US mortgage crisis goes into meltdown

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="4">US mortgage crisis goes into meltdown</font size>

The Telegraph (London)
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 1:15am GMT 24/02/2007

Panic has begun to sweep the sub-prime mortgage sector in the United States after the bankruptcy of 22 lenders over the past two months, setting off mass liquidation of housing loans packaged as securities.

The rapid deterioration could not come at a worse time for British bank HSBC, which has set aside $10.5bn (£5.4bn) to cover bad loans in the US.

The cost of insuring against default on these loans has rocketed in recent weeks, from 50 basis points over Libor to 1,200, raising fears that a credit crunch could spread to the rest of the property market.

Low-grade BBB-rated securities - measured by the ABX index - have crashed from near par of 100 in early November to 72.5 this week.

Peter Schiff, head of Euro Pacific Capital, said the sector was in an unstoppable meltdown. "It's a self-perpetuating spiral: as sub-prime companies tighten lending they create even more defaults," he said.

California's ResMae Mortgage filed for bankruptcy last week as it struggled to cope with defaults on a $7.7bn book of sub-prime loans issued last year, while Accredited Home Lenders in San Diego warned that bad debts had reached 7.18pc of its portfolio.

HSBC chief executive Michael Geoghegan, who stepped in to take control of the US division earlier this month claiming "The buck stops at my door", has ousted top executives. But the worst may not be over for Household International, the property arm it acquired for $14.4bn in 2003 to capitalise on the housing boom.

Rating agency Standard & Poor's is shifting its focus to the tier of debt above sub-prime, eyeing loans covering people viewed as better credit risks but who lack the steady income needed for prime status.

S&P has placed 11 loan packages worth $146m on watch for a possible downgrade this week, saying it was most worried about "piggyback" second mortgages. "There is a potential danger of default on these deals," said credit strategist Robert Pollson.

For now, the US Federal Reserve believes the damage can be contained. "I don't think there'll be a large impact on prime mortgages from the sub-prime market," said governor Susan Schmidt Bies.

However, she warned of a "hidden" problem caused by sellers pulling property off the market. " The percentage of homes where nobody is living in them is at a record level. So the potential for inventory correction is still very high," she said.

Nouriel Roubini, economics professor at New York University, says the housing bust is slowly pulling America into recession. He cites a 14.4pc drop in housing starts last month; an expected loss of 600,000 real estate jobs in 2007; a sharp fall in home equity withdrawals - down from 6pc of GDP at the top of the boom; and a squeeze as $1,000bn of mortgages are adjusted upwards this year to higher interest rates.

Mr Roubini said: "America faces a 'reverse cycle' where a credit crunch has hit before the slowdown, a rare pattern. Normally, recession comes first, setting off credit troubles in its wake. We have a housing recession, an auto recession, a manufacturing recession, and a real investment recession already present. If all this happening in what the consensus terms as a 'Goldilocks economy', what would happen if the economy slows down?"

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/02/24/cnusecon24.xml
 
`

There is a silver lining in every dark cloud.
While somebody is going to hurt from this
situation, on the other hand, there will be
others who with smarts and guile will benefit.

`
 
No one knows what's going on in the market today or if they do they don't want to admit it. The stockmarket is over-priced, the housing market is bottoming and there are massive lay-offs in the jobs market. Don't want to sound like a pessimist but this could be very very bad.
 
This brings to mind the picture of a plane spiraling downwards with visible smoke out the engine.
 
Yesterday my boy was about to close on a duplex. His credit score is over 700. They approved him for the loan a week or 2 ago, but the lenders pull out at the last second. I'm guessing this bubble busting has something to do with his rejection.
 
Only thing I can see as a way to make money is ride out the initial shocks then mine through small and mid cap companies looking for bargains that have the potential to take off. I've been getting some"hints" that security related companies may take off if the depth of the coming meltdown is as deep as some are predicting. but you didn't hear it from me ;) :cool: :cool:
 
QueEx said:
Nobody sees an angle to make money from this yet ???
Mos Def see an angle. But it is a long term investment plan.
Peep. Houses getting foreclosed on = abundant supply of investment properties about to hit the market.
Bad stock>tricksles down to slowing of wage increases> means people are lessing willing to take finanical risk ie BUY NEW BIG HOMES.
Tightening of Mortgage Requirements= Less people able to buy homes>More people ready to RENT.

