Delinquency and
Default
At the end of January 2008, nearly a quarter of subprime
and Alt-A loans were reported
delinquent.
The servicers reported more than 630,000 subprime and
Alt-A loans delinquent
by 90 days or more. As shown in Figure 1 below, the
delinquency rate for 30- day and
60-day delinquencies remained relatively constant,
while the 90-day delinquency rate
increased by 16%. This conveys that servicers are
pushing the 30-day delinquent
files to
the next category, then the 60-day delinquent files
to the 90 days or over
category. Unfortunately,
this lack of loan delinquency resolution at the first
signs of problems for the
borrower is only leading to a pile-up of
seriously-delinquent files and
ultimately, foreclosure.
Figure 1. Subprime and Alt-A
Delinquency Rates
Nearly 300,000
loans are currently in some stage of foreclosure, up 8%
between October and January.
Furthermore, 133,000 foreclosures were completed in
January, a 30% increase from October 2007. In our
initial report, we expressed concern about a build-up
of foreclosed home
inventory on local home prices. We reiterate that
concern based on the trends in foreclosures and
increases in loans 90 days or more past
due.
Finally,
although not the focus of our efforts, we note with concern
the increasing level of prime delinquencies in our data, and in
other publicly available data. Weakness in prime
loan quality will
further strain the capacity of the larger servicers that
manage both prime and subprime servicing
portfolios.
B. Loss Mitigation and Loan
Modification Efforts
The most
troubling finding from our first report was the sheer
number of seriously delinquent borrowers -- 7 out of 10
borrowers – that were not in any loss mitigation process to
work out their situation. This finding has remained
consistent over the subsequent three months of
data.
Figure 2.
Comparison between seriously delinquent (60+) loans and
loss mitigation in process
* Severely delinquent loan total
adjusted downward to account for two servicers not
reporting loss mitigations in
process.
The data through
January confirms the finding from our first report that
servicers have increased their use of loan modifications
as a tool to enable homeowners to avoid foreclosure. While loan
modifications in process increased 56% between October
and January,
repayment plans in process decreased 17% over the same time
period, but overall, the percentage of “home
retention” efforts in process remained unchanged (20%
of seriously
delinquent loans) between October 2007 and January 2008.
Thus, servicers appear to be replacing short-term
repayment plans with longer-term loan
modifications.
In our first
report, we divided loss mitigation efforts into three broad
categories: 1) those where borrower loses the home (short sale
and deed in lieu); 2) those where borrower
retains the home
(forbearance, repayment plan, or modification); and
3) those where borrower efforts lead to
resolving the delinquency (refinance or
reinstatement). The trend data, as seen in Table
1 below, show no change in the relative proportions
of these efforts over this four-month
period.