Foreclosures High and on the Rise for Families with Subprime Mortgage Loans; CRL Joins Groups Calling For Sustainable Homeownership Policies.WASHINGTON -- Tomorrow, Martin Eakes, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of the Center for Responsible Lending, will testify about rising subprime foreclosures before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. CRL CRL - Carnegie Representation Language. Carnegie Group, Inc. Frame language derived from SRL. Written in Common LISP. Used in the product Knowledge Craft. has joined a coalition of civil rights, consumer, labor and community development organizations calling on policymakers to rein in to check the speed of, or cause to stop, by drawing the reins. to cause (a person) to slow down or cease some activity; - to rein in is used commonly of superiors in a chain of command, ordering a subordinate to moderate or cease some activity deemed excessive. See also: Rein Rein risky lending practices in the loosely regulated mortgage market. Homeownership is the most accessible tool available to help families achieve a secure economic future, but today market failures and abusive lending practices are leading millions of families into foreclosure. The Banking Committee received input from the Coalition (letter and member list attached) to inform deliberations on subprime market reform and the worst foreclosure rate in modern mortgage market history. One in five subprime loans will end in foreclosure, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the recently released CRL study, "Losing Ground." 2-28 mortgages, otherwise known as exploding ARMs, were never intended for families with credit problems and now dominate the subprime market. Eakes will discuss the devastation caused by exploding ARMs that feature a two-year "teaser rate Teaser rate A low initial interest rate on an adjustable-rate mortgage to entice borrowers, that is later eliminated and replaced by a market-level rate. ," followed by interest rate adjustments in six-month increments. Families in the subprime sector routinely are getting unaffordable un·af·ford·a·ble adj. Too expensive: medical care that has become unaffordable for many. un loans that prompt repeated refinances or foreclose fore·close v. fore·closed, fore·clos·ing, fore·clos·es v.tr. 1. a. To deprive (a mortgagor) of the right to redeem mortgaged property, as when payments have not been made. b. at worst. CRL research found that 2.2 million loans made in recent years will end in foreclosure, signaling losses to families that mount up to $164 billion. Industry trade associations have opposed extending current federal guidelines to 2-28s, and a number of civil rights and consumer groups recently disputed industry claims about these abusive products in a letter to Senators on the Banking Committee. Eakes will stress that subprime lenders are guaranteeing rampant foreclosures by their lackadaisical lack·a·dai·si·cal adj. Lacking spirit, liveliness, or interest; languid: "There'll be no time to correct lackadaisical driving techniques after trouble develops" William J. Hampton. approach to loan underwriting, combined with broker incentives that don't factor in a borrower's best interest. The way the market is operating now, there are virtually no consequences for lenders and brokers who make home loans that are likely to fail. Eakes will urge Congress to do the following: * Restore safety to the subprime market by imposing a borrower "ability to repay" standard for all subprime loans; * Ensure that brokers must serve the best interest of the people who pay them; * Pass a strong federal anti-predatory mortgage lending law that puts in place meaningful protections for borrowers and preserves the rights of states to supplement it based on local market developments or new abuses. Families affected by loan failure typically spend years to recover financially, if they ever do. Their neighborhoods are often pocked pock n. 1. A pustule caused by smallpox or a similar eruptive disease. 2. A mark or scar left in the skin by such a pustule; a pockmark. tr.v. by foreclosures. Lenders and brokers must rid their ranks of harmful products. Subprime lending at its best provides access to the American Dream of homeownership; currently it is too often spawns a rash of foreclosures turning families out of their homes. About the Center for Responsible Lending The Center for Responsible Lending is a nonprofit, nonpartisan research and policy organization dedicated to protecting homeownership and family wealth by working to eliminate abusive financial practices. CRL is affiliated with Self-Help, one of the nation's largest community development financial institutions. |
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