|
article
feature |
|
Back
|
Print
|
Bookmark |
|
Modify those toxic mortgages |
| |
|
You know you're in a tight spot when bankruptcy
court begins to look like the least bad solution to
a pressing economic problem. |
[HOT: Bankruptcy Courts can
facilitate new financing terms on cars, boats and vacation
homes but not on a primary homes, meaning judges can't help
prevent home foreclosures. That's absurd.
Could it be that the mortgage
industry would rather have government subsidies of
low-interest loans that cause homeowners to refinance and
allows them to collect closing fees on the same house a
second time? Does this industry want laws that force
Fannie and Freddie to buy mortgages so they can collect the
fees and then offload the risk?
Highlights
added.]
Unfortunately, U.S. Bankruptcy Court isn't allowed to be part
of the solution to rising foreclosures, thanks largely to the
mortgage banking lobby. It's worth asking: Why not?
Consider the scale of the problem. The number of homes
threatened by foreclosure today is
estimated as high as 8 million, quadruple the number a
year and a half ago. Experts agree it's a
massive drag on the economy. It
undermines communities,
drives home prices down,
potentially below fair market value, and creates huge losses for banks and mortgage
investors.
Dozens of proposals to stem the tide have been tabled: Force
lenders to dicker with every delinquent borrower, pay loan
servicers more to avert foreclosures than to allow them,
subsidize interest rates or principal values with taxpayer
money. The solutions that have been tried, such as voluntary
loan modification efforts by banks, all seem to help a tiny
fraction of the expected number, in part because
it's hard to distinguish deserving
homeowners from those who should never have gotten a
mortgage in the first place.
That brings us to bankruptcy. In Chapter
13, which is bankruptcy for working people who have fallen
behind in their debts but don't want to stiff all their
creditors, bankruptcy judges can help work out new terms on
cars and boats and vacation homes. The process is known
by the unlovely legal term "cram-down," evidently because from
the creditor's standpoint - well, you get the drift.
The only debt a judge is forbidden to cram down is a mortgage
on a principal residence. Chapter 13 debtors either have to
meet the loan's original terms, throw themselves on the mercy
of their lenders (and we all know how gracious they can be) or
give up the house.
The absurdity of
this rule should be self-evident. Loans
on things that are comparatively expendable - your boat, your
vacation cabin, your Ford Taurus (or your Lamborghini) - can be
modified by a judge to help you hold on to the asset. But your
home? Forget it. This makes sense only if you think you
may need to keep the car so if you're thrown out of your house
you can move into the back seat.
Still, in a rational world, wouldn't the rule be exactly the
opposite - try to save the house and let the repo men fight
over the rest?
Democrats in Congress, who have been trying to fix this
inequity for more than a year, think they're on the verge of
victory. A measure sponsored by Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich.,
sailed through committee and is likely to pass the
House.
But it may not have the requisite 60 votes to pass as a
stand-alone bill in the Senate, in part because bankers remain
adamantly opposed to mortgage cram-downs in any
form.
The mortgage lobby argues that cram-downs would provoke a
headlong rush to Bankruptcy Court. They say mortgage rates
would soar even for worthy home buyers because lenders would
see more risk in the mortgage market, as though a market facing
8 million foreclosures doesn't fit the textbook definition of
"risky."
Economists are sharply divided over the effects of this
proposed change in bankruptcy. Michelle J. White of the
University of California-San Diego, estimated last year that it
could save more than 100,000 homes a year, especially in cases
in which lenders were otherwise unwilling to make a deal. But
Christopher Mayer, a real estate expert at Columbia Business
School, seconds the industry's assertion that it would drive up
rates. "We don't want to permanently damage the mortgage
system," he says. "It's been damaged enough."
But it's worth noting that cram-downs are
necessarily limited to mortgages underwater - those with
balances exceeding the property's market value. Such loans
already are highly vulnerable to foreclosure, so the lenders
face huge losses unless someone like a bankruptcy judge can
craft a solution.
Under the leading proposal in Congress, a
typical plan would work like this for a debtor owing, say,
$225,000 on an adjustable-rate mortgage on a home now worth
$200,000: The judge reduces the balance to $200,000. The excess
$25,000 becomes an unsecured debt to the lender, to be paid
off, probably for pennies, at the end of the case. This
part of the process is known as a "strip down."
The judge can modify the remaining loan by converting the
adjustable rate to a fixed market rate, adding 1 percent to 3
percent as a risk premium. The judge can erase all the fancy
gingerbread that makes so many mortgages toxic - periodic rate
adjustments, prepayment fees, balloon payments, etc. - and
extend it out as long as 40 years. If the judge determines that
no combination of alterations would produce a mortgage the
debtor could handle, the house could be foreclosed.
This process addresses one big obstacle to mortgage workouts,
the rights of bondholders. The securitization of home loans,
which was supposed to be an innovation in lending, separated
the entity servicing the loan - usually a bank that collects
payments, chases delinquents and files foreclosures - from the
loan's owners, who are far-flung and faceless
investors.
Servicers worry that if they
modify a mortgage to keep payments flowing rather than
foreclose, they'll be sued by
bondholders even if the result is arguably better in the
long run. But if a judge orders the
modification, the servicer gets legal cover.
Nobody thinks that cram-down is perfect, or that it's the only
answer to the housing crisis. But its
virtue is that it focuses on the debtors most serious about
keeping their homes and least likely to re-default.
That's because sane people don't subject themselves to Chapter
13 unless they have no alternative.
"It's a fairly draconian process," J. Rich Leonard told me. He
should know: One of the more eloquent proponents of the
mortgage cram-down, having briefed Congress on the subject
several times, he has been a bankruptcy judge in North Carolina
for nearly 17 years.
Under Chapter 13, debtors can be grilled
under oath by the judge, the bankruptcy trustee and their
creditors. With bankruptcy filers' income and outflow
subject to rigorous monitoring, they give up every ounce of
their financial freedom for three to five years. Once they're
out of bankruptcy, they might still owe most of their secured
debts, though payments may be more bearable.
In Leonard's view, these factors give lie to the mortgage
lobby's assertions that the cram-down bill would send
homeowners racing to the courthouse to proclaim themselves
deadbeats.
"I can't imagine that people who have the current ability to
pay their mortgage would want to subject themselves to this,"
he says.
He's perplexed at the mortgage industry's
adamant opposition, as we all should be.
"This might not fix every foreclosure, but it will fix the ones
that need to be fixed," he says. "I keep asking the bankers'
lobby, why isn't this better than selling the house in a
liquidation sale? That's the question they can never
answer."
Michael Hiltzik, LOS ANGELES TIMES
02/02/2009
Source:
http://www.statesman.com/search/content/editorial/stories/02/04/0204hiltzik_edit.html
↑
Back to Top
|