Here are a few populist demands: a moratorium on foreclosures,
mandatory mortgage rate modifications for distressed borrowers,
interest rate caps on mortgages and other personal debts. -- Yoshie

Center for Responsible Lending:
<http://www.responsiblelending.org/>

Subprime Woes:
<http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/03/22/business/0322-biz-webWORKOUT.gif>

<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/22/business/22workout.html>
March 22, 2007
For Some Subprime Borrowers, Few Good Choices
By VIKAS BAJAJ

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

At the end of last year, more than 2.6 million home loans were either
past due for more than 30 days or in foreclosure. About 40 percent of
them were made to people with weak, or subprime, credit. Most
economists predict that the number of troubled loans will continue to
rise this year as more mortgages are adjusted to higher interest rates
and home prices decline further.

Last year, more than 37 percent of subprime loans were made without
verification of borrowers' incomes, up from 15 percent in 2000,
according to an analysis by JPMorgan Chase. Also, a third of borrowers
took out a second mortgage, up from 6.8 percent in 2003, suggesting
that they did not have enough money for a down payment.

For these borrowers, the best alternatives, according to some housing
specialists, may include short sales, in which a lender accepts a sale
for less than what is owed on the house, or a deed in lieu of
foreclosure, where a lender takes ownership of a house instead of full
payment of the mortgage.

Rising default rates have thus far had a modest impact on the overall
economy, but economists fear that the problems could intensify if a
broader range of borrowers, including those with stronger credit,
start falling behind on payments. A big increase in the number of
homes for sale, because of rising foreclosures, would put more
pressure on prices and limit home buying and consumer spending.

The Senate Banking Committee will hold a hearing on problems in the
subprime market today in Washington. Senator Christopher J. Dodd,
Democrat of Connecticut and the committee's chairman, has suggested
that the federal government may need to bail out homeowners in
trouble, and some housing advocacy groups are calling for a moratorium
on foreclosures.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Loss mitigation efforts by mortgage lenders and government subsides,
to be clear, can help borrowers and limit losses. But experience thus
far suggests that a more concerted and coordinated effort will be
needed. It may also require a change in the policies governing what
can be done with securitized loans.

To increase a borrower's chance of making required payments, lenders
can do things like lowering interest rates on the loans, waiving
past-due payments and fees, and extending the periods in which low
teaser rates apply to loans.

But the options vary greatly, based on who owns the mortgages.
Generally speaking, loans held by the banks that made them in the
first place can be modified most easily. Loans that have been
securitized are typically subject to greater restrictions, according
to the terms on which they were sold to investors. Payments made by
borrowers whose loans have been securitized are collected and
processed by mortgage servicers.

According to a Bear Stearns analysis, half of all mortgage securities
that make up a widely followed index allow the servicer to modify the
interest rate, principal balance or maturity of a loan; 40 percent
allow some modifications but require approval from a ratings agency if
more than 5 percent of a pool of mortgages is changed, and 10 percent
of loan pools allow no changes. About half of all modifications are
successful at preventing foreclosures, according to the investment
bank.

The restrictions are intended to protect investors against tampering
with the cash flow generated by the loans. But in times of greater
distress, investors prefer modifications that let them continue
earning a return rather than having the property foreclosed, a costly
process.

"You will see a greater willingness to work with borrowers," said Gyan
Sinha, a senior analyst who follows the subprime market for Bear
Stearns.

Much of the revamping will start occurring once investors sell off or
write down the value of the loans to account for decreases in home
prices and the delinquent status of the loans, said Stan Ross,
chairman of the Lusk Center for Real Estate at the University of
Southern California. Some borrowers may find that they can stay in
their homes if the value is written down enough.

"You mark the asset down to current value," Mr. Ross said, "then you
look at the borrower and say, 'Is this the borrower that will repay
me?' "

But housing counselors and lawyers who have worked on behalf of
borrowers say their experience suggests that is not yet happening.

They say that many servicers are unwilling to discuss modifications
until loans are at least three months past due, a point when many
borrowers are in deep financial trouble. Also, servicers are often
unwilling or unable to make big enough changes to account for inflated
appraisals and income levels that were used in underwriting the loans.

"Some of them take hundreds and hundreds of hours" of work and
negotiations, said Diane Thompson, a lawyer at the Land of Lincoln
Legal Assistance Foundation in East St. Louis, Ill. "It seems to me
that is a terrible waste of our resources. It would be much better if
the bad loans were never made, and if they were made, we would get
people to accept responsibility for them."

Officials at some big mortgage servicers declined to discuss their
practices, but an executive at Wells Fargo, which services the
seventh-largest subprime loan portfolio, according to Inside Mortgage
Finance, a trade publication, says it has taken an active approach.

Mary Coffin, executive vice president for servicing at Wells Fargo
Home Mortgage, said the company repeatedly warns borrowers about
coming interest rate changes, gives them access to loss-mitigation
specialists before they are delinquent for 90 days, and refers them to
financial counselors if they need such help.

"The sooner that we work with them, the more success we will have,"
Ms. Coffin said. She also asserted that the company did not make loans
that allowed customers to put little or no money down, which she
acknowledged were a lot harder to modify or refinance because the
owners typically had no equity in their properties.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

More borrowers may find themselves in a similar situation in the next
two years as the first interest rate adjustments take effect on loans
in 2004 and 2005. Those who continue to have spotty credit and little
equity in their homes will be at the greatest risk because many
lenders are no longer offering no-money-down mortgages to people with
weak credit.

"If someone calls and says they want do a 100 percent loan," said Jeff
Jaye, a mortgage broker in San Jose, Calif., "my antenna goes up. My
first question is 'What's your credit score?' "
--
Yoshie

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