Report reveals 2.2M borrowers face foreclosure on subprime loans.A new Center for Responsible Lending (CRL CRL - Carnegie Representation Language. Carnegie Group, Inc. Frame language derived from SRL. Written in Common LISP. Used in the product Knowledge Craft. ) study reveals that 2.2 million American households will lose their homes and as much as $164 billion due to foreclosures in the subprime mortgage market. Titled, "Losing Ground: Foreclosures in the Subprime Market and Their Cost to Homeowners," the CRL study is the first comprehensive, nationwide review of millions of subprime mortgages originated from 1998 through the third quarter of 2006. CRL's research suggests that risky lending practices have triggered the worst foreclosure crisis in the modern mortgage market, projecting that one out of five (19.4 percent) subprime loans issued during 2005-2006 will fail. "In the subprime sector, the most vulnerable borrowers are sold the most dangerous loans," said Mike Calhoun Mike Calhoun is the Vice President of Local Church Ministries for Word of Life Fellowship, Inc. He is the author of Pushing the Limits: Unleashing the Potential of Student Ministry. Biography Mike was born in Birmingham, Alabama in 1952. His formal education includes a B.A. , CRL president. "At $164 billion, the losses from foreclosures could pay for the college educations of four million kids. For families who lose their houses because their loans fail, savings and economic security will be way out of reach." The report discusses a number of factors that drive subprime foreclosures--in the majority of cases, borrowers receive high-risk loan features, packed into an adjustable rate mortgage This article is about the US mortgage type. For an international perspective, see Variable rate mortgage. An adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) is a mortgage loan where the interest rate on the note is periodically adjusted based on an index. with a low start rate, that is approved without considering whether the homeowner can afford to pay the loan after the rate rises. Adjustable rate mortgages known as 2/28s (or "exploding ARMs") operate with an initial "teaser teaser an animal used to sexually tease but not to impregnate the members of the opposite sex. Usually males and they may be surgically prepared to ensure that they cannot mate or are not fertile. " rate for two years, followed by a steep payment increase. And, regardless of a borrower's credit history, the almost one-quarter of American families who get subprime loans find them crammed with other high-risk terms such as prepayment penalties, limited income documentation, and no escrow for property taxes and hazard insurance Hazard Insurance Insurance protecting a property owner against damages caused by fires or severe storms. If the owner lives in an area that is prone to natural disasters, like earthquakes and floods, he or she may need a separate policy. . In recent years, high appreciation in many areas has masked problems in the subprime market. CRL projects that the cooling housing market, will cause failure rates to rise sharply in many major markets. California, Arizona, Nevada, and greater Washington, D.C. will be especially hard hit. "Foreclosures can be a disaster not only for the family but for the community as well," said Pat Vredevoogd Combs, president of National Association of Realtors The National Association of Realtors (NAR) is made up of residential and commercial realtors who are brokers, salespeople, property managers, appraisers, and counselors, and others working in the real estate industry. . "When one home forecloses, the surrounding houses lose value, too. By threatening neigh borhood stability, foreclosures hurt everyone." Trouble in the overall subprime market spells trouble for African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. and Latino families across the country. Although white families receive more subprime loans overall, African Americans and Latinos receive a higher proportion of high-cost loans than any other group, a fact consistently verified annually by data lenders submit under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA HMDA Hexamethylene Diamine (chemistry) HMDA Hitchhiker Motorized Door Assembly HMDA High Mobility DGM Assemblage HMDA Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1974 ). "Losing Ground" estimates that 8 to 10% of all African American and Latino families who received a home loan in 2005 will be affected by subprime foreclosures. "Homeownership rates for minorities are up but so, too, is the cost of that homeownership," said Wade Henderson Wade Henderson is president of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights and counsel to the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund. Early Years Henderson graduated from Howard University and the Rutgers University School of Law (Newark) and was previously , executive director of Leadership Conference on Civil Rights The Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR) is an umbrella group of American liberal interest groups. Organizational history It was founded in 1950 by three leaders in the American civil rights movement: Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters founder A. . "We need rules to curb predatory lenders, but we also need prime lenders to step up for this expanding market of borrowers." CRL recommends that lenders ensure that every borrower is able to repay his or her loan without resorting to selling their property or refinancing under pressure; all parties involved operate in good faith and fair dealing to ensure a successful outcome; lenders, local governments, and community groups implement strong programs to help troubled borrowers keep their homes. |
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