| Study Shows Wall Street Pipeline Encouraged Risky, Abusive Loans |
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Study of DC area loans reveals racial component to lending and foreclosure unexplained by objective underwriting criteria. Washington, DC – As financial reform works its way through the Senate, a new study by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC) indicates that subprime lending and subsequent resulting foreclosures were led by the private market and contained a clear racial component not explained by objective underwriting criteria. African American and Latino borrowers were more likely to receive a subprime loan, and to go into foreclosure, than similarly situated white homeowners, controlling for credit risk and other borrower, neighborhood and loan characteristics. The Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) appeared to have a moderating effect on risky and abusive lending practices; privately securitized loans went into foreclosure twice as often as loans backed by the GSEs. New Study Shows Wall Street Pipeline Encouraged Risky, Abusive Loans
Washington, DC – As financial reform works its way through the Senate, a new study by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC) indicates that subprime lending and subsequent resulting foreclosures were led by the private market and contained a clear racial component not explained by objective underwriting criteria. African American and Latino borrowers were more likely to receive a subprime loan, and to go into foreclosure, than similarly situated white homeowners, controlling for credit risk and other borrower, neighborhood and loan characteristics. The Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) appeared to have a moderating effect on risky and abusive lending practices; privately securitized loans went into foreclosure twice as often as loans backed by the GSEs.
• The econometric analysis of the study confirms that individual African-American and Latino borrowers obtained subprime loans more often than white borrowers with similar credit scores, incomes, loan-to-value ratios, and neighborhood characteristics. The study confirms that disparities in lending have a clear racial component that has not been adequately addressed through enforcement of the nation’s fair lending laws. • Even controlling for other factors, Latinos were 70 percent more likely and African Americans 80 percent more likely than their white counterparts to receive a subprime loan. This finding suggests that race, in and of itself, alters the likelihood of receiving a subprime loan. • Minority borrowers are facing foreclosure more often than white borrowers, even after controlling for borrower, loan, and neighborhood characteristics. The study finds that minorities are disproportionately affected by the foreclosure crisis, beyond levels that can be explained by objective criteria. • African Americans were almost 20 percent more likely and Latinos were 90 percent more likely than their similarly situated white counterparts to go into foreclosure. This suggests that race, in and of itself, alters the likelihood a borrower will go into foreclosure. • Loans purchased by the Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) are going into foreclosure at roughly half the rate of both portfolio loans and privately securitized loans. This suggests that the standards imposed by the GSEs have encouraged the origination of safe and sustainable loans. • Loan characteristics, especially payment-to-income ratios, adjustable rates, high-costs (subprime) and balloon payments were found to have a significant effect on loan performance. The study breaks down the influence of each of these factors in a regression model. The National Community Reinvestment Coalition is an association of more than 600 community-based organizations that promote access to basic banking services, including credit and savings, to create and sustain affordable housing, job development and vibrant communities for America's working families. Click here to download a PDF of the Press Release Click here to download a PDF of the Executive Summary
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Click here to download a PDF of the Full Study