Game Plan for Savy "Established" Real Estate Investor
Buy R.E.O properties dirt cheap. Cuz banks gonna have to get rid of all them foreclusers cheap!

RENT the properties out--since more people are going to be looking to RENT now as opposed to 3-5 years ago.

Let your property appreciate> Sale a nice profit during the next BOOM cycle
:dance:
 
More details and analysis

<font size="5"><center>Crisis Looms in Market for Mortgages</font size></center>

New York Times
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
Published: March 11, 2007

On March 1, a Wall Street analyst at Bear Stearns wrote an upbeat report on a company that specializes in making mortgages to cash-poor homebuyers. The company, New Century Financial, had already disclosed that a growing number of borrowers were defaulting, and its stock, at around $15, had lost half its value in three weeks.

What happened next seems all too familiar to investors who bought technology stocks in 2000 at the breathless urging of Wall Street analysts. Last week, New Century said it would stop making loans and needed emergency financing to survive. The stock collapsed to $3.21.

The analyst’s untimely call, coupled with a failure among other Wall Street institutions to identify problems in the home mortgage market, isn’t the only familiar ring to investors who watched the technology stock bubble burst precisely seven years ago.

Now, as then, Wall Street firms and entrepreneurs made fortunes issuing questionable securities, in this case pools of home loans taken out by risky borrowers. Now, as then, bullish stock and credit analysts for some of those same Wall Street firms, which profited in the underwriting and rating of those investments, lulled investors with upbeat pronouncements even as loan defaults ballooned. Now, as then, regulators stood by as the mania churned, fed by lax standards and anything-goes lending.

Investment manias are nothing new, of course. But the demise of this one has been broadly viewed as troubling, as it involves the nation’s $6.5 trillion mortgage securities market, which is larger even than the United States treasury market.

Hanging in the balance is the nation’s housing market, which has been a big driver of the economy. Fewer lenders means many potential homebuyers will find it more difficult to get credit, while hundreds of thousands of homes will go up for sale as borrowers default, further swamping a stalled market.

“The regulators are trying to figure out how to work around it, but the Hill is going to be in for one big surprise,” said Josh Rosner, a managing director at Graham-Fisher & Company, an independent investment research firm in New York, and an expert on mortgage securities. “This is far more dramatic than what led to Sarbanes-Oxley,” he added, referring to the legislation that followed the WorldCom and Enron scandals, “both in conflicts and in terms of absolute economic impact.”

While real estate prices were rising, the market for home loans operated like a well-oiled machine, providing ready money to borrowers and high returns to investors like pension funds, insurance companies, hedge funds and other institutions. Now this enormous and important machine is sputtering, and the effects are reverberating throughout Main Street, Wall Street and Washington.

Already, more than two dozen mortgage lenders have failed or closed their doors, and shares of big companies in the mortgage industry have declined significantly. Delinquencies on loans made to less creditworthy borrowers — known as subprime mortgages — recently reached 12.6 percent. Some banks have reported rising problems among borrowers that were deemed more creditworthy as well.

Traders and investors who watch this world say the major participants — Wall Street firms, credit rating agencies, lenders and investors — are holding their collective breath and hoping that the spring season for home sales will reinstate what had been a go-go market for mortgage securities. Many Wall Street firms saw their own stock prices decline over their exposure to the turmoil.

“I guess we are a bit surprised at how fast this has unraveled,” said Tom Zimmerman, head of asset-backed securities research at UBS, in a recent conference call with investors.

Even now the tone accentuates the positive. In a recent presentation to investors, UBS Securities discussed the potential for losses among some mortgage securities in a variety of housing markets. None of the models showed flat or falling home prices, however.

The Bear Stearns analyst who upgraded New Century, Scott R. Coren, wrote in a research note that the company’s stock price reflected the risks in its industry, and that the downside risk was about $10 in a “rescue-sale scenario.” According to New Century, Bear Stearns is among the firms with a “longstanding” relationship financing its mortgage operation. Mr. Coren, through a spokeswoman, declined to comment.

