
Mortgage Lenders Fear Bigger Wave of Loan Defaults
08/04/2008 - The first wave of
Americans to default on their home mortgages appears to be
cresting, but a second, far larger one is quickly building.
Homeowners with good
credit are falling behind on their payments in growing
numbers, even as the problems with mortgages made to people
with weak, or subprime, credit are showing their first,
tentative signs of leveling off after two years of spiraling
defaults.
The percentage of
mortgages in arrears in the category of loans one rung above
subprime, so-called alternative-A mortgages, quadrupled to 12
percent in April from a year earlier. Delinquencies among
prime loans, which account for most of the $12 trillion
market, doubled to 2.7 percent in that time.
The mortgage
troubles have been exacerbated by an economy that is still
struggling. Reports last week showed another drop in
home prices, slower-than-expected economic growth and
a huge loss at General Motors . On Friday,
the Labor Department reported that the unemployment
rate in July climbed to a four-year high.
While it is
difficult to draw precise parallels among various segments of
the mortgage market, the arc of the crisis in subprime loans
suggests that the problems in the broader market may not peak
for another year or two, analysts said.
Defaults are likely
to accelerate because many homeowners’ monthly payments are
rising rapidly. The higher bills come as home prices continue
to decline and banks tighten their lending standards, making
it harder for people to refinance loans or sell their homes.
Of particular concern are “alt-A” loans, many of which were
made to people with good credit scores without proof of their
income or assets.
“Subprime was the
tip of the iceberg,” said Thomas H. Atteberry, president of
First Pacific Advisors, a investment firm in Los Angeles that
trades mortgage securities. “Prime will be far bigger in its
impact.”
In a conference call
with analysts last month, James Dimon, the chairman and chief
executive of JPMorgan Chase , said he
expected losses on prime loans at his bank to triple in the
coming months and described the outlook for them as
“terrible.”
Delinquencies on
mortgages tend to peak three to five years after loans are
made, said Mark Fleming, the chief economist at First American
CoreLogic, a research firm. Not surprisingly, subprime loans
from 2005 appear closer to the end of defaults than those made
in 2007, for which default rates continue to rise steeply.
“We will hit those
points in a few years, and that will help in many ways,” Mr.
Fleming said, referring to the loans made later in the housing
boom. “We just have to survive through this part of the
cycle.”
Data on securities
backed by subprime mortgages show that 8.41 percent of loans
from 2005 were delinquent by 90 days or more or in foreclosure
in June, up from 8.35 percent in May, according to
CreditSights, a research firm with offices in New York and
London. By contrast, 16.6 percent of 2007 loans were troubled
in June, up from 15.8 percent.
Some of that
reflects basic math. Over the years, some loans will be paid
off as homeowners sell or refinance, and some homes will be
foreclosed upon and sold. That reduces the number of loans
from those earlier years that could default. Also, since the
credit market seized up last year, lenders have become much
more conservative and have stopped making most subprime loans
and cut back on many other popular mortgages.
The resetting of
rates on adjustable mortgages, which was a big fear of many
analysts in 2006 and 2007, has become less problematic because
the short-term interest rates to which many of those loans are
tied have fallen significantly as the Federal Reserve has
lowered rates. The recent federal tax rebates and efforts to
modify more loans have also helped somewhat, analysts say.
What will sting
borrowers more than rising interest rates, analysts say, is
having to pay interest and principal every month after
spending several years paying only interest or sometimes even
less than that. Such loan terms were popular during the boom
with alt-A and prime borrowers and appeared appealing while
home prices were rising and interest rates were low.
But now, some
borrowers could see their payments jump 50 percent or more,
and they may not be able to sell their properties for as much
as they owe.
Prime and alt-A
borrowers typically had a five- or seven-year grace period
before payments toward principal were required. By contrast,
subprime loans had a two-to-three-year introductory period.
That difference partly explains the lag in delinquencies
between the two types of loans, said David Watts, an analyst
with CreditSights.
“More delinquencies
look like they are on the horizon because so few of them have
reset,” Mr. Watts said about alt-A mortgages.
The wave of
foreclosures is still rising in states like California, where
many homeowners turned to creative mortgages during the boom.
From April to June, mortgage companies filed 121,000 notices
of default in California, up nearly 7 percent from the first
quarter and more than twice as many as in the second quarter
of 2007, according to DataQuick, a real estate data firm based
in La Jolla, Calif. The firm said the median age of the loans
increased to 26 months from 16 months a year earlier.
The mortgage giants
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae ,
which own or guarantee nearly half of all mortgages, are
trying to stem that tide. Last week, they said they would pay
more to the mortgage servicing companies that they hire to
modify delinquent loans and avoid foreclosures.
Delinquencies in
prime and alt-A loans are particularly challenging for banks
because they hold more such loans on their books than they do
subprime mortgages. Downey Financial, which
owns a savings bank that operates in California and Arizona,
recently reported that 11.2 percent of its loans were
delinquent at the end of June, a big increase from the 6.1
percent that were past due at the end of last year.
The bank’s troubles
stem from its $6.2 billion portfolio of so-called option
adjustable-rate mortgages, which allow borrowers to pay less
than the interest owed on their mortgage in the early years.
The unpaid interest is added to the principal due on the loan,
so over time borrowers can owe more than the initial loan
amount. Eventually, when loans grow by 10 percent or 15
percent, the borrowers are required to start paying both the
interest and principal due.
Many borrowers who
got these loans during the boom had good credit scores, but
many of them owe more than their homes are worth. Analysts
believe that many will not be able to or want to make higher
payments.
“The wave on the
prime side has lagged the wave on the subprime side,” said Rod
Dubitsky, head of asset-backed research at Credit Suisse. “The
reset of option ARM loans is a big event that will drive the
timing of delinquencies.”