WASHINGTON
(AP) — The number of homeowners receiving foreclosure notices hit a
record high in the spring, driven up by problems with subprime
mortgages.
The Mortgage Bankers Association reported today that
mortgage-holders starting the foreclosure process in the April-June
quarter reached 0.65 percent, marking the third consecutive quarter
that this figure has set an all-time high.
The delinquency rate, which tracks the number of people who
are behind in their payments but have not yet entered the foreclosure
process, was also up sharply during the spring, rising to 5.12 percent
of all loans, up nearly three-fourths of a percentage point from the
same period a year ago.
Doug Duncan, the MBA’s chief economist, said the worsening
performance was driven by two factors — heavy job losses in the Midwest
states of Ohio, Michigan and Indiana and the collapse of previously
booming housing markets in California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona.
Analysts said the problems in the formerly red-hot housing
markets of California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona reflected in part
speculators walking away from mortgages they can no longer afford.
During a five-year housing boom, the prices in these areas
surged, creating what many analysts have described as a speculative
bubble as investors bid up the price of homes hoping to quickly resell
them for a profit.
Now with home sales falling, the inventory of unsold homes
rising and prices stagnant, some speculators are choosing to default on
their mortgages.
Another big problem is that an estimated 2 million adjustable
rate mortgages are scheduled to reset this year at sharply higher
interest rates, which will cause monthly payments in some cases to
double or even triple, a problem that is especially severe in the
market for subprime mortgages, loans offered to borrowers with weak
credit histories.
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