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CONSUMER GROUPS: FIX BANKRUPTCY LAWS SO HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS
OF AMERICANS CAN AVOID HOME FORECLOSURES IN SUBPRIME MORTGAGE CRISIS
81 Percent of Bankruptcy Attorneys Say It’s Now Tougher for
Clients to Keep Homes Under 2005 Bankruptcy Law Changes; Adding Insult to
Injury: Rich Americans Get Break to Save
2nd and 3rd Homes.
WASHINGTON, D.C.//April
12, 2007//Bankruptcy
law changes are needed if hundreds of thousands of American families struggling
with abusive subprime mortgages are going to escape foreclosure and the loss of
up to $164 billion in home-based wealth, according to a joint call for
Congressional action issued today by the National Association of Consumer
Bankruptcy Attorneys (NACBA), the Consumer Federation of America (CFA) and the
Center for Responsible Lending (CRL). NACBA
also released the findings of a national survey of nearly 650 bankruptcy
attorneys showing a sharp rise in subprime mortgage-related problems concurrent
with controversial 2005 changes to federal bankruptcy laws.
The
three consumer groups warned that -- while primarily low-income subprime
mortgage borrowers face often insurmountable bankruptcy hurdles to hold onto their
homes -- high-income individuals in bankruptcy court get preferential treatment
when they seek to save second and third homes.
As
the joint statement notes: “The only
chance many of these (subprime) borrowers have is through declaring
bankruptcy. The problem is that as
currently enacted, the Bankruptcy Code favors home mortgage lenders over
virtually all other secured and unsecured creditors. The amendment disfavoring
protection of the debtor’s principal residence was added at a time – 1978 –
when home mortgages were nearly all fixed-interest rate instruments with low
loan-to-value ratios and were rarely themselves the source of a family’s
financial distress. As a result,
bankruptcy law singled out the home mortgage loan as the major debt for which
the bankruptcy court is powerless to provide relief. Since that time, the mortgage market has
shifted considerably. Subprime lending
practices of the last six years, which have relied on property appreciation,
and in many cases appraisal fraud, have left many borrowers with mortgages
larger than the value of their homes. If
the borrowers cannot restructure these debts, then they cannot get back on
their feet financially.”
Commenting
on the findings, Philadelphia
bankruptcy attorney and NACBA President Henry Sommer said: “Help is urgently
needed for hundreds of thousands of American families at risk of losing their
homes due to abusive home loans. For
most of these families, bankruptcy is the only viable option to save their
home, and this option will be available only if the Bankruptcy Code is revised
to eliminate or limit the provisions that exclude home loans from bankruptcy
protection. This current exclusion is
contrary to sound policy, and operates to disadvantage low wealth and middle
income borrowers as compared to debtors with the wealth to own more than one
home.”
Allen
Fishbein, director of housing and credit policy of the Consumer Federation of
America, said: “Two million or more
homeowners face foreclosure over the next few years, with many of these
resulting from negligent and reckless lending practices by mortgage
originators. A sizable number of
borrowers find themselves in this situation because their mortgages are larger
than the current value of their homes.
Modifying the bankruptcy laws to permit the write down of certain toxic
mortgages would provide a critical life-line for these at-risk families to hang
on to their homes. We urge the Congress
to act.”
Eric
Stein, chief operating officer of Self-Help and senior vice president of the Center
for Responsible Lending, said: "The purpose of bankruptcy is to give
troubled families a chance for a fresh start. Today we have an epidemic
of homeowners who are in serious financial trouble, and whose houses are worth
less than the balance due on their loans because of the irresponsible
lending practices of subprime lenders. To make matters
worse, bankruptcy laws will actually prevent these families from
recovering. Subprime loans have pushed millions of households under
water; unless Congress makes some common-sense changes, our current laws
will ensure that they drown."
OVERVIEW OF CALL TO
ACTION
As
2006 drew to a close, 2.2 million households in the subprime market had either
lost their homes to foreclosure or held subprime mortgages that likely will
fail over the next several years absent intervention. These foreclosures will cost these families
their homes, along with up to $164 billion in lost wealth. For increasing numbers of borrowers,
foreclosure is the only option available.
Lehman Brothers has estimated that 30 percent of subprime loans
originated in 2006 will end in foreclosure. The joint statement recommends a wide range
of specific bankruptcy law changes, including the following:
· End the Bankruptcy Code’s special treatment of home mortgage
loans. As the joint statement notes: “In order to address problems resulting from
the Code’s disempowerment of bankruptcy judges to modify home mortgage debt,
Congress should eliminate the exception, putting home mortgage loans in parity
with other secured debt.” This step also
will put middle class homeowners in parity with wealthy debtors, who currently are
able to save second and third homes in bankruptcy because they fall outside the
currently restrictive mortgage provisions that apply only to primary residences.
· Remove time-consuming credit counseling requirements. “As a result of the 2005 amendments to the
Bankruptcy Code, there are now several hurdles a debtor must clear in order to
file for chapter 13 bankruptcy, as Credit Suisse notes in its analysis of the
impact of the 2005 amendments on subprime borrowers and the subprime
market. For example, as a result of the
2005 amendments, an individual cannot even meet the definition of a ‘debtor’
(and so cannot file for bankruptcy) without first receiving credit counseling
from an approved credit-counseling agency.
Requirements like these cost precious time, which a borrower facing
foreclosure cannot afford to lose, and were clearly not designed for dealing
with an immediate crisis regarding the borrower’s home … The remedy to the
counseling requirement is simply to eliminate it for debtors facing
foreclosure.”