Others who follow the industry have voiced more caution. Thomas A. Lawler, founder of Lawler Economic and Housing Consulting, said: “It’s not that the mortgage industry is collapsing, it’s just that the mortgage industry went wild and there are consequences of going wild.

“I think there is no doubt that home sales are going to be weaker than most anybody who was forecasting the market just two months ago thought. For those areas where the housing market was already not too great, where inventories were at historically high levels and it finally looked like things were stabilizing, this is going to be unpleasant.”

Like worms that surface after a torrential rain, revelations that emerge when an asset bubble bursts are often unattractive, involving dubious industry practices and even fraud. In the coming weeks, some mortgage market participants predict, investors will learn not only how lax real estate lending standards became, but also how hard to value these opaque securities are and how easy their values are to prop up.

Owners of mortgage securities that have been pooled, for example, do not have to reflect the prevailing market prices of those securities each day, as stockholders do. Only when a security is downgraded by a rating agency do investors have to mark their holdings to the market value. As a result, traders say, many investors are reporting the values of their holdings at inflated prices.

“How these things are valued for portfolio purposes is exposed to management judgment, which is potentially arbitrary,” Mr. Rosner said.

At the heart of the turmoil is the subprime mortgage market, which developed to give loans to shaky borrowers or to those with little cash to put down as collateral. Some 35 percent of all mortgage securities issued last year were in that category, up from 13 percent in 2003.

Looking to expand their reach and their profits, lenders were far too willing to lend, as evidenced by the creation of new types of mortgages — known as “affordability products” — that required little or no down payment and little or no documentation of a borrower’s income. Loans with 40-year or even 50-year terms were also popular among cash-strapped borrowers seeking low monthly payments. Exceedingly low “teaser” rates that move up rapidly in later years were another feature of the new loans.

The rapid rise in the amount borrowed against a property’s value shows how willing lenders were to stretch. In 2000, according to Banc of America Securities, the average loan to a subprime lender was 48 percent of the value of the underlying property. By 2006, that figure reached 82 percent.

Mortgages requiring little or no documentation became known colloquially as “liar loans.” An April 2006 report by the Mortgage Asset Research Institute, a consulting concern in Reston, Va., analyzed 100 loans in which the borrowers merely stated their incomes, and then looked at documents those borrowers had filed with the I.R.S. The resulting differences were significant: in 90 percent of loans, borrowers overstated their incomes 5 percent or more. But in almost 60 percent of cases, borrowers inflated their incomes by more than half.

A Deutsche Bank report said liar loans accounted for 40 percent of the subprime mortgage issuance last year, up from 25 percent in 2001.

Securities backed by home mortgages have been traded since the 1970s, but it has been only since 2002 or so that investors, including pension funds, insurance companies, hedge funds and other institutions, have shown such an appetite for them.

Wall Street, of course, was happy to help refashion mortgages from arcane and illiquid securities into ubiquitous and frequently traded ones. Its reward is that it now dominates the market. While commercial banks and savings banks had long been the biggest lenders to home buyers, by 2006, Wall Street had a commanding share — 60 percent — of the mortgage financing market, Federal Reserve data show.

The big firms in the business are Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank and UBS. They buy mortgages from issuers, put thousands of them into pools to spread out the risks and then divide them into slices, known as tranches, based on quality. Then they sell them.

The profits from packaging these securities and trading them for customers and their own accounts have been phenomenal. At Lehman Brothers, for example, mortgage-related businesses contributed directly to record revenue and income over the last three years.

The issuance of mortgage-related securities, which include those backed by home-equity loans, peaked in 2003 at more than $3 trillion, according to data from the Bond Market Association. Last year’s issuance, reflecting a slowdown in home price appreciation, was $1.93 trillion, a slight decline from 2005.

In addition to enviable growth, the mortgage securities market has undergone other changes in recent years. In the 1990s, buyers of mortgage securities spread out their risk by combining those securities with loans backed by other assets, like credit card receivables and automobile loans. But in 2001, investor preferences changed, focusing on specific types of loans. Mortgages quickly became the favorite.

