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Foreclosures soar, layoffs mount in US mortgage industry crisis
By Joe Kay
22 August 2007
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The US housing market showed further signs of deterioration
on Tuesday with the release of a report showing a sharp 9 percent
increase in foreclosure filings from June to July. World financial
markets have been rocked in recent weeks by a credit crisis with
origins in the US home mortgage market.
The report came a day after Capital One Financial Corp, a major
US bank, announced it was shutting down a mortgage branch of the
company, laying off 1,900 employees. Tens of thousands of financial
services jobs have been eliminated this year as a consequence
of problems in the mortgage markets.
According to Realtytrac.com, a foreclosure research and marketing
firm, there were a total of 179,599 foreclosure filings in Julyincluding
default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions.
This was a 93 percent increase over the same figure one year ago.
Foreclosure filings have been rising for over a year, although
they fell seven percent in June.
Foreclosures are heavily concentrated in a number of states
in which shifts in the housing market have been particularly devastating
for working people. California, Florida, Michigan, Ohio, and Georgia
accounted for over half of the total number of foreclosures in
July. Californias foreclosure activity is up 289 percent
from July 2006, and six California cities were among the top ten
urban centers with the highest foreclosure rates in the country.
Michigan residents continue to be devastated by the attack
on jobs and wages in the auto industry. According to Realtytrac.com,
Detroit posted a 70 percent month-over-month increase in
foreclosure activity in July, pushing the citys foreclosure
rate to one foreclosure filing for every 97 householdsmore
than seven times the national average and the highest among 200
metro areas tracked. Michigan as a whole had the third highest
foreclosure rate in the countryone out of 320 homes.
Nevada had the highest rate of foreclosure, with one out of
every 199 homes (or 0.5 percent) foreclosed in July. Because it
is a relatively less-populated state, however, Nevada did not
rank among the top states for total foreclosures. Georgia had
the second highest rate, with one out of ever 299 homes foreclosed,
a 75 percent increase over June.
The rise in foreclosures is bound up with the deflation in
home prices, as struggling homeowners are no longer able to refinance
their mortgages to meet monthly payments. The maturing of adjustable
rate mortgages has also led to a sharp increase in housing bills
for many homeowners in recent months.
A separate report from the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS),
part of the federal Department of the Treasury, reported difficulties
in the savings and loan banking sector, which is heavily involved
in home lending. Troubled assets, defined as loans that are at
least 90 days past due, have increased by 50 percent over the
past year, to $14.2 billion. According to an AP report, Thats
the highest level of troubled loans at the OTS since 1993, with
most of the problems in home mortgages, OTS officials said.
Meanwhile, Capital One Financial said it would shut down its
GreenPoint mortgage arm. The unit of the bank specialized in jumbo
loansthose over $417,000and so-called Alt-A
loansloans to individuals who cannot fully document income
or assets.
Capital One, whose main area of operations is credit cards,
acquired GreenPoint when it bought up North Fork Bankcorp in 2005.
North Fork paid $6.3 billion for GreenPoint in 2004. In a sign
of the sharp downturn in the housing market, Capital One announced
that it would take an after-tax charge of $860 million associated
with the closure.
Unlike subprime loans, jumbo loans are generally made to individuals
with good credit histories. However, their large size means that
they are ineligible for repurchase by the government-backed mortgages
agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Problems in the jumbo loan market reflect in part the over-extension
of many homebuyers as housing prices have soared in recent years.
While such mortgages were once generally used to purchase luxury
homes, in recent years even modest residences in states like California
cost more than the $417,000 minimum that defines a jumbo
loan. Unable to afford the large monthly payments, buyers have
been forced into foreclosure.
In a statement announcing the move, Capital One indicated that
it saw broad worries in the mortgage industry extending beyond
the subprime market. [R]ecent and continuing development
in the mortgage markets reduce the long-term outlook for profitability
in the business, as the company expects markets for prime, non-conforming
mortgage products are likely to remain challenged for the foreseeable
future.
In an internal memo, Capital One CEO Richard Fairbank said
the closure was the result of an unprecedented set of market
circumstances.
The layoffs at Capital One are only the latest in a spate of
job cuts at US financial service companies, according to a report
issued by consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas on
Tuesday.
Challenger reported that already in 2007 there have been 87,962
job cuts in financial services, 75 percent more than in all of
2006. The number of layoffs has been escalating in recent months,
with nearly one quarter announced in the first three weeks of
August alone.
Challenger found that 35,830 of the job cuts were tied to the
housing market. In addition, real estate firms have announced
1,950 job cuts, and construction firms 19,670, so far this year.
The total for these two sectors is more than twice the number
for 2006.
In an interview with news agency Reuters, Challenger CEO John
Challenger gave a sense of the magnitude of the shift. Many
companies expected the mortgage situation to implode; theyve
just been wondering when the bubble would burst, he said.
But many are stopping on a dime, shutting down operations.
Companies are not surprised by whats happening, but the
reality of the situation and the speed with which it occurred
is shocking.
In addition to Capital One, major job cuts have been announced
at Bear Stearns, First Magnus Financial Corp, and Countrywide
Financial Corp.
Troubles at Countrywide, the nations largest mortgage
lender in terms of volume, have been particularly worrisome for
investors. In an ominous sign for the banking system, depositors
lined up in many cities on Monday morning to check on deposits
and withdraw money from the institutions banks, after hearing
of the companys financial troubles.
Late on Monday, Countrywide announced that it had cut 500 jobs
at one of its lending divisions that specializes in Alt-A loans.
In an effort to maintain confidence in its operations, Countrywide
took out advertisements seeking to assure consumers that all is
well at the company. Last week, the company reported that it had
reached the limit of its $11.5 billion credit line, and there
has been speculation that it could go bankrupt, or might be bought
up by outside investors, including billionaire Warren Buffetts
company, Berkshire Hathaway.
A series of other actions this week indicate a housing market
that is in deep crisis:
* Thornburg Mortgage, which specializes in jumbo loans, announced
on Monday that it had been forced to swallow a $930 million loss
in order to unload top-rated mortgage securities to avoid a cash
crisis. The company had been frozen out of an important lending
market after having its credit rating downgraded.
* San Francisco-based Luminent Mortgage Capital Inc., a real
estate investment trust, said on Monday that it would allow Arco
Capital to buy a 51 percent share in the company at a deep discount
in order to obtain necessary cash. The company is suffering from
a spate of housing mortgage default notices.
* Bank of America moved Toll Brothers, a luxury homebuilder,
to a sell rating. Many of Toll Brothers buyers use
jumbo loans. Bank of America analyst Daniel Oppenheim said that
demand for new homes will likely fall by 35 percent this year.
The problems in the US housing market have set off a broader
credit crunch, as investors fear the souring of loans to individuals
and businesses. In a sign of extreme nervousness among investors,
the yield on short-term US Treasury bonds on Monday saw their
biggest drop since the late 1980s. Yields fall as investors buy
the Treasury bonds, which are considered to be one of the most
secure forms of investment.
The flight to treasury bonds came as investors dumped holdings
in other assets, including corporate debt and securities related
to jumbo mortgages.
See Also:
Credit crisis claims another bank
[20 August 2007]
Fed moves to halt market meltdown
[18 August 2007]
Wild gyrations on world markets
[17 August 2007]
Worldwide panic compels central banks
to intervene
[13 August 2007]
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