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December 26th, 2007

Compromise mortgage reform bill



Just recently, the U.S. House of Representatives seemed to be riding to the rescue of U.S. homeowners with its Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007, which passed by a commanding margin.

Back in March, the National Urban League addressed the unfolding subprime lending debacle through our Homebuyer’s Bill of Rights well before the issue started to trigger shockwaves in international credit markets and to send hedge fund analysts to the unemployment line. At that time, policy makers and government officials were reluctant to support greater regulation to give the market a chance to correct itself. Guess what?

It didn’t happen.

But the chamber didn’t quite send struggling homeowners their knight in shining armor.

But some kind of help is better than nothing at all, I guess. Such is life on Capitol Hill, where slim party margins, especially in the U.S. Senate, make for glacial progress in the legislative process.

But what about the hundreds of thousands of households who have and will be foreclosed upon? According to Realty Trac, foreclosure filings in the third quarter were up 100 percent in 2007 over 2006, and up 33 percent over the second quarter. By the end of September, nearly half a million properties had entered some stage of foreclosure nationwide - or one per 196 households. Just a few years ago, black homeownership hit historic levels - nearly 50 percent - and has fallen steadily since.

The decrease obviously has something to do with the surge in subprime foreclosures over the past few years.

The Center for Responsible Lending estimates that one out of five subprime loans taken out in the past few years will go into foreclosure. In 2006, the center estimated that blacks were 31 percent more likely to hold subprime loans than whites with similar credit histories and that they were four times more likely to get higher interest rates. A recent study by New York University’s Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy found that African-Americans were four times as likely as whites to hold subprime mortgage loans in the New York City metropolitan area.

In our Homebuyer’s Bill of Rights under The Right to Be Free from Predatory Lending, we threw our support behind H.R. 1182, the "Prohibit Predatory Lending Act," sponsored by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank of Massachusetts. It served as a basis for the legislation that passed the House earlier this month until last-minute lobbying by the mortgage industry knocked some of its teeth out.

One provision added to quell industry concerns would prevent borrowers from suing Wall Street firms in state courts where protections are often stronger for abusive lending practices. It represented a concession by Frank to win the support of the panel’s ranking Republican Spencer Bachus of Alabama. The legislation still fails to please many, including us, but managed to garner enough votes to pass the House by a strong margin and currently eludes a White House veto threat.

"The lack of Wall Street account-ability is particularly troublesome," said John Taylor, president and CEO of National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a group of more than 600 community-based organizations in favor of creating and sustain affordable housing, job development and vibrant communities for working families. "While Wall Street has piled up billions of dollars in earnings and bonuses on defective or negligent mortgage products, the taxpayers are increasingly paying for their mistakes.

Homeowners across the country have lost billions of dollars in home equity due to falling house prices."

At the other end of the spectrum, the Mortgage Bankers Association predicted that the legislation would result in fewer home loans being issued nationwide. "Have no doubt, this bill will limit credit availability and options for thousands of Americans who want to grab their share of the American dream of homeownership. It will eliminate tools that millions of Americans have used to become successful long-term homeowners," said Kieran P. Quinn, the MBA’s chairman.

Far too many Americans of color have watched their dreams of homeownership turn into their worst nightmares. However, at this stage in the game, a watered-down effort is better than nothing at all. Still, it shows that to some extent our nation’s leaders aren’t terribly concerned about hard-working Americans’ desire to capture their own sliver of the American Pie. It also underscores the need for current and prospective U.S. homebuyers to exercise their own brand of consumer protection. They cannot rely completely on the government and should remember to go to great lengths to educate themselves about mortgage loan products before they sign the dotted line.

5 / 5 (1 Votes)

Copyright 2006-2008 The Hudson Valley Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Reader Response
  • Ted
  • December 27th, 2007 Insightful article.

    Keep up your GREAT work!

    Thought you might also find this interesting . . .I am a former senior loan officer for a regional mortgage bank. It made me sick to see how we took advantage of consumers for thousands of extra dollars. Sometimes these were smart people who simply didn't know any better. So I developed this simple Mortgage Loan Comparison Worksheet. If borrowers just used this easy tool when shopping for a mortgage, predatory lending in this country could virtually be eradicated:

    http://www.januspresentations.com/MortgageLoanComparisonWorksheet.pdf

    Problem is, most borrowers only make a decision once every seven years, so how would they even know what to look for? As a loan officer, my mission was not to educate, but to get a signature on the bottom line, at any cost.

    As my penance I wrote a book entitled Kickback: Confessions of a Mortgage Salesman, now one of the best-selling books on mortgages on Amazon.com. In the book, I list the Top 10 Mistakes Mortgage Borrowers Make :

    1. Not knowing which mortgage fees the borrower can -- and cannot -- negotiate.

    2. Choosing and trusting the first loan officer the borrower interviews.

    3. Using an interest-only or payment option adjustable-rate loan primarily to qualify for a more expensive house than you could normally afford.

    4. Thinking the interest rate is always the main thing.

    5. Not comparing the final fees listed on the closing documents to the up-front estimates to avoid the lender packing the loan with added-on fees without the borrower's knowledge.

    6. Not knowing if the mortgage has a pre-payment penalty - until it's too late.

    7. Thinking that renting is always just throwing money away.

    8. The borrower does not know if he or she is paying a back-end yield spread or Service Release Premium.

    9. Paying for mortgage life insurance, credit insurance or other expensive lender add-ons to increase the amount of kickbacks the lender can receive from various vendors.

    10. Paying hundreds of dollars to have a company set up a biweekly mortgage payment plan, something the borrower can generally do for herself or himself -- for free.

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