· Curb excessive fees during bankruptcy. “Another necessary change is a provision to
control the enormous problem of mortgage companies adding unauthorized or
excessive fees to the accounts of debtors who are in chapter 13. Many of these debtors emerge from a chapter
13 case after three to five years of struggling to cure an arrearage only to
have the lender assert that they are several months behind on their payments
due to fees for such items as attorney’s fees, broker price opinions, and other
charges allegedly incurred during the chapter 13 case, and which they were
never informed of before. Many
bankruptcy courts have decried these abuses, but usually they go unremedied
because the bankruptcy case is over and the debtor has no money to litigate
about them. Sometimes, the fees are not
even revealed to the debtor until the debtor pays off the mortgage balance upon
selling the home or refinancing. A
provision to remedy the problem of excessive fees could provide that all fees
and charges based upon occurrences during the pendency of a chapter 13 case
must be approved by the court …”
· End mandatory arbitration in bankruptcy. “Mandatory arbitration clauses are found in
many consumer contracts, including home mortgages. These clauses force consumers to submit their
claims to an arbitrator who issues a final, binding ruling on the merits, with
virtually no opportunity for judicial review. The enforcement of these
arbitration agreements under the Federal Arbitration Act is often in direct
conflict with the goal of bankruptcy jurisdiction to have one centralized forum
for the prompt resolution of disputes affecting the bankruptcy estate.”
· Create a minimum homestead exemption for the elderly. “A significant number of debtors facing
foreclosure are elderly and have nonexempt equity in their properties because
of low homestead exemptions in some states, either due to recent appreciation
or the fact that their predatory mortgages were for less than the value of
their properties. These debtors cannot
save their homes by refinancing because they cannot afford the monthly payments
that would be required, and cannot file chapter 13 cases to save their homes
because current law would require paying the value of their nonexempt equity to
unsecured creditors. They cannot even get chapter 7 relief because chapter 7
would cause them to lose their homes.
The solution to this problem is a homestead floor for the elderly.”
· Amend chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. “One problem facing debtors who are trapped
in high cost loans is the inability to refinance out of those loans. So, for example, a debtor who owes 125
percent loan to value (LTV) on a home must come up with a lender who will
finance a 125 percent LTV mortgage -- leaving the debtor in much the same
difficulty. The inability to strip down
a high loan to value mortgage gives the first lender a stranglehold over the
debtor, as payments and fees rise and the debtor’s only option is to give up
the home.” Holders of personal property
can “redeem” their property by paying the creditor the current value of the
property; owners or homes should get the same right.
For
the full list of needed steps by Congress, review the complete joint statement
at http://www.nacba.org on the Web.
BANKRUPTCY ATTORNEY
SURVEY FINDINGS
Conducted
from April 2-9, 2007, the NACBA survey of its Association members was responded
to by 640 attorneys (26 percent of total membership). The key survey findings are as follows:
· 83
percent of bankruptcy attorneys with clients experiencing mortgage problems say
that subprime mortgages are a “much bigger problem” (53 percent) or “somewhat
bigger problem” (29.8 percent) today than five years ago. Only 6.6
percent say that they have seen no change or a decline in such cases.
· Over
four out of five bankruptcy attorneys (81 percent) say it is “somewhat more
difficult” (52.6 percent) or “much more difficult” (27.5 percent) “for people
facing foreclosure to file to save their homes than before bankruptcy law
changes were enacted in 2005”.
· Four
out of five bankruptcy attorneys say that “exotic mortgages” – such as
nothing-down loans and ARM loans with short-term “teaser” rates are “a big
problem” (47 percent) or “somewhat of a big problem” (32.5 percent) for their
clients.
· Over
half of bankruptcy attorneys (51 percent) say that 50 percent or more of their
clients with homes “have come to you at least partially because of
mortgage-related problems.” More than a fifth of bankruptcy attorneys
(20.6 percent) said that over 75 percent of their clients with homes had
mortgage-related problems.
· Among
those who report having clients with mortgage-related problems, nearly three
out of five bankruptcy attorneys (58 percent) said that half or more of the
clients had subprime mortgages, including 50-75 percent with subprime mortgages
(35.5 percent) and over 75 percent with subprime mortgages (21.8 percent).
· More
than a third of bankruptcy attorneys (34 percent) say that 50-75 percent of
their clients (20.4 percent) or over 75 percent (13.8 percent) “could have
avoided foreclosure problems if they had sought bankruptcy relief earlier.”
For
complete NACBA survey findings, go to http://www.nacba.org
on the Web.
ABOUT THE GROUPS
The
National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys (http://www.nacba.org) is
the only national organization dedicated to serving the needs of consumer
bankruptcy attorneys and protecting the rights of consumer debtors in bankruptcy.
Formed in 1992, NACBA now has more than 2500 members located in all 50
states and Puerto Rico.
The
Consumer Federation of America (http://www.consumerfed.org) is a non-profit
association of 300 organizations that, since 1968, has sought to advance the
consumer interest through research, advocacy and education.
The
Center for Responsible Lending (http://www.responsiblelending.org) is a
national nonprofit, nonpartisan research and policy organization dedicated to
protecting home ownership and family wealth by working to eliminate abusive
financial practices. CRL is affiliated with Self-Help, one of the nation’s
largest community development financial institutions.
CONTACT: Ailis Aaron Wolf, (703) 276-3265, or
aaaron@hastingsgroup.com.
EDITOR’S NOTE: A streaming audio replay of a related news
event will be available as of 6 p.m. EDT on April 12, 2007 at
http://www.nacba.org.
NACBA Press Release - Subprime Mortgage Crisis |
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