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Salt Lake City, UT
/ June 19, 2007 / Press Release / -- Like a dormant volcano that
suddenly spews ash and lava the loosely regulated sub-prime mortgage
market is a sleepy giant no more. Late last week the U.S.
sub-prime lending market which has been forecasted by some as in
recovery stages proved once more that the depth and scope of damage
caused by sub-prime lending has yet to be truly realized.
Joe Astorina,
director of the securitization research at Barclays Capital said
in an interview with Saskia Scholtes of Financial Times that, "People are really trying to digest last week's news and there was
certainly plenty of it to go around, whether it was the Mortgage
Bankers' Association data or the Moody's downgrades."
MBA's data last
week showed that a record number of borrowers were set to lose their the
homes to foreclosure while delinquency rates for sub-prime home loans
roared from 11.5 per cent to 13.8 percent.
In a further drift
from main stream thinking, this past Friday, rating agency Moody's cut
the ratings of 131 bonds backed by sub-prime home loans stating reasons
such as high levels of defaults and late payments on underlying
mortgages. In addition to the downgrades Moody's has already made,
the ratings agency is currently reviewing 247 bonds including 111 of the
bonds it had just downgraded.
The negative
headlines of Moody's sub-prime mortgage-backed bonds downgrade rifled
through the markets as the ABX derivative index, which tracks sub-prime
bonds rated BBB- and issued in 2006, to a record low of 60.95 on Friday.
The index at the beginning of the year was above 97.
The impact from
market news forced hedge fund managers at Bear Stearns to hold crisis
talks with creditors yesterday to keep one of their hedge funds afloat
as hedge fund investors demanded their money back amid fears that the
fund could struggle to meet margin calls from lenders according to
reporting from Ms. Scholtes of the Financial Times.
"Without market
transparency, investors of mortgage backed securities will across the
board continue to pay the price for escalating fraud within the housing
sector," says Sheri Fitzpatrick, CEO of Perfect Home Living. "As
our organization is called upon more and more to address these issues
and provide real time solutions to the problems that real estate fraud
causes, investors have to realize that bad loans continue to make their
way into their portfolios and without addressing the issues, market
collapse concerns will continue rise."
About Perfect Home
Living
Perfect Home Living
is a nationally recognized leader that
assists in implementing programs and providing training to financial
lenders as well as educating consumers and licensed professionals
to red flags within today's real estate market. For more information or to request assistance please
email:
businessdevelopment@perfecthomeliving.com |