Another change in the market involves its trading characteristics. Years ago, mortgage-backed securities appealed to a buy-and-hold crowd, who kept the securities on their books until the loans were paid off. “You used to think of mortgages as slow moving,” said Glenn T. Costello, managing director of structured finance residential mortgage at Fitch Ratings. “Now it has become much more of a trading market, with a mark-to-market bent.”

The average daily trading volume of mortgage securities issued by government agencies like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, for example, exceeded $250 billion last year. That’s up from about $60 billion in 2000.

Wall Street became so enamored of the profits in mortgages that it began to expand its reach, buying companies that make loans to consumers to supplement its packaging and sales operations. In August 2006, Morgan Stanley bought Saxon, a $6.5 billion subprime mortgage underwriter, for $706 million.

And last September, Merrill Lynch paid $1.3 billion to buy First Franklin Financial, a home lender in San Jose, Calif. At the time, Merrill said it expected First Franklin to add to its earnings in 2007. Now analysts expect Merrill to take a large loss on the purchase.

Indeed, on Feb. 28, as the first fiscal quarter ended for many big investment banks, Wall Street buzzed with speculation that the firms had slashed the value of their numerous mortgage holdings, recording significant losses.

As prevailing interest rates remained low over the last several years, the appetite for these securities only rose. In the ever-present search for high yields, buyers clamored for securities that contained subprime mortgages, which carry interest rates that are typically one to two percentage points higher than traditional loans. Mortgage securities participants say increasingly lax lending standards in these loans became almost an invitation to commit mortgage fraud. It is too early to tell how significant a role mortgage fraud played in the rocketing delinquency rates — 12.6 percent among subprime borrowers. Delinquency rates among all mortgages stood at 4.7 percent in the third quarter of 2006.

For years, investors cared little about risks in mortgage holdings. That is changing.

“I would not be surprised if between now and the end of the year at least 20 percent of BBB and BBB- bonds that are backed by subprime loans originated in 2006 will be downgraded,” Mr. Lawler said.

Still, the rating agencies have yet to downgrade large numbers of mortgage securities to reflect the market turmoil. Standard & Poor’s has put 2 percent of the subprime loans it rates on watch for a downgrade, and Moody’s said it has downgraded 1 percent to 2 percent of such mortgages that were issued in 2005 and 2006.

Fitch appears to be the most proactive, having downgraded 3.7 percent of subprime mortgages in the period.

The agencies say that they are confident that their ratings reflect reality in the mortgages they have analyzed and that they have required managers of mortgage pools with risky loans in them to increase the collateral. A spokesman for S.& P. said the firm made its ratings requirements more stringent for subprime issuers last summer and that they shored up the loans as a result.

Meeting with Wall Street analysts last week, Terry McGraw, chief executive of McGraw-Hill, the parent of S.& P., said the firm does not believe that loans made in 2006 will perform “as badly as some have suggested.”

Nevertheless, some investors wonder whether the rating agencies have the stomach to downgrade these securities because of the selling stampede that would follow. Many mortgage buyers cannot hold securities that are rated below investment grade — insurance companies are an example. So if the securities were downgraded, forced selling would ensue, further pressuring an already beleaguered market.

Another consideration is the profits in mortgage ratings. Some 6.5 percent of Moody’s 2006 revenue was related to the subprime market.

Brian Clarkson, Moody’s co-chief operating officer, denied that the company hesitates to cut ratings. “We made assumptions early on that we were going to have worse performance in subprime mortgages, which is the reason we haven’t seen that many downgrades,” he said. “If we have something that is investment grade that we need to take below investment grade, we will do it.”

Interestingly, accounting conventions in mortgage securities require an investor to mark his holdings to market only when they get downgraded. So investors may be assigning higher values to their positions than they would receive if they had to go into the market and find a buyer. That delays the reckoning, some analysts say.

“There are delayed triggers in many of these investment vehicles and that is delaying the recognition of losses,” Charles Peabody, founder of Portales Partners, an independent research boutique in New York, said. “I do think the unwind is just starting. The moment of truth is not yet here.”

