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PREDATORY MORTGAGE LENDING: A PROFESSIONAL PERSPECTIVE by Luke Erickson

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Title: PREDATORY MORTGAGE LENDING: A PROFESSIONAL PERSPECTIVE by Luke Erickson


1
PREDATORY MORTGAGE LENDINGA PROFESSIONAL
PERSPECTIVEbyLuke Erickson
2
Background
  • Homeownership has been encouraged over the years.
  • Homeowners are thought to be more productive and
    more stable citizens.
  • The political environment encourages homeownership

3
There is a lot more money available for home
loans than there was 20 years ago(Engel McCoy).
  • Deregulation
  • Increased technology
  • Secondary market
  • International investing

4
Prime Market
5
Primary Market (Engel McCoy, 2001)
  • Traditional loans
  • Minimal fees
  • Standard interest rates
  • Requires 20 down
  • Customers generally have steady employment and
    good credit.
  • These loans primarily originate with banks
    (depository institutions).

6
Overlapping Markets.
Subprime Market
Prime Market
7
Subprime Mortgage Market
  • Non-traditional loans
  • Higher than average fees
  • Higher than average interest rates
  • Often does not require a substantial down payment
  • Customers usually have bad credit and unsteady
    employment.
  • These loans primarily originate with
    non-depositories (non-banks).

8
Predatory Lending
  • Banks used to red line
  • Certain lenders today actually green line those
    populations (Lord, 2005)
  • Target individuals who are naïve, or not
    particularly financially savvy, and lack
    connections to the prime market (Engel McCoy,
    2001).
  • Deception, unethical procedures, and hard sell
    tactics are used to trick and trap these
    borrowers
  • Disproportionately benefit the lender, and harm
    the borrower (Engel McCoy, 2001).

9
Overlapping Markets.
Subprime Market
Prime Market
Predatory Loans
10
Overlapping Markets.
Subprime Market
Prime Market
Predatory Loans
11
How does mortgage fraud fit in?(Federal Bureau
of Investigation, 2005)
  • Fraud is illegal activity.
  • There are two kinds of fraud.
  • Fraud against the lender
  • Fraud against the borrower

12
Overlapping Markets.
Predatory Loans
Subprime Market
Prime Market
Fraud against the borrower
Fraud against the lender
Mortgage Fraud
13
  • HUD/Treasury joint report (2000), predatory
    lending is difficult to define and therefore
    difficult to regulate and control.

14
Purpose of this Study
  • To define and describe predatory mortgage lending
    in Utah.
  • Qualitative research study,
  • Interviews with 12 full-time mortgage
    professionals from around the state of Utah.

15
Objectives
  • 1. Conceptualize a definition of predatory
    mortgage lending.
  • 2. Determine the extent or magnitude of predatory
    loans in Utah.
  • 3. Identify the common characteristics of
    borrowers who end up with these loans.
  • 4. Identify the major factors behind the
    existence of high cost and abusive home loans.
  • 5. Document specific predatory practices seen in
    home loans.
  • 6. Determine optimal strategies for reducing
    predatory mortgage lending in Utah.

16
METHODOLGY AND PRODEDURES
17
Qualitative research paradigm
  • Unlike quantitative data, numbers are not the
    objective of this research.
  • The goal was to collect highly detailed and
    descriptive data (Rubin Rubin, 2005).

18
Sampling
  • 12 full time mortgage professionals
  • 4 consumer advocates
  • 4 industry advocates
  • 4 neutral participants
  • 182 years of collective experience

19
Interviewing
  • 7 Main Questions
  • Follow-ups and probes
  • Two pilot interviews

20
Data Recording Procedures
  • Written notes
  • Key verbal responses
  • Initial concepts and themes
  • Other thoughts and reflective notes
  • Interviews were also audio recorded
  • Later transcribed into text

21
Data Analysis Procedures
  • Read through interviews individually.
  • Assigned content to major categories
  • Using NVivo7 computer program organized material
    by topic
  • Identified subtopics, arranged content accordingly

22
RESULTS
23
Definition
  • Targeted practices that intentionally exploit the
    vulnerabilities of borrowers.
  • In use and description it was much more than
    that.
  • Predatory lending is misunderstood.
  • Meaning is often associated with the perceptions
    of those who use it
  • Can sometimes carry negative connotations,
    attacking implications, or stigma.

24
  • On the inadequacy of the term predatory lending
    one branch manager complained
  • I dont like the term predatory lending.
    Theres something about that term that really
    bothers me as a lender. But I dont know a
    better term for it. And thats the term
    everybody is using, but its such a broad
    paintbrush that I wish someone would come up with
    a better definition for it, and figure that out.
  • The conclusion is that the term predatory lending
    serves as more of an obstacle to common
    understanding, than a tool

25
Unfair Lending
  • The term unfair lending was used throughout the
    remainder of the study to refer to all instances
    of predatory, abusive, fraudulent and harmful
    lending
  • Unfair lending as defined by participants is one
    or more of the following
  • a) a transaction without a fiduciary duty or
    having the borrowers best interest in mind,
  • b) a transaction the borrower does not completely
    understand for any reason including age, language
    barrier or lack of financial savvy,
  • c) a transaction that has no beneficial use or
    results in harm to the borrower,
  • d) a loan that delivers the lender excessive
    profits, and
  • e) a loan that the borrower does not have the
    ability to repay.

