DEBT
HIGHER THAN VALUE!!
Washington
the leader in owing more than it can re-pay.
All
across the USA Americans owe more than the value of the home they purchased at an
inflated price. Jimmy Carter started the downhill spiral in the housing market
by requiring lenders make it easier for buyers to qualify to purchase a house
and it's been going downhill ever since. Washington enables the economic
decline of citizens by micro-managing the financial markets from the Wall
Street to Main Street. be ###
Almost
half of all mortgages in Arizona are underwater, report says
By Anthony Dewitt, Cronkite News Service
WASHINGTON – Just under half of all Arizona
mortgages were “under water” in spring of this year, the second-highest
percentage in the nation, according to a report from a private research firm.
CoreLogic said only Nevada, at 63 percent, had a
higher rate of homes under water at the end of the first fiscal quarter of
2011, the most recent period for which it had a report.
An underwater mortgage is a home with negative
equity — when a person owes more on their mortgage than their home is worth.
Arizona homeowners who were under water averaged
$60,000 in negative equity, according to the report, below the national average
of $65,000. New York borrowers held the highest negative equity with an average
of $120,000, but only 6.2 percent of mortgages in that state were under water.
Phoenix was the third-highest metro area in the
nation, with 55 percent of its mortgages under water, according to CoreLogic,
trailing Las Vegas and Stockton, Calif.
Bankers in Arizona said they sense that
foreclosures are starting to slow down, as the market attempts to stabilize.
“We may be bottoming out here,” said Paul
Hickman, president of the Arizona Association of Bankers.
Large surpluses of housing are still keeping
both housing and banking in gridlock. But experts don’t believe the situation
can get worse than it is right now.
Hickman said the banks are trying to avoid
foreclosures, if only to avoid having to pay to maintain them — a cost that can
grow exponentially with about 100,000 foreclosed homes in the state.
“Foreclosures are flattening, they are not
putting all that inventory on top of current inventory,” Hickman said.
But state housing officials say that requests
remain high from people seeking helpwith their mortgage payments.
“We have been seeing a lot of activity,” said
Shaun Rieve, spokesman for the Arizona Department of Housing.
Rieve said that the department got more than
$267 million from a federal program that targeted states with the biggest
losses in the sub-prime mortgage crisis of 2008. The Principal Reduction
Program could allocate up to $50,000 toward a homeowner’s principal if the
lender matched that amount, up to 31 percent of the mortgage, according to the
state housing department.
But Rieve said few big lenders came on board
with matching funds. He said Bank of America was one of the few to come on
board, while the state “can’t get Chase (Bank) or Fannie (Mae) and Freddie
(Mac)” to sign on.
The department has since redirected $36 million
to an unemployment assistance fund that pays up to $2,000 a month in mortgage
to unemployed homeowners who meet other requirements. The new program has been
far more successful, he said.
Lenders said they are also offering loan
modification programs and financial counseling programs to assist borrowers
with underwater mortgages.
Chase spokeswoman Mary Jane Rogers said the bank
is opening more than 25 newhomeownership centers nationally in 2011. The bank
already has two centers in Arizona, one in Phoenix and one in Tempe.
She said borrowers can come into these locations
six days a week to meet with a Chase adviser to work on alternatives to walking
away from their homes.
“We do not want to own people’s homes,” Rogers
said.
Drowning in Debt?
The top 10 states for percentage of homes with
mortgages that were “under water” at the end of the first fiscal quarter.
Nevada: 62.6 percent
Arizona: 49.6 percent
Florida: 46.1 percent
Michigan: 36.0 percent
California: 30.9 percent
Georgia: 30.4 percent
Idaho: 24.2 percent
Maryland: 23.8 percent
Virginia: 23.1 percent
Ohio: 21.9 percent
Arizona: 49.6 percent
Florida: 46.1 percent
Michigan: 36.0 percent
California: 30.9 percent
Georgia: 30.4 percent
Idaho: 24.2 percent
Maryland: 23.8 percent
Virginia: 23.1 percent
Ohio: 21.9 percent
Source: CoreLogic Inc.
