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Modifying Mortgages Isn't Slowing Default Rate PDF Print E-mail
Homeowners with modified loans fall back into delinquency, official says

Providing help to homeowners facing default, many who had subprime loans, was supposed to help stem the wave of foreclosures. But the preliminary evidence doesn't support that, a top federal banking officials says.

U.S. Comptroller of the Currency John C. Dugan said Monday that new data shows that more than half of loans modified in the first quarter of 2008 fell delinquent within six months.

"After three months, nearly 36 percent of the borrowers had re-defaulted by being more than 30 days past due. After six months, the rate was nearly 53 percent, and after eight months, 58 percent," Dugan said at the Office of Thrift Supervision's National Housing Forum in Washington.

Dugan spoke during a panel discussion with OTS Director John Reich, Federal Reserve Board Vice Chairman Donald Kohn, FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair, and Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James Lockhart. A key question, Mr. Dugan said, is why is the number of re-defaults so high?

"Is it because the modifications did not reduce monthly payments enough to be truly affordable to the borrowers?" he asked. "Is it because consumers replaced lower mortgage payments with increased credit card debt? Is it because the mortgages were so badly underwritten that the borrowers simply could not afford them, even with reduced monthly payments? Or is it a combination of these and other factors?"

That question "has important ramifications for the foreclosure crisis and how policymakers should address loan modifications, as they surely will in the coming weeks and months," Dugan said.

His remarks also provided a preview of the second OCC and OTS Mortgage Metrics Report to be published later this month. The report will show continued increasing delinquencies and foreclosures in process for all first-lien mortgages held by the largest national banks and federally-regulated thrifts. However, the report will show new foreclosures decreasing by 2.6 percent from the second quarter.

The mortgage metrics report covers nearly 35 million loans worth more than $6.1 trillion, or about 60 percent of all first-lien mortgages in the United States. The quarterly reports are unique in that they are not merely surveys, but instead consist of validated, loan level data using standardized definitions for prime, Alt-A, and subprime mortgages, and standardized definitions for loan modifications.

"We believe the reports include the most accurate and reliable data on mortgage performance that is available today," Dugan said. "And in addition to providing more clarity about mortgage performance generally, the data have proven to be exceptionally valuable for supervisory purposes."

 

 

Referred from: (http://www.consumeraffairs.com)

 
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