Title: John Taylor
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2John Taylor
3John Taylor
President and CEO, National Community
Reinvestment Coalition
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5Continuing Wealth Disparitiesby Race / Ethnicity
6Wealth Disparity Assets Owned by Income Level
Next 10
Bottom 80
Next 9
Top 1 of households
2003
NCRC - Confidential
7Mortgage Tsunami - The Perfect Storm
- Predatory Exotic Mortgages
- Inflated Appraisals
- Increased Foreclosures (Harv. Jt Center)
- Declining Housing Prices
- Decline in Real Wages
- Homeowners Insurance - rising costs
- Rising Interest Rates
- Vacant housing saturates market
8Foreclosures
Projected foreclosures Over next 12
months 1,788,000 homes
Mortgage Tsunami
March, 2007
March, 2006
March, 2005
March, 2001
9Exhibit 42 Adjustable Rate Mortgage Reset
Schedule
Peak reset rates
for Option ARMs,
Unsecuretized
ARMs is
last
10 weeks of 2007
Source Credit Suisse Fixed Income U.S. Mortgage
Strategy Note Data as of January 2007
10Need a National Anti-Predatory Law
- System for accessing mortgages must be fair and
competitive - Escrow for Taxes and Insurance
- Eliminate or drastically reduce Stated Income or
Low Documentation Loans - Limit prepayment penalties after expiration of
teaser rates - Ability to Pay - not only at loan closing
- Assignee Liability
11Other Needs
- Bank Regulatory agencies must see their clients
as consumers, not the lenders - Lenders, consumers, and their associations must
come together and see that Americas future is at
stake. We need a responsible lending coalition. - Work together to eliminate bad actors
- Work together to produce meaningful laws that
protect consumers but constrict only the
predatory lending practices - We must clean up the appraisal practices
- Title Insurance must be more competitive
- Homeowners insurance must be available to all
- Need national licensing standard that covers
brokers - Need CRA for the Credit Unions
12- Thank you
- You need to visit
- www.communityinvestmentnetwork.org
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14Allen Fishbein
15Allen J. Fishbein
Director of Housing and Credit Policy Consumer
Federation of America
16 "New Challenges to Preserving and Supporting
Sustainable Homeownership"
17Risky Lending Greatest Threat to Sustainable
Homeownership
- Homeownership traditionally has been the most
accessible tool available to enable families to
build wealth and to foster neighborhood stability - These benefits are eroded when it becomes easier
for consumers to buy houses, than to keep them - The proliferation of risky loan products
threatens sustainable homeownership - Subprime mortgage meltdown threatens to result in
a net loss of homeownership - Common-sense reforms are needed to preserve and
support sustainable homeownership
18More Subprime Woes Ahead
- 600 billion Subprime Loans Face Rate Reset
Within Two Years - Subprime Defaults Hit 10-Year High
- SP market represents 13 of outstanding mortgages
but over 60 of foreclosures - 20 (1 in 5) subprime loans issued in 05/06
forecasted to go into default - Placing as many as 2.2 million households in
danger of losing their homes - Subprime foreclosures hitting some areas harder
than others especially severe in predominately
minority localities - threatens to reverse
recent homeownership gains - Subprime Foreclosure Tsunami - Tip of the
Iceberg?
19Evidence of Consumer Confusion in Understanding
Mortgage Risks
- 34 of homeowners dont know what type of
mortgage they have (survey for Bankrate.com) - 40 of ARM borrowers underestimate the amount of
rate change (2006 Fed Reserve survey) - Over 1/3 consumers preferring ARMs could not
calculate the payment increases (2004 Consumer
Federation of America survey) - 24 of homeowners are anxious about ability to
make mortgage payments (Survey for TransUnion by
GfK Roper)
20Improved Disclosures and Better Borrower
Education Necessary, But Not Sufficient
- Truth-in-Lending Act disclosures perpetuate
confusion about ARMs and Non-Traditional
Mortgages - Disclosures should be more timely, clear and
balanced - Consumers also need better education about the
home buying process, loan products and players - While important, better disclosures and education
are not enough - Disclosures do not inform consumers whether other
loans better fit their needs - Mortgages are increasingly complex, particularly
for the most vulnerable borrowers - Mortgage professionals are in a better position
to evaluate home loans than ordinary consumers
21- Every time I have sat to close my own mortgage
loan I have felt at a disadvantage in terms of
my understanding so I can imagine what a first
time buyer must feel. - - Former Fed Reserve Governor Mark
Olson
22Improved Protections for Consumers Seeking
Mortgage Credit
- Establish duty of care standard for loan
originators that includes... - Qualifying borrowers based on long-term
affordability - Escrow taxes and insurance
- Documentation of applicants income
- No anti-competitive fees
- No steering
- Meaningful enforcement and accountability for
abusive or irresponsible actions by all
participants in the lending chain
23Active Participation in Borrower Assistance
- Lenders, servicers and investors must actively
engage in constructive solutions - Three to six million families are now mired in
harmful subprime loans (3/4 of these will
dramatically reset in coming months and years) - All parties in the lending chain have
responsibility for reducing economic distress for
at-risk homeowners
24www.consumerfed.org