On March 2, reacting to the distress in the mortgage market, a throng of regulators, including the Federal Reserve Board, asked lenders to tighten their policies on lending to those with questionable credit. Late last week, WMC Mortgage, General Electric’s subprime mortgage arm, said it would no longer make loans with no down payments.

Meanwhile, investors wait to see whether the spring home selling season will shore up the mortgage market. If home prices do not appreciate or if they fall, defaults will rise, and pension funds and others that embraced the mortgage securities market will have to record losses. And they will likely retreat from the market, analysts said, affecting consumers and the overall economy.

A paper published last month by Mr. Rosner and Joseph R. Mason, an associate professor of finance at Drexel University’s LeBow College of Business, assessed the potential problems associated with disruptions in the mortgage securities market. They wrote: “Decreased funding for residential mortgage-backed securities could set off a downward spiral in credit availability that can deprive individuals of home ownership and substantially hurt the U.S. economy.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/11/business/11mortgage.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2&hp
 
Can a mod pull up all those discussions we had on this issue like a year ago. My predictions are right on the money.
 
<font size="4">Subprime Lending Often the Root
of African-American Dreams Deferred</font size>


Black Press USA
by Jenice Richardson
Special to the NNPA from the Howard University News Service

WASHINGTON (NNPA) - Subprime loans have been the gateway to the American dream of homeownership for many, especially African-Americans. However, these loans are in close relation to high trends in foreclosures and is having a significant effect on Black borrowers, say fair-housing experts.

“It is not enough to put more Americans into their own homes if we fail to arm them with the tools needed to sustain homeownership,” says Marc Morial, president and chief executive officer of the National Urban League. “Far too many first-time homebuyers with limited financial experience have fallen into the trap of predatory lending where unscrupulous mortgage brokers steer them into unsuitable and exploitive mortgage products and turn their American dream into the American nightmare.”

The National Urban League reports that in 2004, African-American homeownership soared to nearly 50 percent, a historic high. White-American homeownership was at 76 percent. But, Black homeownership slipped to 47.9 percent in 2006 largely because of foreclosures.

The future does not look better. According to a 2006 study by the Durham-based Center for Responsible Lending, of subprime mortgages that originated during the seven-year period between1998 to 2006, “2.2 million U.S. households will lose their homes to foreclosure” and subprime foreclosures will affect 10 percent of recent African-American borrowers. The organization’s study also projects that, “one out of every five (19.4 percent) subprime loans made today will fail.”

Subprime loans are high interest loans that are generally utilized by those who have poor credit scores and limited options, describes Sharon Reuss, spokeswoman for the Center for Responsible Lending.

“I think often African-Americans are steered in the direction of subprime loans by brokers,” says Reuss. The subprime benefit to the broker is what are called yield spread premiums or “broker kickbacks,” which are the benefits a broker gains from getting borrowers to take higher interest loans with risky conditions and terms, Reuss explained.

In a 2003 study, the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a non-profit organization that focuses on lending and community development issues, found that subprime mortgages were more prevalent among Blacks in about 326 of 331 U.S. metropolitan areas studied. In addition, the Federal Reserve reported in 2005 that 54.7 percent of Blacks paid higher than average market rates for conventional home loans in contrast to 17.2 percent of non-Hispanic whites.

John Taylor, president and CEO of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, says that it is common for lenders to underwrite subprime loans based, not on a borrower’s ability to repay, but on the value of the borrower’s home that the lender stands to gain in a foreclosure or from fees associated with the loan.

Some fair-housing advocates think new laws should regulate subprime lending.

Morial says in a recent speech on what he calls the “Homebuyers’ Bill of Rights,” that Congress should form a Housing and Urban Development (HUD) task force.

“[It] would investigate and process mortgage lending complaints, including such actions as inappropriate steering to sub-prime loans, stricter qualification standards for minority borrowers and higher rates and/or conditions for minority homebuyers,” Morial says. He says he is seeking a congressional sponsor for the six-point Bill of Rights.

However, Morial also agrees that African-Americans and all homebuyers must educate themselves before stepping out into the industry and losing their dreams.

