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Salt Lake City, UT
/ November 30, 2006 / Press Release / --
It would seem
nationally that the housing market has cooled as new and pre-existing
housing inventories increase, adjustable rate mortgages take
flight and consumers struggle to keep pace with an economy that demands
financially more when truly there is less. But in a world built
with risk seekers and fortune makers Wall Street may have found one more
untapped resource within the housing market via Subprime loans.
In the past six
months Merrill Lynch & Company have purchased National City
Corporation's First Franklin lending unit for $1.3 billion; Bear Stearns
is purchasing ECC Capital Corporation's mortgage lending unit for $26
million in cash and Saxon Capital has agreed to be bought by Morgan
Stanley for $706 million. With consolidation by the Street
seeming such a sure thing even H&R Block is considering to sell its
subprime lending unit Option One which last year purportedly made $40
billion in loans.
But is this latest
fade of consolidating new to Wall Street and how healthy can it really
be in today's economy?
Considering who you
speak with, Wall Street's love affair with the
subprime market isn't new at all. Remember that Wall Street has long since invested
in mortgage backed securities also known as collateralized-debt
obligations (CDO). CDOs are a type of derivative, that sidestep
limits on investing in low-grade debt, which opens the CDO market to
insurance companies, pension funds and because of their potential for
double-digit gains they are also a favorite among hedge funds.
However, the
same risk that pushes the market to crave more of these CDOs now faces
significant loss from the subprime market due to increased white collar fraud
activity within
the real estate industry. As Barron's reported over the next two
years homeowners can expect an increase in monthly payments on over $600
billion of subprime lending.
In Utah, a state that
ranks second in the nation for mortgage fraud and has an overvalued
housing market of 22% as reported by Matt Heimer of the Wall Street
Journal's SmartMoney, such statistics could prove disastrous for the CDO
Market.
"Traditional lenders
rely upon information received by the loan originator and the mortgage
broker to ensure that a borrower can repay the loan, but with new forms
of no-doc and stated income hybrid loans, lenders are being taken for
quite the ride," says Sheri Fitzpatrick,
Utah Real Estate
Broker and CEO of Perfect Home Living INC., a Non-Profit Organization
based in Salt Lake City, UT, committed to the education of consumers,
financial institutions and law enforcement agencies on loopholes used
during predatory lending practices and other symptoms of real
estate fraud by white collar criminals.
"White collar
criminals have become smarter in their fraud for profit schemes and know
how to beat proprietary software and prevention tools that lenders
currently use. It's not until you have organizations like the
International Association of Mortgage Brokers, where information sharing
is on a global scale within an industry that the loopholes of affording
illegal activity are closed for good," Fitzpatrick
added.
Still Wall Street is
unbothered by the risk threat that fraud plays within the lender CDO
market.
"We're starting to
see bigger deals now with Option One coming up for sale," says Mr.
Howlett of Fox-Pitt, Kelton. "We think we will begin to see over
the next 12 months even larger deals."
Recently Perfect Home
Living examined the life of loan to CDO stardom and netted the following
results - , Perfect Home Living was able to determine that a loan
brokered to BNC Mortgage INC., on April 22, 2005 was sold by BNC
Mortgage Inc., within the first 30 days according to records to Option
One. Option One as well according to records sold this particular
loan within 30 to 90 days of receiving it to Wells Fargo.
For each of the three
lender's involved, it was determined that a simple review of
the original paperwork submitted by the borrower would have immediately revealed to each
of the lender's involved that this was a fraud for profit scheme.
The borrower in this case had limited income that would not have qualified
the borrower for the
home loan of $650,000.00.
Nonetheless it's this type of fraud that
on a much broader basis gets lumped into bank asset backed securities and CDOs
that are funneled through various business units.
Units that are completely unaware of the hidden dangers that lie within
their portfolios.
But that's not to say
that the Street isn't taking notice. Lehman Brothers Holdings INC.,
has grabbed eight mortgage firms in the U.S. and Europe in the past
three years. But in past months Lehman has passed on such
opportunities, leaving others on the Street to decide if the profit
truly is worth the risk.
About Perfect Home
Living
Perfect Home Living
assists in implementing programs and providing training to financial
lenders as well as educating Utah's consumers and licensed professionals
to red flags within Utah's real estate market. For more information or to request assistance please visit us online at:
http://www.PerfectHomeLiving.com |