Reigning Foreclosures Create the Perfect
Storm
By Patricia L Johnson and Richard E Walrath
Just how bad is it?
Adjustable Rate Mortgages are just that – they’re mortgages that have adjustable rates. It appears both buyers and lenders fell into the ARM trap – buyers by not fully understanding the requirements of their loans, and lenders by not completing sufficient risk assessments on potential buyers. Lenders must ensure their borrower can pay both the current mortgage and the future mortgage payment on ARMs.
There are several key items that must be understood by borrowers purchasing homes with ARMs [3]
The following sample chart indicates the difference in payment requirements on a $200,000.00 loan at a fixed 30-year rate of 7.5% compared to a $200,000.00 “2/28” ARM at 7% for 2 years then adjusting to a variable maximum rate of 10% - in year 3, an 11.5% maximum rate year 4, and a 13.0% variable maximum rate in years
5-30. The sample indicates no rate change in years 3 & 4
and a 2% rate increase in year 5. The
sample includes $200.00 per month for taxes and insurance. [3]

Click for larger version of chart http://www.articlesandanswers.com/ARMCHART.htm
While the fixed mortgage rate remains constant at $1,598.00 per month, the ARM mortgage increases $839.00 per month, from $1,531.00 in years 1 and 2, to $2,370.00 in year 5.
Wall Street Journal online has an excellent interactive map indicating the areas of the country that have been hit by the worst subprime delinquencies.
Some
newspapers lumped families who have been caught in the subprime mortgage crisis
with speculators who purchased houses for flipping purposes. Somehow we just don’t have the same amount of
sympathy for the speculators as we do for the families that are going to lose
their homes.
If all
those subprime mortgages were still held by the banks that granted them, they
wouldn’t have become the problem we have today.
But,
they were rolled up, sliced and diced to serve as securities for further
issuance of debt. When it all starts to
unravel, we have the credit crunch that Bernanke is trying to alleviate with
the cut in the discount rate.
This
wasn’t the rate cut everyone was looking for, but there will be a cut in the
Fed fund rate in the very near future.
In the meantime, the cut in the discount rate – the discount rate window
– will help, but will this be enough?
Sources: [1] John
C Dugan, OCC, April 2007 [2] WSJ Online – Subprime Mortgages [3] Federal
Reserve