Wednesday, November 4, 2009

FHA Digging Out After Loans Sour

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125729000674726513.html#articleTabs%3Dcomments

Here comes another bailout. Do you really think they don't know what they're doing?

Last fall, as the financial system was teetering and the biggest banks were tightening credit, Karen DeForte couldn't find a lender to refinance the two mortgages on her New York home, until she received a phone call from Lend America.

Most banks rejected Ms. DeForte because her debt level was too high and her credit score too low. But Lend America put Ms. DeForte into a $402,000 loan backed by the Federal Housing Administration, a New Deal-era agency that Washington and Wall Street were relying upon to pick up the slack in the mortgage market as private lenders pulled back. Ms. DeForte fell behind on payments six months later and is seeking a loan modification. Taking the loan was "a stupid mistake," the 46-year-old office manager said.

In late 2007 and early 2008, thousands of borrowers with marginal credit were allowed to refinance via the government-insured FHA program, just as home-price declines began to accelerate. Policy makers were urging the agency to fill the gap left by the exit of private lenders, refinancing subprime borrowers out of loans that threatened to reset to unaffordable payments.

Although the FHA has tightened credit standards, many of the 2007 and early 2008 mortgages are going bad. The agency expects defaults on 24% of all loans insured in 2007, and 20% of those backed in 2008. "The orders from Congress and us were clear: We want to save as many families as we can, recognizing that a lot of loans people were looking to refinance out of should never have been made in the first place," said Brian Montgomery, who served as the agency's commissioner for four years ending in July.