Bernanke urges more action to stem home foreclosure crisis
WASHINGTON –
May 6, 2008 – A rising tide of late mortgage payments and home
foreclosures poses considerable dangers to the national economy,
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke warned anew Monday as he urged
Congress to take additional steps to alleviate the problems.
“High rates of
delinquency and foreclosure can have substantial spillover effects
on the housing market, the financial markets and the broader
economy,” Bernanke said in a dinner speech to Columbia Business
School in New York. “Therefore, doing what we can to avoid
preventable foreclosures is not just in the interest of lenders and
borrowers. It’s in everybody’s interest,” he said.
Some 1.5
million U.S. homes entered into the foreclosure process last year,
up 53 percent from 2006, Bernanke said. The rate of new foreclosures
looks likely to be even higher this year, he said.
To provide
more relief, Bernanke again called on Congress to give the Federal
Housing Administration, which insures mortgages, more flexibility to
help distressed borrowers at risk of losing their homes. He also
again urged lawmakers to move ahead on legislation revamping Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, which finance mortgages. And, he called on the
two mortgage giants to quickly raise new capital.
House leaders
plan action on those and other housing measures this week.
“Conditions in
mortgage markets remain quite difficult,” the Fed chief said. A copy
of the speech was made available in Washington.
The reasons
behind surging late payments and foreclosures can vary and that
needs to be taken into account when developing solutions, Bernanke
said. For instance, parts of New England, states in the Great Lakes,
including Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, show increased mortgage
delinquencies and “notable increases” in unemployment rates, he
said.
California,
Florida and parts of Colorado, on the other hand, saw delinquencies
rise during a period when unemployment generally decreased but the
value of homes declined, he said.
Mortgage
companies are used to dealing with delinquencies related to life
events, such as job loss or an illness, with the most common
approaches being a temporary repayment plan or the folding of missed
payments into the principal balance, Bernanke said.
“A widespread
decline in home prices, by contrast, is a relatively novel
phenomenon, and lenders and servicers will have to develop new and
flexible strategies to deal with this issue,” Bernanke said.
The current
housing crises has clobbered some borrowers as home prices dropped.
That left them with mortgages that are bigger than the value of
their home. When that’s the primary problem, Bernanke said the best
solution may be reducing the amount that the borrower owes on the
loan or some other permanent modification to the loan.
Rising
foreclosures add to the glut of unsold homes and that puts more
downward pressure on prices, aggravating the housing slump, he said.
More rapid declines in house prices could have an “adverse impact”
on the broader economy and the stability of the financial system, he
said.
In his
remarks, Bernanke did not talk about the interest rate policy or the
state of the economy.
To help
bolster the economy, the Federal Reserve last Wednesday cut a key
interest rate by one-quarter percentage point to 2 percent and
strongly hinted that it may take a breather in its rate-cutting
campaign that started last September.
The Fed hopes
that its powerful series of rate cuts - its most aggressive in
decades - along with the government’s $168 billion stimulus package
– including tax rebates that started flowing to bank accounts last
week – will be sufficient to lift the country out of its slump in
the second half of this year.
The mortgage
meltdown started with problems with subprime mortgages – those made
to people with tarnished credit. However, they have spread to more
creditworthy borrowers.
The trio of
crises – housing, credit and financial – have threatened to plunge
the country into its first recession since 2001. The situation has
roiled Wall Street, rattled consumers and has galvanized politicians
in the White House, in Congress and on the campaign trail to come up
with proposals to provide relief.
“The Realtor’s
mantra is ‘location, location, location’ ... local variation in
housing and mortgage markets is considerable,” Bernanke said. “This
variation is useful for understanding the sources of the increase in
mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures, and it should be taken into
account as servicers and policymakers consider how best to avoid
preventable foreclosures,” he said.
source:ap.org