Page 1 of 1

Investors a big share of home defaults in 4 states

Posted: Sat Sep 01, 2007 4:16 am
by *jr
Fri Aug 31, 2007 4:03pm ET135

By Patrick Rucker

WASHINGTON, Aug 31 (Reuters) - Real estate speculators account for a large share of failed loans in four states hard hit by foreclosures, according to a leading mortgage-lending trade association.

While non-owner occupied homes account for 13 percent of defaults among prime-rate mortgages across the country, the rate is much higher in Nevada, Florida, Arizona and California, according to a report by the Mortgage Bankers Associations released on Thursday.

Through the end of June, defaults among non-owner occupied homes with good credit terms were 32 percent in Nevada, 26 percent in Arizona, 25 percent in Florida and 21 percent in California, the group said. "Defaults are on the rise in most parts of the country, but it is not always the case of a homeowner losing his or her home," Doug Duncan, the chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association, said in a statement. "It is often the case of an investor gambling on a continued increase in home values and losing that gamble."

Investors and builders flooded markets like Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada, pushing up the inventory and prices of homes. As the housing market has cooled in recent months, many of the investors who bought homes in those markets are now stuck with properties with ballooning payments and no ready buyers, Duncan said.

Read more: http://today.reuters.com/news/articlein ... spx?typ...


See folks, this is the real reason for the current crisis in the Markets; it is all about the Mortgage market, but it's so much easier for our so-called el president and the and the wolves on Wall Street to blame the "people who bought house that they couldn't afford" instead of their own policies of de-regulation of lending practices, as well the huge interest rates that they knew that those they were lending of low income borrowers couldn't afford such high mortgage. Now we are seeing the effect of lending mismanagements in the markets.