| Despite Interest Rate Cuts, Foreclosures Hit Record High Renae Merle Even though lower interest rates have made many adjustable-rate mortgages more affordable, foreclosures continue to reach new heights as more than 1 million homeowners face losing their home, according to industry figures released yesterday. That's because what began as a mortgage crisis focused largely on subprime borrowers has spread and is being fed by the slowing economy it helped create. Borrowers once considered the most creditworthy have been hamstrung by declining home prices, making it difficult to refinance their home to dodge a financial crunch. About 2.47 percent of home mortgages were in foreclosure during the first quarter of the year, up from 1.28 percent during the comparable period last year and the highest point since the Mortgage Bankers Association began compiling figures in 1979. Another 6.35 percent of home mortgages were delinquent but not yet in foreclosure, up from 4.84 percent last year, the survey found. Taken together, that means that almost 9 percent of mortgages nationally were in trouble, even though sharp Federal Reserve interest rate cuts have cushioned payment increases for some homeowners. More than 60 percent of the loans entering foreclosure are adjustable-rate mortgages, but the problem does not appear to be the "rate shocks" widely forecast about a year ago. Many of "the loans went bad before any of the resets took place, which is why talking about carving out solutions for just ARM reset problems is misplaced," said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance. A borrower with a typical-size subprime ARM could expect payments to increase about $70 a month if it reset now, compared with about $450 a month if it had reset in December, according to the American Securitization Forum, a financial industry group.
|
|||||