball table.

Step this way and the Snearys point out the places where they never
could find the cash to hang a ceiling fan, install a hot tub, replace
the siding ... a long list of abandoned ambitions that seem almost too
big to squeeze into the modest four-bedroom tri-level.

Owning a home is all about finding humor in unfinished projects. But
in the house set back from a bend at 11030 Eudora Circle, the Snearys
never had the luxury.

They ran out of money first. Then, they ran out of time. Soon, they'll
almost certainly be out of a home.

Buying a home is the American dream and a record number of Americans —
nearly 70 percent — are living it.

Many families, though, likely never would have become owners if not
for the tremendous growth over the past decade of a new kind of
mortgage business called subprime lending. It long seemed like a
winning proposition for all parties. Now the costs are becoming
apparent — and they are very unsettling.

Subprime lenders peddle new kinds of mortgages, often requiring no
money down and made at "teaser" interest rates that soon rise. They
target marginal borrowers with weak credit or questionable incomes who
previously might not have gotten a loan at all.

By last year, subprime loans made up 20 percent of the market for new mortgages.

But as the housing market cools, thousands of subprime borrowers are
struggling to keep their homes. A number of subprime lenders, saddled
by failed loans and a shortage of cash, have folded or staggered. In
some particularly hard-hit neighborhoods in Denver's suburbs — one of
a few metropolitan areas where the problem is especially grave — home
after home sits dark.

Clearly, this isn't how the American dream is supposed to play out,
but who's to blame?

The experience of families like the Snearys show how the squeeze
created by questionable lending can quickly be compounded by family
economic crises, a lack of planning and knowledge, and the rapid
shifts in a real estate market that once seemed unstoppable.

"You were set up to fail," one real estate agent told them.

It's a sobering thought for anybody who shares the American dream.
After all, it hits so close to home.

___

Tim first met Angela when he was just 5. She was hours old.

Their fathers were best friends, "two old hippies who partied
together." On an afternoon 33 years ago, they celebrated Angela's
arrival. Tim stared at the tiny infant a nurse held up to the
maternity ward window and waved.

Sixteen years later, Angela's dad died. Tim, just out of the Navy,
went to pay his respects. He offered his arms to Angela — and never
let go.

In the wedding photos, Tim's rock-star hair reaches the shoulders of
his white tuxedo. Angela's bridal gown does little to hide her eighth
month of pregnancy.

The new family grew fast — a year after Amanda was born, Timmy Jr.
followed and three years later came Steven. Tim found work doing
landscaping in Denver's mushrooming subdivisions. Angela got a job
working for an insurance company. Eventually, they combined to make
around $55,000 a year.

They moved from rental to rental, aspiring to buy. By 2004, their
rental town house was getting tight. A neighbor complained they were
noisy.

The couple set out to look at homes in Thornton, a fast-expanding,
mostly working-class suburb 20 minutes outside Denver.

They loved the second house the agent showed them, tucked in a 1970s
subdivision with streets curled around each other like a ball of yarn.
It was painted glowing pink with a big shade tree out front. The
kitchen drawer-pulls were shaped like tiny forks and spoons. It had
spacious bedrooms for all three kids, plenty of space for three dogs
and six cats.

Tim "walked in here and said this is perfect," Angela recalls.

It cost $204,000. "We thought we were getting a deal," Tim says.

The agent said he'd find them a mortgage, no money down. The Snearys
say they never thought to shop around.

More than two years and 100-plus homes later, agent Kent Widmar says
he has no memory of the couple or the deal. But he knows his customers
— and subprime loans are the only loans most can get.

"I kind of work the bottom of the market, the tough deals, the people
that can't get credit anywhere," Widmar says. "You're dealing with
people where nobody else (other lenders) is even going to talk to them
... It's not like you have a whole lot of choices."

The Snearys say they expected to borrow at a fixed rate of 6.5
percent. That would put monthly payments at about $1,290, a little
more than rent.

But at the closing in August, all the numbers were higher. The Snearys
were offered two loans, both from a Texas subprime lender, Sebring
Capital Partners. The first, for 90 percent of the purchase price, was
at 8.31 percent, set to adjust after two years. The second, for the
remainder, was at 13.69 percent.

The house would cost $1,623.80 a month to start — and it was almost
certain to rise.

Looking back, Tim wishes they'd asked more questions or considered
walking out. But everything was in boxes, and they'd given notice. So
they eyed each other nervously, and agreed to work more hours. Then,
they signed the papers.

___

The home loan business is very different from what it used to be.

"When we were children, the lender was a savings and loan — just like
in 'It's a Wonderful Life'," says Oliver Frascona, a Boulder, Colo.
attorney whose firm represents many lenders in foreclosure
proceedings, including the Snearys'. "The lender was loaning their own
money ... so they were very careful with how they lent it."

Savings and loans had their own deeply serious flaws, and their
failings opened the business to competitors.

Today, many buyers find loans through a mortgage broker. Many of those
loans — certainly subprime loans — come not from local banks but from
loan originators. These companies hold the loans briefly before
reselling them, earning a profit and passing along the risk.

The mortgages are usually bought by a bank or Wall Street firm.
Sometimes a loan servicing company, which pockets a fee for
administering each mortgage, acts as a go-between. Then the loans are
bundled and resold as securities to investors.

The new system works well in many ways, but the incentives driving the
players are very different. The mortgage broker and loan originator,
rather than being restrained by risk, pursue the profit that is the
reward for generating new business. An enthusiastic Wall Street
provides cash for yet more loans.

