The meltdown in the subprime mortgage sector continued last week, raising concerns that home buyers with impaired credit will face higher rates and far fewer options in the months ahead. Following the December bankruptcy filing of Ownit Mortgage Solutions, a major subprime lender, a steady stream of mortgage firms have either announced cutbacks in subprime production, quarterly losses, or sharply-elevated delinquency rates. Some major banks, such as Washington Mutual, have announced staff reductions in subprime and moved to tighten underwriting rules. House Poor: Pumped Up Prices, Rising Rates, and Mortgages on Steroids: How to Survive the Coming Housing Crisis

Subprime mortgage originations now account for 20 percent of all new loans, up from a tiny sliver a decade ago. Roughly 45 percent of all subprime borrowers use their loans to buy a home, according to Michael Fratantoni, an economist with the Mortgage Bankers Association, and 25 percent of those purchasers are buying their first home. Any major flight of bond investors from the subprime mortgage securities market, in other words, would have negative repercussions not only lenders and borrowers, but on realty agents and builders as well. The tightening of standards already underway is reducing the availability of “piggyback” mortgages-combined first lien and second lien loan programs that cut downpayment requirements to 5 percent or zero with no private mortgage insurance. The cutbacks in investor appetite are also reducing opportunities for home buyers with spotty credit histories to use limited-documentation and stated-income mortgage financing, sometimes called “liar loans” in the industry. Mortgage wholesalers also report sharply-reduced investor appetites for loans that “layer” risk-combining, for example, low FICO scores with high debt-to-income ratios.

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