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Corporate Social Responsibility
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6.14.2007 - 08:06am ET
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After Years of Inaction, the Fed Could Clean Up Subprime Market, Say Advocates
(CSRwire) ASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 14, 2007--This morning the Federal Reserve
Board will hold a hearing on abusive lending that, with the right outcome,
could mark a key turning point for American families with subprime home
loans. According to consumer groups, for 13 years the Board has largely
ignored Congress's mandate to take strong action against abusive, unfair
or deceptive mortgage lending practices, but today's hearing signals an
opportunity for meaningful change.
Organizations representing millions of members across the nation are
urging the Board to act swiftly to require common-sense protections on
subprime mortgages. It is time for the Board to use its authority to stop
mortgage lending practices that place homeowners at a high risk of
foreclosure.
Among those testifying at the hearing are Janis Bowdler of the
National Council of La Raza, Alys Cohen of the National Consumer Law
Center, Ira Rheingold of the National Association of Consumer Advocates
and Martin Eakes of the Center for Responsible Lending. In addition,
several state officials will discuss the impact of mortgages abuses on
their home state, including Attorneys Generals from Iowa and Minnesota and
Banking regulators from Arizona, Massachusetts, and North Carolina.
In the past, the Federal Reserve Board, along with other banking
regulators, has issued guidance for banks and their affiliates aimed at
the safety and soundness of issuing subprime home loans, including general
statements in 1999 and 2001 recommending that lenders consider a borrower's
ability to repay before approving loans. Subprime lenders became
increasingly bold in ignoring the spirit of this guidance, turning to
dangerous loan products and looser underwriting. The result is today's
rash of subprime foreclosures, which is expected to rise to one out of
five subprime loans made in recent years. It is clear that more specific
bright-line rules are needed.
The Federal Reserve Board has asked participants in this week's
hearing to comment on certain dangerous features that typically have been
included in subprime mortgages in recent years: prepayment penalties, lack
of escrows for taxes and hazard insurance, stated income and
low-documentation and loans made without adequate consideration of the
borrower's ability to repay.
Some observers have said that no regulatory action is necessary
because of market corrections, but in spite of the alarming rate of
foreclosures, subprime lenders are continuing to make loans packed with
risky features, and Wall Street is continuing to accept these loans. Based
on a review of five mortgage-backed securities offered in the first quarter
of this year, CRL found that loans containing characteristics shown to
increase the risk of foreclosure continue to constitute a large portion of
subprime offerings. The risky characteristics--seldom found in the
lower-priced prime market--include a high portion of loans with adjustable
interest rates, prepayment penalties and unverified income.
The most common type of mortgage issued in recent years has been
dangerous hybrid mortgages, which begin with a fixed-rate, but shift to a
much higher adjustable-rate with multiple interest rate increases. Lenders
have been aggressively marketing these loans to debt-strapped families and
approving the loans based on the initial interest rate rather than
considering long-term affordability.
Consumer advocates and civil rights leaders all over the nation have
expressed deep concerns about the financial harm resulting from typical
subprime loans. Brief statements from a number of groups
follow:
"Our neighborhoods are being torn apart by predatory lending and
foreclosures. American homeowners shouldn't have to wait for Congress to
pass new legislation. How many more families have to lose their homes
before the Federal Reserve will use its power and do something to stop
this problem? The time for them to act is now." Maude Hurd, ACORN National
President
"We applaud the Federal Reserve for holding this hearing. The Fed is
empowered under HOEPA to act, and it must do so now. The foreclosures
we're seeing today have effects very much like Hurricane Katrina, except
in this case homeowners all over the country are going under water. The
Fed must protect future homeowners from unscrupulous lenders marketing
defective products." Wade Henderson, President and CEO - Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights
"The Federal Reserve must act decisively under its authority to
protect families from bad lending practices, predatory mortgage loans and
deliberate fraud and abuse. Families make many sacrifices to become
homeowners--the Fed should have no tolerance for irresponsible mortgage
practices which make it difficult if not impossible for many families to
keep the homes they have worked so hard to buy. Access to fair home loans
is vital--but it should not come at the expense of a family's financial
stability." Linda Sherry, Director of National Priorities - Consumer
Action
"Irresponsible subprime lending practices have put millions of
households at risk of losing their homes and are having a corrosive effect
on other parts of the home loan market. Congress has directed the Federal
Reserve to write rules to put a stop to unfair and deceptive mortgage
practices that would apply to all mortgage lenders. Consumer Federation of
America urges Chairman Bernanke and the other Fed governors to move quickly
and decisively to put a halt to mortgage lending that place homeowners at
high risk of foreclosure." Allen Fishbein, Director Housing and Credit
Policy - Consumer Federation of America
"Because predatory lenders have long targeted African Americans, other
racial and ethnic minorities, women and the elderly, Americans of color and
the communities in which we live stand to lose the most from the
foreclosure boom. The Federal Reserve has the ability, as well as the
moral obligation, to exercise its authority under HOEPA and help stem the
tide of predatory mortgage abuses. We need clear and concise rules that
require lenders to responsibly underwrite loans, including considering
borrowers' repayment ability. As long as abuses are legal, mandatory
disclosures and increased financial literacy will not be enough." Hilary
Shelton, Director, NAACP Washington Bureau
"Abusive lending is devastating American communities. The Board must
take bold steps to address this problem by issuing rules that require
affordable loans with verified income, access to loss mitigation, and
protection from other unfair practices. The cost of not acting will be the
continued explosion in foreclosures and the destruction of wealth for
working people." Alys Cohen, Staff Attorney
- National Consumer Law Center
"It is imperative that the Federal Reserve use its rulemaking
authority to curb abusive lending practices in the home mortgage market.
Until then, homeowners and neighborhoods across America, especially
integrated neighborhoods and communities of color, will continue to bear
the costs and consequences of irresponsible lending.
By taking action, the Federal Reserve will also send a message to Wall
Street about its responsibility not to pay higher premiums for ARMs that
have a discriminatory and adverse impact on those protected under the Fair
Housing Act." Shanna L. Smith, President/CEO - National Fair Housing
Alliance
"It is possible and profitable to lend responsibly for home purchases
and refinancing without resorting to predatory practices, loans, and fees.
Responsible mortgage lending benefits everyone, while abusive lending
benefits greedy predators. We need a prudent policy response that puts an
end to predatory lending, a prudent financial response that preserves the
assets of homeowners at risk due to predatory lending, and a responsible
market strategy that demonstrates that low-income and low-wealth people
are good borrowers and good homeowners. The Federal Reserve needs to take
this opportunity to act now." Mark Pinsky, President & CEO of Opportunity
Finance Network and Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve's Consumer
Advisory Council
"There is an urgent need to address the epidemic of foreclosures in
the subprime market today. The Federal Reserve has a responsibility to
prohibit abusive, unfair or deceptive lending acts, as mandated by
Congress, and we hope they will take action soon." Martin Eakes, CEO -
Self-Help and the Center for Responsible Lending
"Federal bank regulators have long failed to require basic standards
of decent lending, especially for debt-strapped families and communities
of color targeted by subprime lenders. We expect that the entire country
will suffer adverse effects from the massive wave of subprime
foreclosures--foreclosures that could have been prevented if the Board and
other agencies had not ignored rampant predatory activity in the
marketplace." Ed Mierzwinski, Consumer Program Director - U.S. PIRG
Copyright Business Wire 2007
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