But the willingness to downplay the risk of subprime loans turns a
business of caution into a hedged bet. Often, buyers qualify for these
loans only because they can afford payments at the introductory rate,
without considering how they'll make good once the rate goes up.

While home prices kept rising, it hardly seemed a gamble. Lenders and
investors embraced the high returns generated by such loans. For
consumers with shaky credit, it was easier to buy a home, easy to
refinance and easy to sell for a gain.

Then the market turned — and for many homeowners, the escape hatch slammed shut.

There will always be people who fall behind on loans.

But "house prices are no longer the lifesaver they were for people in
good times," says Ellen Schloemer of the Center for Responsible
Lending, which recently projected a sharp rise in subprime
foreclosures in the next few years.

Now, owners in trouble are living in homes that may be worth
substantially less than they owe. They can't sell or refinance. They
are ensnared in loans whose costs keep rising.

It is a vortex that's difficult to escape. Schloemer calls it "the
perfect storm."

___

On their first night as homeowners, the Snearys celebrated at one of
the kids' favorite restaurants, Old Chicago, with a deep-dish
pepperoni pizza. The next morning, Tim borrowed a trailer from work
and moved them in. They set to work making the place their own,
repainting the exterior themselves in a stunning night-sky shade
called Suddenly Sapphire.

They stopped when they ran out of paint. Two years later, patches of
pink still show through the eastern wall.

For a few months, anyway, they kept pace with the costs. But as 2004
ended, Tim's employer — who had already laid him off and called him
back — sent him home for good.

With little saved, the Snearys immediately fell behind, missing two payments.

By now, their loan had been sold. The new loan servicer, Homecomings
Financial, told them they'd need to catch up and set up a payment
plan. The Snearys' monthly bill jumped to $1,920.

After three months, Tim found a new job for two-thirds of his previous
pay. A tax refund helped. But the larger payments "had us strapped so
tight it wasn't even funny," he says.

So Angela took on more hours.

In July 2005, she pointed her Saturn into Denver's morning rush.
Trying to merge into traffic on I-25, the car was slammed from behind.
It spun across traffic and smashed into the concrete divider.

Doctors said Angela would be OK. But disabling headaches kept her home
for three weeks, and made work for another three all but impossible.
The couple fell further behind.

The lender set up a new payment plan. Monthly costs jumped to $2,100.
Angela began draining her small 401(k).

If the Snearys could make it through 2006, maybe they could refinance
and dig out.

Now, though, there was another problem.

They still owed nearly all of their loan. But their home was worth
much less in a real estate market slowed by economic uncertainty and
bloated by new construction. The couple, convinced they'd overpaid,
couldn't refinance or sell.

Instead, they neared the two-year mark, when their interest rate would jump.

The lender "said you're going to have to pay ... or we'll have to go
to foreclosure," Tim says. "Well, I guess I'm going to have to go
foreclosure because I've given everything I have to give and you can't
squeeze blood from a turnip."

The foreclosure notice came last October. The Snearys have not made a
payment since.

In theory, if they paid up, they could keep the house. But there is no
money or incentive.

A few weeks ago, Homecomings sent a letter. Stay and their interest
rate will leap again to 12.8 percent. Payments that were impossible to
meet temporarily will become permanent.

___

Late last year, a form letter arrived in the Snearys' box from their
original lender, Sebring Capital, inviting them to refinance.

"I thought it was crazy," Tim says. They threw the letter in the trash.

It's just as well. Weeks later, Sebring folded, a stark example of how
quickly subprime lending has soured.

Sebring, a mid-sized lender, hardly wasted away. Near the end, it was
initiating nearly $200 million in new loans a month, senior vice
president Michael Waldron says.

But the company didn't have the cash to keep up, particularly as the
market turned, and Sebring went searching for a buyer.

When subprime lenders sell mortgages, they sign contracts promising
that loans will meet certain standards and performance measures.
Otherwise, the lenders are obligated to take the loans back.

Sebring found a buyer — just as Wall Street began taking notice of the
spike in foreclosures and the resulting squeeze on lenders. The deal
fell through and the next morning executives at what had been one of
Dallas' fastest growing companies gathered their 325 employees to
announce they were shutting down.

That would be no big deal if it were only the tale of a single
company. But in recent months, more than two dozen subprime lenders
have stumbled or failed.

The question now is just how many more bad loans like the Snearys' are
still out there — and who will be left holding the bag.

___

Officially, it's an auction.

But there is no machine-gun sales chatter at Adams County's weekly
foreclosure sale, no gavel-banging. Bargains are doubtful, so no
bidders show up. It is mostly a formality, finished minutes after it
begins.

That's the scene this Wednesday morning, when the Sneary home goes up
for sale. With many homes worth less than borrowers owe, the only bids
are the ones submitted in advance by the banks holding the soured
loans.

The lack of bids gives Tim and Angela 75 more days to move out. They
hope that will be enough to find a buyer who'll satisfy their lender,
and keep foreclosure from staining their record.

But even if that doesn't happen, the couple has reached an unexpected
truce with failure. After two years of fighting to hold on to a house,
there's soothing relief in losing. Finally, there's a chance to rest,
to crawl out from under the pressure.

They can stop shouting now, the Snearys say. They can give the time
they'd spent working to the kids. They'll find new jobs, a place to
rent, and try to save.

The Snearys have a long-term plan, too. In a few years, they hope to buy again.

But the next time will be different, Tim and Angela say. They'll stay
within their means. They'll borrow more intelligently. And they
already know just where to find a deal.

They'll make an offer to another family desperate to escape foreclosure.

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