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  • September 4, 2008 12:42 PM EDT by Elizabeth MacDonald

    The Banks' Next Hot Zone: Home Equity Delinquencies

    Delinquencies on home equity loans and lines of credit are at their highest levels in a decade.
    That should give Wall Street and investors pause. Because when home equity borrowers, default on their lines of credit, bankers don't have first recourse to the underlying property, the home. Mortgage bankers who own the mortgage on the home do. That's why bankers are growing ashen-white over looming losses, and why they are scrambling to fix this problem now.

    The numbers are staggering. Borrowers had outstanding $1.12 tn of home equity loans this year, virtually the same amount in the fourth quarter of 2007.

    The American Bankers Association recently said the percentage of home equity lines of credit more than 30 days past due rose to 1.10 % during the first quarter, the highest since 1997, though still lower than bank card delinquencies which hit 4.51 %, slightly above the five year average delinquency rate of 4.40 %. The number of home equity lines more than a month past due is 55% above the average since the American Bankers Association began tracking it around 1990; delinquencies on home equity loans are 45% higher.

    Sluggish personal income growth, plunging home equity, job losses and a rocky stock market, as well as soaring food and energy prices, are partly to blame for the spike in delinquencies.

    Over the past two decades, value of home equity loan balances outstanding soared to more than $1 tn from just $1 bn. One in four homeowners have a home equity line of credit, and banks have made huge sums of money on them due to fat fees, returns that are a quarter or 50% higher than regular consumer loans.

    Lenders are to blame for recasting these loans as borrowings that really didn't seem to be backed by their most important investment, their homes, caling these loans "equity access" or as a Citigroup campaign called it, take a home equity loan and "Live Richly" or as Fleet Bank once advertised it, ""The smartest place to borrow? Your place." All glammed up ways to essentially hock your house.

    Bank exposure to home equity lines/loans are a major problem is huge. At last look, Wells Fargo (WFC) had $84 bn of them on their portfolio. In late 2007, Wells Fargo hived off $12 bn in home-equity loans in a separate portfolio to prepare them for liquidation. Bank of America (BAC), Wachovia (WB) and JPMorgan Chase have frozen borrowers' access to home equity lines or changed the terms to cut their potential home equity exposure, The Financial Times reports.  

    National City (NCC), the US bank that has been among the hardest hit by the subprime crisis, is trying to cut its exposure to the riskiest category of home loans by offering customers cash to close their untapped home equity lines, the Financial Times reported.

    If the scheme is successful, analysts say other banks could follow suit, choosing to spend money now to avoid taking on more exposure to the US housing slump.

    The bank's initiative, which was launched at the end of July, encourages National City customers to surrender their unused home equity lines by waiving the $350 fee it would normally charge for closing the line and by writing customers a $200 check. The idea here is to avoid future losses on lines or home equity loans that go belly up by enticing borrowers to bail out of them early with cash. The question for banks is, will this be a help in getting their own houses in order, and, for borrowers, is it worth taking the money and running?

    Finally, the losses don't just stop on the loans and lines of credit themselves. They also will take a bite out of bonds backed by these borrowings.

    Moody's Investors Service issued a report recently that said losses on prime home-equity loans, also called second mortgages, repackaged into bonds, vintage 2007, will climb to 17% on average. Home equity backed bonds from 2006 will rise to 13%, and 6% for 2005.

    For home-equity lines of credit, 2007 bond losses will rise to 26 %, Moody's said. For 2006, losses on securities will increase to 24 %, while losses for 2005 "vintage" bonds will reach 9%.

Bert

Cat's gotta blank sometime, and it looks like someone finally mixed some EX-LAX with the Friskies, there. In all seriousness, I think the financial services industry probably knew they had a problem some time ago, but got a free pass and free chips from the 'house' to keep doubling down...when the DOW drops to 7k or so, people will sober up, and find other hobbies. Maybe we'll go back to being citizens instead of Murkensumirs or something...lol

September 6, 2008 at 10:50 pm

Jean-Claude Anthony

Sorry ... 99 Trillion in US$ Government Debt ... as noted by the Dallas Fed. Bank in a recent report. (See The Market Oracle and the International Forecaster for more details).

September 6, 2008 at 3:58 am

Jean-Claude Anthony

The head of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank published a report detailing 99 US$ Dollars in US govt. debt. Add to that the trade issue, immigration, death of manufacturing jobs, our idiot public schools, the lost wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, then 800 Trillion in outstanding derivatives and other exotic financial instruments ... and you have the anatomy of a financial Tsunami. The world is about to get even uglier. God help us all.

September 6, 2008 at 3:56 am

profnasty

Banks do not have the option of foreclosing on "equity loans". The loan in default must be assessed against a future sale by the homeowner. Sorry Rockefellor, you cannot throw these families out on the street. You must be VERY disappointed.

September 5, 2008 at 9:06 pm

Nathan

At some point in time we are going to have to stop using our homes as ATM MACHINES and start living within our means. Lenders used to look out for the consumers and now have concentrated more on how to keep them breathing under water. The most confusing part is the american taxpayers will soon provide the snorkel. We still live in a gotta have it now society that doesn't mind keeping their precious home equity on a debit card for all to swipe. I surely hope we can learn from this as our struggling financial system continues a total restructuring process.

September 5, 2008 at 8:53 am

Nathan Johnson

At some point in time we need to quit using our homes as ATM MACHINES and start living within our means! Bankers used to look out for consumers but decided to lend to anyone with a pulse. This mess will take longer to clean up than just a few quarters.

September 4, 2008 at 6:21 pm

Jordan

"Actions have consequences." Looks like the major US financial institutions got greedy, not to mention consumers, and will have to suffer the consequences.

September 4, 2008 at 3:48 pm

Greedom

At the nation state level, the US survives on 'credit' to some degree, depending on how you look at US GAO.gov with say China. I expect the micro to reflect the macro here. The citizen will live on a margin of credit as the nation state does. All about integrity and accountability and reliability I suppose - HELOCs and nation state loans - if it's not being put to use to generate capital then I think credit is mis-used. I say, use credit if you have a business that needs a margin for example, but never for a slushee at the 7-11 (or a black SUV) off the home equity line. The failing HELOC's etc, I do say aren't a sign of foul play, just hard times I think. I did like the line "The numbers are staggering".

September 4, 2008 at 2:02 pm

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