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Lenders Broaden Clampdown on Risky Mortgages Tightening standards could worsen slump in the housing market By JAMES R. HAGERTY and RUTH SIMON August 3, 2007 Courtesy of the Wall Street Journal
Jittery home-mortgage lenders are cutting off credit or raising interest rates for a growing portion of Americans, extending well beyond the market for subprime loans for people with the weakest credit records. This worsening credit crunch threatens to put further pressure on the housing market, where prices are flat to declining in much of the country.
• The Trend: Nervous home-mortgage lenders are returning to more-conservative practices and are raising interest rates and cutting back on a category of loans between prime and subprime. • The Issue: The worsening credit situation threatens to put more pressure on the housing market, where prices are flat to declining in much of the country. • What's Next: Economist Thomas Lawler said he expects the credit squeeze will make "the late summer home-sales season even worse than the dismal spring season."
Lenders say they are being forced to raise interest rates and stop offering certain loans because mortgage-bond investors have lost their appetite for a broad range of mortgages considered risky. That includes those dubbed Alt-A, a category between prime and subprime that often involves borrowers who don't fully document their income or assets, or those buying investment properties. Lenders are tightening standards and "raising rates like crazy," said Melissa Cohn, chief executive of Manhattan Mortgage, a New York mortgage broker. She said Wells Fargo & Co. is charging 8% for a prime jumbo 30-year fixed-rate loan that carried a 6 7/8% rate late last week. (Jumbo loans are those too large to be sold to government-sponsored mortgage investors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.) A Wells spokesman said rates are lower on loans made directly by the bank than on those through brokers. The market for mortgage-backed securities is "very panicked," Michael Perry, chief executive of IndyMac Bancorp Inc., another big lender, said in a message on the lender's Web site yesterday. Seeking to soothe the market, Countrywide Financial Corp., the nation's largest home lender, said it had plenty of funds available to weather the industry's troubles. The fright among investors is forcing lenders to go back to more-conservative practices that were the norm before the housing boom of the first half of this decade. Many now are focusing on loans to borrowers who are willing to document their income, can make a down payment of at least 5% and have a history of paying bills on time.
Alt-A loans accounted for about 13% of U.S. home loans granted last year, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, and subprime loans about 20%. Industry executives have said subprime lending is likely to shrink by more than 50% this year, and now much of the Alt-A market is vanishing too. This credit squeeze "will further crimp the effective demand for housing, and will make the late summer home-sales season even worse than the dismal spring season," said Thomas Lawler, a housing economist in Vienna, Va. Tom Lamalfa, managing director of Wholesale Access, a mortgage-research firm in Columbia, Md., expects that half or more of the market for no- and low-documentation loans will disappear. Some people use so-called low-doc loans to avoid paper work or because they are self-employed and have trouble showing a steady stream of income. But low-doc mortgages also can be used by people exaggerating their incomes. Most lenders have limited capacity to keep loans as long-term investments and rely on an ability to sell most of them to investors, mainly in the form of mortgage-backed securities. But investors are wary of many types of mortgages amid soaring defaults and foreclosures. National City Corp., another large lender, said yesterday that it is suspending originations of stated-income loans, which don't require the borrower to verify income. Wachovia Corp. said it had stopped making Alt-A loans through brokers, joining a trend among big lenders to rely less on outsiders to arrange mortgages. Wells Fargo told brokers this week that it was making "day-to-day" decisions on the pricing and availability of Alt-A loans amid reduced investor demand. Several dozen lenders have gone out of business in the past six months, and others are teetering. Shares of Accredited Home Lenders Holding Co. dropped 35% yesterday on the Nasdaq Stock Market after auditors said its "financial and operational viability" is uncertain if a pending merger isn't completed. American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. stopped making loans earlier this week and said late yesterday it would slash its work force to about 750 from more than 7,000. |
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