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October 25, 2010 6:09 PM

12% Of Homeowners Behind On Mortgages

(CBS/AP)  Twelve perecent of all U.S. homeowners are behind in their mortgage payments are in forclosure, including a stunning 48 percent of those with subprime adjustable-rate mortgages, new data showed Thursday.

The reckless lending practices in states like Florida, California and Nevada that were the epicenter of the housing crisis are no longer driving up the nation's delinquency rate. Instead, the foreclosure crisis now is being fueled by a spike in defaults in states like Louisiana, New York, Georgia and Texas, where the economies are rapidly deteriorating and thousands are losing their jobs.

A record 5.4 million American homeowners with a mortgage of any kind, or nearly 12 percent, were at least one month late or in foreclosure at the end of last year, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported. That's up from 10 percent at the end of the third quarter, and up from 8 percent at the end of 2007.

Prime and subprime fixed-rate loans saw sharp increases in the fourth quarter, a sign that the problem is now the economy.

"We're seeing increases in fixed-rate categories and that's where the problems are coming from," said Jay Brinkmann, the group's chief economist. "The foreclosure picture is more clearly driven by the jobs market."

That trend highlights one of the biggest challenges confronting the Obama administration's mortgage relief plan launched this week. While the $75 billion plan could help change the loan terms or refinance up to 9 million homeowners, unemployed borrowers will have a hard time qualifying.

On Thursday, the Labor Department said new unemployment claims last week totaled 639,000, lower than expected, but still at elevated levels. Factory orders also slipped for the sixth month in a row in January, the Commerce Department reported.

"There can be no doubt that employers continue to shed labor at a frightening pace, with no end in sight," Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, wrote in a client note Wednesday.

The key is what kind of workers are losing their jobs, Brinkmann said. Unemployment for people with college degrees, some college education or technical training - those most likely to own homes and have prime fixed-rate loans - has nearly doubled over the past six months.

In New York, for example, where the financial industry is handing out pink slips like ticker tape, homeowners who once had good credit are defaulting at an increasing clip.

The only bright spot in the report is the devastation wrought by subprime ARMs appears to be waning. Their 30-day delinquency rate continues to fall and is at the lowest point since the first quarter of 2007.

That offers little reassurance to Florida, where 60 percent of homeowners who have a subprime ARM are at least one payment behind and one in five of all mortgage holders aren't current.

On Wednesday, Mr. Obama's team announced details of his plan, which features cash incentives for mortgage holders - known as loan servicers - who cut deals with borrowers for new, more affordable terms.

The legislation has been the subject of an intense lobbying campaign by the financial services industry, which has worked hard to kill it. It has exposed rifts among liberal Democrats who regard it as the only real way to help debt-strapped homeowners avoid foreclosures and moderates who want to give voluntary efforts a chance to work before resorting to the courts.

The same divisions are at work in the Senate, which is expected to consider its own version of the legislation in the coming weeks.

The industry already won several concessions from Democrats in the House, who agreed to limit the measure to existing loans, to homeowners who sought a loan modification from their lenders before filing for bankruptcy, and to people who can no longer afford to pay their mortgages.

Democrats were forced to put off action on the measure when moderates voiced concerns last week that the bill was still overly broad. They wrote a compromise that requires bankruptcy judges to consider whether banks offered homeowners reasonable loan restructuring deals before they weigh in with their own rewrites.

Borrowers also would have a responsibility to prove that they tried to modify their mortgages with their lenders before seeking help in bankruptcy court.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 42 Comments
by philabias March 10, 2009 1:43 AM EDT
$100.00 bucks says 18% in a year
OBAMA IS BLEACH
DESTROYS EVERTHING HE TOUCHES.....
46 months to go.
Reply to this comment
by VTPatriot March 6, 2009 4:47 PM EST
8.1% unemployment and 12% behind on their mortgages. City Bank stock worth under a dollar. Stocks falling faster than I can remember. Sure looks like the American business owners have confidence in the Obama Administration.

Please stop throwing money at the problem, makes you look like a fire fighter that only has one bucket and no ladder.
Business will find its own footing with out government intervention. This is the American way. Not socialist programs that the wealthy are forced to provide for.

