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Mortgage foreclosures rise to record

Delinquencies jump among riskiest loans; California, Nevada hit hard

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Has housing hit bottom?
June 12: CNBC asked two economists if the downturn in the U.S. housing market has run its course — or whether further trouble lies ahead.

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CNBC video
Foreclosures surge in May
June 12: CNBC’s Diana Olick reports that the latest numbers show a big jump in mortgage foreclosures in May.

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By John W. Schoen
Senior producer
MSNBC
updated 4:24 p.m. ET June 14, 2007

John W. Schoen
Senior producer

E-mail

As the U.S. housing market continues to slog through a hangover from its post-millennium boom, mortgage foreclosure data released Thursday provide fresh evidence that the slow-motion unwinding of the easy-money mania is still under way.

The number of residential mortgages going into foreclosure hit a record in the first quarter of the year, with the biggest increases coming in the so-called "subprime" market of borrowers with weaker credit histories. Foreclosure rates were highest in a handful of states where home prices and sales surged during the boom, including California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona.

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The rate of delinquencies, defined as borrowers who are at least 30 days behind on their payments, also rose among subprime borrowers to 15.75 percent. For all mortgages, the delinquency rate dipped a bit compared with last year's fourth quarter, but remained higher than the comparable year-ago period.

The housing industry watches these numbers closely because the delinquency rate is a bellwether for more serious problems down the road, including a default by borrowers who have gotten in over their heads. Unless those borrowers can renegotiate a new loan with more favorable terms, those defaults will likely become foreclosures. While the dip in delinquencies is a positive sign, it's too soon to say the rate has peaked, said Doug Duncan, chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Association.

"We’re not ready to say one data point is a trend," he said. "We will probably see modest increases in delinquencies and foreclosures for the next couple of quarters."

A separate report this week by RealtyTrac reported that foreclosures for May were up 19 percent from April and up nearly 90 percent from May 2006. In Nevada, there was one foreclosure filing for every 166 households last month, nearly four times the national average and the highest rate in the country for the fifth month in a row, according to RealtyTrac.

Some lenders are working to help borrowers who got into trouble. By making concessions, like offering a new loan with a lower interest rate or shifting from an adjustable to a fixed rate, those lenders may lose a little in the short term. But they’re hoping to head off bigger losses if the loan goes to default and the borrower's home is sold in a foreclosure.



"There's no question that within the industry it's kind of all hands on deck — let's work with borrowers," said Duncan. "They are aggressively restructuring loans for people who, largely due to circumstances beyond their control, are in some difficulty."

Those circumstances include a drop in housing prices in many parts of the country, which has left some recent homebuyers holding loans that are bigger than the value of their houses. So far, the biggest problems are cropping up in the relatively small subprime market, where the riskiest lending took place.

No one can say for sure when the housing market will hit bottom. The outlook for an overall recovery depends on a variety of factors, including the overall strength of the economy and job market, the direction of future interest moves, and how well borrowers now facing delinquency can get back on their feet.


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