Taylor says he does not think borrowers of “any race” totally understand all of the language and pitfalls of the mortgage business, such as the difference between annual percentage rates and effective annual rates or the significance in the frequency of compounding interest, issues that tend to lead to default and foreclosures.

“We need to protect consumers in a way that they don’t have to be economists” to be successful in owning a home, says Taylor . “Because someone is not financially literate, you shouldn’t be able to rob them.”

William Spriggs, Chair of Howard Univesity’s economics department, says that one of the things resulting in defaults on these loans among Blacks is the effect of adjustable rates on those loans.

“Many think that something like a one percent increase from six to seven is insignificant, but in fact it’s a big deal,” says Spriggs.

In an attempt to combat harsh outcomes of subprime lending, Freddie Mac, a company that purchases mortgages to support homeownership, has recently announced that the company will refrain from buying subprime mortgages with high likelihood of payment shock and foreclosure. The company is developing a new model of subprime products that will give more protection, characterized by longer fixed terms and reset periods, according to Sharon McHale, vice president of public relations for Freddie Mac.

Under the company’s stricter subprime lending standards, low-documentation underwriting will be limited to ensure that borrowers can afford their homes.

Taylor says in order to limit foreclosures that result from subprime loan defaults, both borrowers and lenders must take responsibility. Borrowers need to be better educated and informed about their investment, but “[Lenders] ought to be highly honest, highly regulated and highly accountable.”

http://www.blackpressusa.com/News/Article.asp?SID=3&Title=National+News&NewsID=12610
 
Situation doesn't look good for sub-prime. I've been reading some articles about "concern" in the Alt A market also. Thinking is that sub-prime woes may spill over into Alt A causing even more credit tightening which in turn will drive real estate values down across the board. Estimates are 1.1 million buyers will be unable to get financing which in turn may cause a 10% drop in home values. If I come across the article again i'll post it here.

If your looking to make some money off this i've got an idea. Once a region collapses(Detroit comes to mind) jump into the foreclosure market and get some rock bottom deals.Banks will be wanting to unload properties. They don't make money keeping properties but by selling them.The key is your staying power.You'll have to keep them a minimum of 5-10 yrs before local conditions recover and financing for buyers returns.

Any thoughts on this??
 
BigUnc said:
They don't make money keeping properties but by selling them.The key is your staying power


Bruh, don't use terms like "staying power" on a predominantly black porn board. You know damn well every nigga, especially brotha Lick, gonna be thumping their chest like "yeah I can go for 20 years nonstop!...shieet, the RE industry gonna be begging me to stop" :lol:
 
afroyale said:


Bruh, don't use terms like "staying power" on a predominantly black porn board. You know damn well every nigga, especially brotha Lick, gonna be thumping their chest like "yeah I can go for 20 years nonstop!...shieet, the RE industry gonna be begging me to stop" :lol:


:lol: I'm 45 yrs old brother. I don't fall for the infomercial flash alot of cash and promise the moon if I send them $$$$$ then I can be that way too.

Just an idea to make some $$$$$ mid to long term when this Real Estate meltdown spreads across the country region by region.

Hell even Greenspan is saying he's expecting this to spread to other sectors of the economy. Other prognosticators are saying deep recession sometime second part of this year.

I'm holding what I got and waiting til the wave hits my area then maybe i'll jump on something then.
 
Here's one article





Subprime Defaults to Soar, Hurt Lenders, Funds Say (Update1)

By Jenny Strasburg

March 15 (Bloomberg) -- Harbinger Capital Partners and Paulson & Co., hedge-fund managers who profited when subprime- mortgage defaults surged, told investors that delinquent loans will soar and more lenders will disappear.

``We believe we are in the early stage of a correction in this market and that the market will eventually implode,'' New York-based Paulson & Co., which manages $11 billion, said in a letter to investors last week. Paulson said bad loans held by the riskiest borrowers will ``skyrocket'' and ``most, if not all, of the independent originators will go bankrupt.''

Paulson and New York-based Harbinger posted record gains last month on credit derivatives that increased in value as prices for securities backed by subprime loans fell. Paulson's 8-month-old credit fund gained 67 percent, swelling assets to almost $2 billion. Harbinger's $6 billion distressed-debt fund returned 8.1 percent, according to an investor update. Both firms said they continue to bet loan defaults will rise.