SRH
Reply to this comment
by philabias March 6, 2009 2:45 AM EST
If the Mortgages are delinqnt now wait till 3 months when those 700,000 cant keep up
And if Obamas plan works like every other plan we will see 25+
watch and see
Reply to this comment
by Solarrays247 March 5, 2009 10:48 PM EST
it appears some idiots are asleep to this idea when they post their hideous comments - NOT everybody went out and got one of those fly by nite mortages who are losing their homes Fools !
Posted by jetranger7 at 5:22 PM : Mar 5, 2009

I agree jetranger7. Please bear in mind that the majority of our fellow Americans are more savvy than those few particular fools that you are speaking about....they must not have a life. Hang in there!!
Reply to this comment
by Solarrays247 March 5, 2009 10:38 PM EST
The outrageously increasing number of foreclosure listings is alarming the nation of the bad stain on its economy. The news is not a pleasant one but definitely catches attention. It has also been responsible for causing panic amongst the people. Posted by WillowOne at 4:28 PM : Mar 5, 2009
----------------------------

Sounds like maybe we're really in a mental recession and the country is a bunch of whiners. I have to give credit to Phil Gram for those words.
Posted by perk235 at 5:52 PM : Mar 5, 2009

Yes! Lets tell that to Citi Bank and AIG and Washington Mutual, and......Wall Street? You betcha !!
Reply to this comment
by lambor59 March 5, 2009 10:16 PM EST
I'm waiting for the home price to hit bottom in the next 2 years and jump right in, it's perfect time.
Reply to this comment
by CnUHerMeNow March 5, 2009 9:52 PM EST
I cannot believe that people think that it's OK to buy a house you can't afford. I asked a million questions when we bought our house and our closing was hours long because I read. They hated me, but I can't say I didn't do enough reading or learning. I have NO sympathy for anyone who gets an ARM to buy a house. If you can barely afford it now, you are not going to be able to afford it when the payment doubles. Hello? Is there anybody IN there? If you try to buy this house AND two Hummers AND vacation AND a 65" TV AND...you get my drift...you deserve what you get.
Reply to this comment
by perk235 March 5, 2009 8:52 PM EST
The outrageously increasing number of foreclosure listings is alarming the nation of the bad stain on its economy. The news is not a pleasant one but definitely catches attention. It has also been responsible for causing panic amongst the people. Posted by WillowOne at 4:28 PM : Mar 5, 2009
----------------------------

Sounds like maybe we're really in a mental recession and the country is a bunch of whiners. I have to give credit to Phil Gram for those words.
Reply to this comment
by perk235 March 5, 2009 8:41 PM EST
I put the blame on idiots who bought home(s) knowing that they couldn't afford them. You can say the mortgage companies, the bank but the end of the line it was the stupid idiot who signed the mortgage without knowing what he/she got into.
All that because he/she is greedy and thought after two years they would sell the house and get profit.
GREEDY IDIOTS!!!!!
Posted by lgqwerty at 4:53 PM : Mar 5, 2009
---------------------------------

Those greedy idiot homeowners are in good company: CEOs, CFOs of major financial institutions, people with years of experience in finance, financial analysts, the head of the federal reserve, the treasury department, the insurance industry, etc., etc.

But let's make sure we put our wrath on the average person. Part of the problem is that people trusted financial institutions to be like they were in the past--they didn't lend money they thought would not be payed back. Securitizing debt and other risky bets fundamentally changed the financial instutions but regular folks didn't know that. Mortgage brokers made a killing on MAKING THE LOAN instead of HOLDING THE LOAN. That causes problems.
Reply to this comment
by jetranger7 March 5, 2009 8:22 PM EST
So in otherwords,, according to the post down below this one,, nobody should buy anything, ever, for one day they could lose their jobs ! So according to the post below, the only people who are behind on the mortages or losing their homes are those who bought more house than they could afford ? Well what about those who've been in their homes for 10-15-20 years, and their company closed down, outsourced their jobs, asked them to take a pay cut, or after the company closed the entire town dried up,,, and those are people who only bought housing they could afford, but according to your post as well as others,,, you should still be able to afford your house payments, utilties, insurance etc,,, while NOT being Employeed and working,,, in an Economy like this,,,, Where in the World, did you get your Brains at Fool !!!! Well nobody buy anything, house, car, furniture, boat, Nothing, cause one day you might lose your job, or have your job outsourced, and you won't be able to afford anything,, according to a lot of blamers on here, who must think theres an abundance of money trees sproting up in back yards, so you can continue not to work,, and still make the payments ! I have a 30-Fixed Mortage onmy 95,000 house I've had for 12 years - If I lost my job this week, and it took me say almost 6 months to regain employment- I'd be foreclosed on in an economy like this finding another job that'll pay you enough to keep up is tough with companies tightening their belts too , it appears some idiots are asleep to this idea when they post their hideous comments - NOT everybody went out and got one of those fly by nite mortages who are losing their homes Fools !
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