26
New findings
  • Term predatory lending itself was an obstacle to
    achieving common understanding.
  • Distinction between targeted and untargeted abuse.

27
Overlapping Markets.
Predatory Loans
Subprime Market
Prime Market
Fraud against the borrower
Fraud against the lender
Mortgage Fraud
28
Overlapping Markets.
Abusive Loans
Predatory Loans
Subprime Market
Prime Market
Fraud against the borrower
Fraud against the lender
Mortgage Fraud
29
Overlapping Markets.
Unfair Loans
Abusive Loans
Predatory Loans
Subprime Market
Prime Market
Fraud against the borrower
Fraud against the lender
Mortgage Fraud
30
Magnitude
  • Unfair lending in Utah is directly indicated by
    the default, foreclosure, and bankruptcy rates in
    the state.
  • Because Utah has ranked in the top ten in each of
    these categories over the last several years,
    this indicates that unfair lending in Utah is
    widespread and rampant (ABI, 2004 Mitchell,
    2003 Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2005).

31
Victim Characteristics
  • Investors, the industry itself, and sometimes
    even co-conspirators in fraud attempts can become
    victimized to a degree.
  • In the literature, borrowers are nearly always
    seen as the sole victims in unfair lending
    (Calem, Hershaff, Wachtor, 2004 Engel McCoy,
    2001 Lord, 2005 Zimmerman, Wyly Botein,
    2002).

32
  • Similar to reports in literature, borrowers are
    more vulnerable due to certain personal and
    financial attributes, such as being elderly,
    minority, low-income or bad credit (Newman
    Wyly, 2002 Zimmerman, Wyly Botein, 2002).
  • Unlike the literature, participants also
    explained that borrowers are generally unprepared
    mentally and emotionally to enter home loan
    transactions.

33
Factors
  • Literature - unethical and irresponsible market
    actors (Engel McCoy, 2001).
  • Participants agreed, but indicated that
    irresponsibility and lack of accountability
    persists on both sides of a transaction.
  • Most unfair, predatory, or abusive acts
    that occur to victims are actually fully
    disclosed in the paper work

34
  • The mortgage lending market is complex and vast
  • Conflicting incentives
  • Market structure
  • Legal jurisdictions
  • Victim redress
  • Literature does address each of these issues to
    some extent, though they are not emphasized as
    they were by participants (Engel McCoy, 2001
    Lord, 2005 Sturdevant Brennan, 1999)

35
Practices
  • According to literature, unfair loans are the
    result of harmful loan features (Sturdevant
    Brennan, 1999).
  • Participants explained that loan features are not
    in and of themselves unfair but rather become
    unfair only when misused.
  • Misunderstanding has led several aggressive state
    legislatures to ban certain lending features
    (Lord, 2005 Quercia, Stegman, Davis, 2003).
  • adverse consequences in some states (Downey
    Barr, 2006).

36
Reduction
  • Prohibitive legislation in the literature (Engel
    McCoy, 2001 Quercia, Stegman, Davis, 2004).
  • Participants generally disagreed.
  • Free market approach, with increased
    accountability for their own actions
  • Licensing
  • Increased penalties,
  • More efficient victim redress
  • Mandatory borrower education
  • Jurisdictional boundaries

37
  • Literature often downplays education (Engel
    McCoy, Lord, 2005).
  • Participants emphasized education as the primary
    method of reducing
  • Consumer education is paramount.
  • Homebuyer education courses are encouraged by
    participants as a short term remedy, as similarly
    echoed in the literature (Lord, 2005).
  • But this is only a short term solution to a much
    larger problem.

38
  • Long term solution
  • extensive exposure to financial education courses
    in the secondary schools, colleges, and
    communities
  • Barely discussed in literature (Engel McCoy,
    2001).

39
When asked to rate the importance of financial
education one expert replied
  • I rate it a ten, in my opinion, on a scale of
    one to ten. Everybody has to go get a job,
    everybody is going to have credit of some kind
    somewhere or another down the road. . . I dont
    know how you manage in life without having some
    financial literacy. Now Algebra I would say one
    in ten might use it once they get out of school,
    but real life finances, everybody.

40
Conclusions Implications
  • Predatory Lending can be a confusing term and
    should be replaced.
  • Predatory Lending in use refers to much more than
    targeted abuses.
  • Less prohibitive legislation
  • More accountability
  • Financial Education

41
Limitations
  • Opinions of these twelve participants do
    notnecessarily represent the opinions of the
    entire lending community of Utah
  • this is an exploratory study to be built upon and
    is not a conclusive study
  • Chain/snowball sampling
  • Assignment of participants to the categories of
    consumer advocate, industry advocate, and neutral
    participant
  • Primary Researcher bias

42
Future Research
  • Supplemental quantitative study
  • Qualitative study to interview victims
  • Financial education
  • Issues of timing
  • Methods
  • Optimal quantity and frequency

43
  • Special Thanks to my committee, for all their
    time and patience,
  • To my parents for making the trek down from Idaho
    today.
  • To my wife Rachel
  • To my friends and colleagues in the program.
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