Investors holding mortgage-backed bonds stand to lose $100 billion from defaults on $10 trillion in outstanding home loans, Citigroup Inc. bond analysts said this month. Hedge funds have profited from the rising costs of insuring against defaults and from fears that Wall Street will finance fewer subprime loans, hurting new-home sales and the economy.

Banks ``will shut down their origination platforms,'' and the business of pooling subprime loans into packages of securities ``will all but disappear,'' Paulson said in its letter. ``While the bonds have fallen significantly, we think they have much further to fall.''

Greenspan Warning

John Paulson, president of Paulson & Co., declined to comment through a spokesman.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said today that he expects subprime-mortgage defaults to ripple through other areas of the economy, especially if home prices fall. ``If prices go down, we will have problems,'' he said at the Futures Industry Association meeting in Boca Raton, Florida.

Hedge funds are private and mostly unregulated pools of capital whose managers can buy or sell any assets and participate substantially in profits from money invested. They are allowed to take short positions, which is a bet that the value of a security will fall.

They returned an average of 0.65 percent globally in February, which ended with a selloff that battered stock markets, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc. The industry oversees $1.4 trillion, the Chicago-based firm estimates.

Credit-Default Swaps

Harbinger's $6 billion fund that invests in high-yield debt and assets of troubled companies had 60 percent of its assets allocated to short positions, including bets on declines in mortgage securities, according to its monthly investor update from Philip Falcone, 44, the firm's founder and senior managing director. That compared with the fund's typical 35 percent allocation to short positions, according to an investor who declined to be named because the information is private.

``Note that these are individual collateral pools, not the ABX Indices,'' Harbinger said in its investor letter.

ABX indexes allow investors to buy into derivatives called credit-default swaps on multiple securities. Bearish investors have used ABX bets to wager against the health of subprime mortgage lenders.

More than two dozen mortgage lenders have closed or sold assets since the start of 2006 as delinquencies and defaults among high-risk borrowers climbed to their highest rate since at least 2003. Shares of New Century Financial Corp., Fremont General Corp. and other companies have plunged, while foreclosures have increased even among borrowers with high credit scores.

Kensico

``We believe that the market will continue to be tested in the weeks and months ahead, as the subprime situation unfolds amid a choppier market backdrop,'' Falcone said in the letter.

Paulson wagered on declines in mortgage-backed bonds in every strategy it employs, including through funds that invest in companies going through mergers. ``While not directly related to merger activity, we thought the subprime short provided a valuable indirect hedge,'' according to the fund's investor letter.

The bet helped Paulson return 13 percent and 25 percent last month in its two merger arbitrage funds, which have $6 billion in combined assets, it told investors.

Kensico Capital Management, a Greenwich, Connecticut-based hedge-fund firm with more than $1 billion in assets, returned 5.4 percent in February in the onshore version of its Kensico Partners LP fund, bringing the gain to 8.6 percent at month's end, according to an investor.

`Stay Tuned'

The fund, which started in January 2000 and is closed to new investors, invests primarily in stocks. In the fourth quarter, Kensico added credit-default swaps on subprime mortgage securities it saw as ``particularly vulnerable to future losses, such as loans with low documentation or high ratios of loan to value,'' according to a quarterly update sent to investors Feb. 7. The letter came from Michael Lowenstein and Thomas Coleman, co-founders and co-presidents of the fund. Lowenstein, 48, declined to comment.

``We can make money if credit spreads return to the more historical norms, and we can make a lot of money if subprime mortgage losses are somewhat higher than forecast at the time of issuance,'' the managers told Kensico investors. ``Stay tuned.''
 
<font size="5"><center>Subprime Lending Often the Root
of African-American Dreams Deferred</font size></center>


Black Press USA
by Jenice Richardson
Special to the NNPA from the Howard University News Service

WASHINGTON (NNPA) - Subprime loans have been the gateway to the American dream of homeownership for many, especially African-Americans. However, these loans are in close relation to high trends in foreclosures and is having a significant effect on Black borrowers, say fair-housing experts.

