Unwary Borrowers Snared In USHousing `Bloodbath`

Released on: March 13, 2008, 3:54 am

Press Release Author: Pam Lawhorne

Industry: Real Estate

Press Release Summary: Renae Gorney sees the human side of the slumping U.S. housing
market, the people whose homes are part of the $1 trillion worth of unconventional
mortgages that are about to get more expensive.

Press Release Body: Charlotte,NC,March,13,2008 -- Gorney, director of loss
mitigation at Freedom Foreclosure Prevention Services in Mesa, Arizona, receives
more than 300 applications a month from people facing Foreclosure, and has little
faith in forecasters who say the worst of the housing market downturn is over.

"It's going to be a bloodbath this year," she said.

Many of her clients - homeowners who come for help renegotiating mortgage terms or
to work out deals to avoid Foreclosure - have adjustable-rate mortgages that
initially carried lower interest rates but will soon spike up.

The Mortgage Bankers Association estimates that between $1 trillion and $1.5
trillion in adjustable-rate mortgages face an interest rate reset this year.

As the housing market cools and homeowners have trouble refinancing or selling, more
people are falling behind on mortgage payments. The delinquency rate for all types
of mortgages rose to 4.67 percent in the third quarter of 2006 from 4.39 percent in
the prior three months, a gain of 6 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers
Association.

Foreclosures last year were up 42 percent from 2005 levels, and will likely rise
another 20 percent to 25 percent this year, real estate information service
RealtyTrac Inc. says.

NEW CENTURY, NEW PAIN
A jittery Wall Street has focused on the sub prime mortgage sector, which lends
money to people with poor credit histories. One such mortgage company, New Century
Financial Corp., has said its lenders plan to halt the financing it may need to fund
its operations, as bad loans keep piling up.

While sub prime mortgages have spread credit more widely and helped more people buy
their own homes, critics contend a hot real estate market encouraged lenders to get
more aggressive and offer increasingly complicated terms that borrowers did not
always fully understand.

Housing has always been an integral part of the U.S. economy, but it has taken on
greater significance in recent years as many consumers took out home equity loans
and ramped up their spending.

Some economists worry that as house prices fall and lenders tighten credit terms,
consumers will curb spending and drag down the U.S. economy.

Christopher Cagan, director of research and analytics at First American Core Logic,
estimates that adjustable-rate mortgage resets will trigger some 1.1 million
foreclosures over the next 5 or 6 years, wiping out $110 billion in equity.

That may sound like a lot, but Cagan does not believe the fallout will tank the $13
trillion U.S. economy or even the mortgage industry.

"It's less than we spend on alcoholic beverages," he said.

Bill Rayburn, chairman and chief executive of FNC Inc., which provides collateral
data to banks, said lenders are increasingly eager for information to help them
value homes for both loans and foreclosures.

"Our phones are ringing off the hook," he said.

Rayburn, whose firm takes data from home appraisers to help banks process
information for some 400,000 loans a month, said bankers "are in bunker mentality"
as the housing market slumps, and desperate for details such as whether they can
quickly resell a foreclosed home.

SIGN, SIGN, SIGN
Lack of information is a big part of the problem for borrowers, said Freedom
Foreclosure Prevention's Gorney. She says "99.99 percent of people just sign, sign,
sign" without fully understanding mortgage terms.

Some of her clients had borrowed 100 percent of the purchase price on homes that are
now worth less than the mortgage. She has referred a few to attorneys general to
investigate whether they fell victim to fraudulent lenders.

"They've been sold the American dream and now there is no way to go forward," she said.

She talks of clients who signed blank loan documents and later discovered that they
had agreed to interest rates as high as 10 percent. Others learned of high rates
when it was too late to do much about it - their belongings were on a moving truck
in the parking lot while they signed the documents to close on a new house.

Malachi Cade, one of Gorney's clients in Monroe, Louisiana, said he didn't realize
that he was late on his mortgage payment until the bank mailed back his check. When
he called to find out why, they told him he was four or five months behind and they
had started Foreclosure procedures.

He's still not exactly sure what happened.

As the number of homeowners in financial distress soars, Gorney said banks are
increasingly willing to consider alternatives that may be cheaper and faster than
Foreclosure.

Some troubled homeowners are turning over deeds in exchange for banks ripping up
mortgages, a practice called "deed in lieu" of Foreclosure. It damages credit
ratings, but not as severely as a Foreclosure would.

Even with those tools available, Gorney rejects nearly half of the applications she
receives from homeowners looking for a way to avoid Foreclosure because there is
simply nothing she can do to help them.

Despite such problems, Rick Sharga at RealtyTrac said sub prime mortgages aren't
bad. It was more a matter of bad timing.

We wouldn't be having this discussion if the real estate market was still booming,"
he said.

Visit Freedom Foreclosure Prevention Services to learn how you can help stop
foreclosures.
Pressrelease distribution by pressreleasepoint ( http://www.pressreleasepoint.com )



Web Site: http://homesaversusa.info

Contact Details: For additional Information:

Pam Lawhorne
Home Savers USA
CHARLOTTE, NC
866-377-3295 x 102
info@homesaversusa.info
http://homesaversusa.info

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