Feds ask: Is that mortgage really right for you? |
| By Holden
Lewis Bankrate.com |
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Imagine that mortgages were automobiles, and you had
the power to witness every sale. Every day, you would watch, dumbfounded,
as pizza deliverers passed up Priuses and bought Hummers instead.
You would cringe as 16-year-olds screeched off the lot in souped-up
cars, destined to die young.
If mortgages were cars, you would see people making
these mistakes all the time. Too often, consumers get home loans
that are inappropriate or too risky.
Regulators are wrestling with the question of what
to do about it. Whose job is it to decide that a particular loan
is unsuitable for a specific customer?
"Who am I to tell you that you're eligible
for this kind of loan, but you're not suitable for it?" banker
Robert Broeksmit asked at a recent Federal Trade Commission workshop.
A consumer advocate retorted in an interview: "It
can be boiled down to this: Don't offer things that people can't
pay and really are rip-offs."
'Nontraditional' mortgages surge
The argument is about what federal regulators call "nontraditional"
mortgages -- home loans in which the borrower is required to pay
only interest, and not principal, for the first few years. About
one-quarter of new mortgages are nontraditional loans, up from a
negligible market share just five years ago. That worries regulators,
because these loans are considered riskier. Some nontraditional
loans, called payment-option adjustable-rate mortgages, don't even
require the borrower to pay the interest accrued: The amount owed
can increase every month.
Regulators have proposed a "guidance" asking
lenders to step cautiously when underwriting nontraditional loans.
A guidance is a recommendation -- not as binding as a regulation,
but stronger than a mere suggestion. The proposed guidance says
lenders should avoid loans "that may result in the borrower
having to rely on the sale or refinancing of the property,"
once the borrower has to start paying principal as well as interest.
In other words, don't give a mortgage to someone
who can't afford to pay principal and interest, even if it's an
interest-only loan.
Regulatory agencies jointly proposed such guidance
in December and asked for written comments. In late May in Washington,
D.C., the FTC held the workshop on behalf of itself and other agencies
so regulators could ask questions and get answers in a more informal
setting.
Added risk for consumers, lenders
Regulators worry about interest-only and payment-option mortgages,
because payments can rise abruptly after a few years. In unlikely
worst-case scenarios, monthly payments can more than double in one
traumatic leap. A lot of borrowers don't make down payments or document
their income -- additional risk factors that increase the odds of
eventual foreclosure.
Interest-only mortgages have been around for decades,
and they were originally marketed to two types of customers: wealthy
people who can afford volatile payments, and workers with unpredictable
incomes, such as business owners, salespeople on commission and
executives whose income mostly comes from annual bonuses. But now
a lot of homeowners get these loans because they offer the only
way to afford an acceptable house in pricey markets.
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