| Subprime lenders that went out of business
with the industry's collapse targeted minority neighborhoods,
leaving them to struggle disproportionately with foreclosures
and crumbling home values, according to a new report.
These companies' high-risk loans made up 20 percent of all loans
in predominantly minority communities, compared with 4 percent
of total loans in mostly white areas, according to the report
released Thursday by an alliance of policy, research and advocacy
organizations.
''These high risk lenders were targeting their loans to particular
neighborhoods _ to communities of color,'' said Saara Nifici of
the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project in New
York, one of the organizations participating in the study. ''That's
where they focused their marketing practices.''
Part of their growth in those areas can be explained by the lack
of other available resources _ simply not having another lender
in the neighborhood, Nifici said. But researchers believe there's
more to the issue.
''It's a question of access and a question of steering,'' Nifici
said. ''If you walk into the local subprime office, there's no
incentive for them to send you to a different lender where you
can qualify for a prime loan. People are steered downward, not
upward.''
The study analyzed the geographic operating patterns of 35 high-risk
lenders that were very active in 2006 but that went bankrupt,
were closed or sold in 2007 as the industry imploded. Chief among
them were New Century Mortgage Corp., WMC Mortgage Corp., Fremont
Investment & Loan, and Argent Mortgage Co.
The survey focused on lending to minority urban markets in New
York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, Cleveland, Charlotte, N.C.,
and Rochester, N.Y. In six of these seven urban areas, high-risk
lenders' market share in minority neighborhoods was at least three
times the share in white neighborhoods.
Many subprime loans to borrowers with blemished credit or low
incomes featured low introductory or ''teaser'' rates. When the
adjustable mortgages reset to higher rates, it made the monthly
payments unaffordable for many people and put their homes at risk
of foreclosure.
Advocacy groups have said poor and minority borrowers who qualified
for traditional loans were nevertheless steered into risky adjustable
mortgages.
The concentration of subprime loans happened in low-income areas,
but also in middle-class minority communities like the predominantly
African- and Caribbean-American areas of southeast Queens in New
York, Nifici said.
In these cases, ''race and ethnicity played a bigger part'' in
lending decisions than income, she said.
This concentration means these minority communities will shoulder
most of the negative impacts of the subprime crisis _ foreclosures,
sinking property values, lower tax bases, abandoned homes and
higher crime.
The report recommended that policy makers protect borrowers and
tenants from foreclosures and pass mortgage reform legislation.
The city of Baltimore filed a federal lawsuit against Wells Fargo
Bank in January, alleging the bank intentionally sold high-interest
mortgages more to blacks than to whites in violation of federal
law and targeted black neighborhoods for high-risk and unfairly
priced loans.
Wells Fargo has said it does not consider race when making loans.
Source: Associated Press
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