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America
Home foreclosures surgeno housing boom for poor families
in the US
By Naomi Sheehan Groce
13 June 2005
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A little-reported aspect of the housing boom in the US is the
corresponding surge in home foreclosures. Amidst a sharp rise
in median housing prices, more and more Americans are finding
themselves unable to meet monthly payments and are being forced
into foreclosure. For many working class homeowners,
the potential for financial catastrophe, including home
foreclosure and personal bankruptcy, is one illness or
missed paycheck away.
Foreclosure is the circumstance a homeowner falls into after
missing mortgage principal or interest payments,
losing the title to the home. The holder of the mortgage, most
commonly a bank or other financial lending corporation, then seizes
and sells the property to satisfy the claims of the mortgage.
According to Brad Geisen, president and CEO of the online real
estate listing service Foreclosure.com, New foreclosure
inventory rose in 47 states in March. This signifies a national
trend ... foreclosure inventory will likely continue to rise across
the country. The most recent market report issued by Foreclosure.com
listed 28,190 newly foreclosed properties for the month of March,
up 57 percent from 18,012 the same month last year. The total
national inventory of foreclosed homes was 80,757 in March. RealtyTrac
Inc., the real estate data provider to AOL, MSN and Yahoo, also
released a report on foreclosures in March, listing more than
62,000 properties nationally in some stage of the foreclosure
process for the month.
A May 30 Washington Post article focused on the foreclosure
rate in Pennsylvania, describing personal hardships of residents
facing loss of their homes. In one working class neighborhood
in northeastern Philadelphia, for example, 18 of 42 homes on a
single block have gone into foreclosure within the past three
years. Philadelphias sheriff now handles more than 1,000
property auctions a month, compared to 300 to 400 a month in 2000.
In Pittsburgh, officials referred to the record number of auctions
as indicative of a Depression-era problem.
The Post interviewed a Philadelphia resident who had
been diagnosed with cancer and lacked health insurance. She fell
behind on her house payments and had to foreclose. Another woman
with a similar story approached her lender, who had already sold
her debt to another credit agency. She attempted to file for bankruptcy
but was denied, and currently contends with double payments because
of late penalties. Most low-income homeowners across the country
face comparable threats, lacking adequate health insurance. By
one estimate, medical expenses are the primary cause of financial
distress for 40 percent of those struggling to hold on to their
homes.
An illness or injury which leads to hospitalization and unemployment
also easily leads to lapses in bill payments. A study of 1,771
bankrupt Americans conducted by Harvard University and released
in February found that half were driven to bankruptcy court by
medical bills and illness. Most of those, three-fourths, had health
insurance, but could not afford high co-payments or had their
employment terminated due to health problems.
The housing sector is at present a principal prop of the US
economy. Since 1999, the average price of existing homes has risen
48 percent. The 2005 median home price has soared to $206,000,
15.5 percent over the same period in 2004the largest yearly
increase since 1980. The Department of Housing and Urban Development
listed 26 areas in the US where home prices have inflated by more
than 20 percent, with half of those areas actually experiencing
a doubling in market price. Meanwhile, employment and real wages
have declined, creating a precarious situation for many American
homeowners dependent on credit.
One much-touted force sustaining the housing market has been
low mortgage interest ratescurrently the fixed 30-year mortgage
rate stands at a 45-year low of 5.56 percent. However, the rise
in housing prices means that for many Americans even these low
interest rates are difficult to meet. Many Americans have been
hooked by financial firms pushing option adjustable rate mortgages,
or option ARMs, which usually promise initially low interest rates
that vary from month to month. Introductory rates can be as low
as 2 percent, but if interest rates increase, those who have only
made the minimum monthly payment face a bloated and sometimes
insurmountable loan balance.
Interest-only loans are another major contributor to the boom.
This type of mortgage plan allows a buyer to pay only the interest
for a number of years while optionally paying down the principal.
But after the initial interest-only period has ended, the buyer
must pay the principal at a much higher rate because of the delay.
In the short term, the interest-only option reduces the proportion
of income a borrower must devote to housing, an appealing prospect
to many working class Americans in light of the decline of real
wages and the economy as a whole. A recent survey by the Mortgage
Bankers Association found that nearly two-thirds of all new loans
in the second half of 2004 were option ARM and interest-only loans.
Another factor boosting the housing sector has been the explosion
of sub-prime lending, where predatory mortgage companies target
consumers with bad credit ratings and low incomes. These consumers
are often ineligible for the much lower prime market rates. The
lenders prey upon the dream of homeownership among the working
poor, offering to accept high risk borrowers. In turn,
interest rates are inflated as high as 12 percent, a rate so exorbitant
that many borrowers cannot keep up with payments, penalties and
other fine-print fees, particularly in the event of job loss,
injury or illness in the family. A very high percentage of sub-prime
mortgage agreements end in desperate refinancing attempts, foreclosures
and personal bankruptcy filings.
The Mortgage Bankers Association on June 8 stated that refinancings
as a percentage of all mortgage applications have increased to
42.9 percent of total mortgage applications, up from 41.2 percent
the previous week and 40.3 percent the week before.
Commenting after a speech on May 20, Federal Reserve Board
Chairman Alan Greenspan conceded that the national market appears
to be a froth of volatile local bubbles, symptomatic
of an unsustainable underlying pattern. Particularly
in urban and coastal areas, these local bubbles are characterized
by a frenzy of speculation, home turnover and large margins between
median house prices and median incomes. In California, for instance,
the median household income is $53,540, but the median house price
is currently $488,600. To qualify for a traditional fixed-rate
mortgage for such a house, a buyer would need to earn almost twice
the median income.
In part, house prices are being pushed up by those purchasing
multiple homesthree-fourths of all homes for sale are bought
by owners of multiple homes, with the intention of converting
them into rental units, or flipping them back onto
the market after remodeling in order to turn a profit. Those in
the working class who are seeking to buy are thus effectively
and systematically out-priced by the voracious demand of speculators,
driving demand, competition and prices still higher.
Buyers who have sought refuge from this housing boom in the
form of interest-only and option ARM loans are vulnerable to the
inevitable rise in federal interest rates. If interests rates
rise sharply, this will mean a sharp rise in monthly payments
for millions of people with nontraditional mortgages, leading
to even more foreclosures.
The governments response to such a potential development
has been to take preventive steps on behalf of credit agencies
against individual debtors. Signed by President Bush in April
and set to take effect in October, the Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 will more
tightly restrict the ability of individuals to declare bankruptcy
and find relief from debt. The new law will convert many Chapter
7 personal bankruptcy filings to Chapter 13 designations, requiring
debtors to devote future sources of income to stringent repayment
plans.
Further limitations have been placed on the ability of individual
debtors to exempt property from creditors, opening the door for
total liquidation of those debtors estates by the same predatory
lenders responsible for the financial collapse. In many states,
this includes stripping the destitute, ill and elderly of homes
and land valued at as little as $10,000, leaving them without
shelter and incapable of making a fresh start.
See Also:
US child poverty on the risestatistics
mask depth of crisis
[1 June 2005]
The dysfunctional society:
US billionaires on the riseroads, bridges in decay
[22 March 2005]
Studies document housing
disaster for millions in US
[22 September 2003]
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