“It is not enough to put more Americans into their own homes if we fail to arm them with the tools needed to sustain homeownership,” says Marc Morial, president and chief executive officer of the National Urban League. “Far too many first-time homebuyers with limited financial experience have fallen into the trap of predatory lending where unscrupulous mortgage brokers steer them into unsuitable and exploitive mortgage products and turn their American dream into the American nightmare.”

The National Urban League reports that in 2004, African-American homeownership soared to nearly 50 percent, a historic high. White-American homeownership was at 76 percent. But, Black homeownership slipped to 47.9 percent in 2006 largely because of foreclosures.

The future does not look better. According to a 2006 study by the Durham-based Center for Responsible Lending, of subprime mortgages that originated during the seven-year period between1998 to 2006, “2.2 million U.S. households will lose their homes to foreclosure” and subprime foreclosures will affect 10 percent of recent African-American borrowers. The organization’s study also projects that, “one out of every five (19.4 percent) subprime loans made today will fail.”

Subprime loans are high interest loans that are generally utilized by those who have poor credit scores and limited options, describes Sharon Reuss, spokeswoman for the Center for Responsible Lending.

“I think often African-Americans are steered in the direction of subprime loans by brokers,” says Reuss. The subprime benefit to the broker is what are called yield spread premiums or “broker kickbacks,” which are the benefits a broker gains from getting borrowers to take higher interest loans with risky conditions and terms, Reuss explained.

In a 2003 study, the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a non-profit organization that focuses on lending and community development issues, found that subprime mortgages were more prevalent among Blacks in about 326 of 331 U.S. metropolitan areas studied. In addition, the Federal Reserve reported in 2005 that 54.7 percent of Blacks paid higher than average market rates for conventional home loans in contrast to 17.2 percent of non-Hispanic whites.

John Taylor, president and CEO of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, says that it is common for lenders to underwrite subprime loans based, not on a borrower’s ability to repay, but on the value of the borrower’s home that the lender stands to gain in a foreclosure or from fees associated with the loan.

Some fair-housing advocates think new laws should regulate subprime lending.

Morial says in a recent speech on what he calls the “Homebuyers’ Bill of Rights,” that Congress should form a Housing and Urban Development (HUD) task force.

“[It] would investigate and process mortgage lending complaints, including such actions as inappropriate steering to sub-prime loans, stricter qualification standards for minority borrowers and higher rates and/or conditions for minority homebuyers,” Morial says. He says he is seeking a congressional sponsor for the six-point Bill of Rights.

However, Morial also agrees that African-Americans and all homebuyers must educate themselves before stepping out into the industry and losing their dreams.

Taylor says he does not think borrowers of “any race” totally understand all of the language and pitfalls of the mortgage business, such as the difference between annual percentage rates and effective annual rates or the significance in the frequency of compounding interest, issues that tend to lead to default and foreclosures.

“We need to protect consumers in a way that they don’t have to be economists” to be successful in owning a home, says Taylor . “Because someone is not financially literate, you shouldn’t be able to rob them.”

William Spriggs, Chair of Howard Univesity’s economics department, says that one of the things resulting in defaults on these loans among Blacks is the effect of adjustable rates on those loans.

“Many think that something like a one percent increase from six to seven is insignificant, but in fact it’s a big deal,” says Spriggs.

In an attempt to combat harsh outcomes of subprime lending, Freddie Mac, a company that purchases mortgages to support homeownership, has recently announced that the company will refrain from buying subprime mortgages with high likelihood of payment shock and foreclosure. The company is developing a new model of subprime products that will give more protection, characterized by longer fixed terms and reset periods, according to Sharon McHale, vice president of public relations for Freddie Mac.

Under the company’s stricter subprime lending standards, low-documentation underwriting will be limited to ensure that borrowers can afford their homes.

Taylor says in order to limit foreclosures that result from subprime loan defaults, both borrowers and lenders must take responsibility. Borrowers need to be better educated and informed about their investment, but “[Lenders] ought to be highly honest, highly regulated and highly accountable.”

http://www.blackpressusa.com/news/Article.asp?SID=3&Title=National+News&NewsID=12610
 
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