The Mortgage Bankers Association recently fought off federal legislation that
would have allowed bankruptcy judges to modify residential mortgages. The MBA's
victory was a huge success for lenders, but an unfortunate loss for homeowners
who have declared bankruptcy.
Lenders disliked the proposal, since it would have shifted
some of the power over mortgages from lenders' loss-mitigation departments to
bankruptcy judges, who might have imposed modifications that the lenders
wouldn't have liked.
The risk was deemed so serious that the MBA pulled out all the stops to pound
the idea into dust. Lawmakers were lobbied, members were mobilized, press
releases were issued, and the MBA's Web site featured a "Stop The Bankruptcy
Cram Down Resource Center".
Consider "cram down," a bit of MBA-speak that refers to a judicial cut in the
interest rate on a borrower's existing loan. The term may be new to some, but in
fact dates back to the last real estate downturn. The phrase naturally evokes
emotionally charged images of gagging, choking and force-feeding, none of which
is relevant to a serious discussion of bankruptcy relief.
Consider also the MBA's claims that mortgage interest rates would rise by as
much as 2 percentage points and that lenders would be forced to require bigger
down payments and charge higher closing costs if bankruptcy judges had a say. No
factual evidence was offered to support these arguments.
In fact, a causal connection between the so-called "cram down" and
significantly higher interest rates is a stretch at best, according to an
academic paper by Adam J. Levitin, a law professor at Georgetown University. The
paper stated that even unlimited loan modifications in bankruptcy courts would
have only an insignificant, if any, impact on mortgage interest rates or
mortgage markets.
Of course, the MBA also had a promised presidential veto in its pocket and
the support of Alphonso Jackson, the now-former secretary of the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development. In a speech, Jackson called the proposal "an
odd, time-consuming, distant way to help homeowners," and said, seeming with no
evidence other than the MBA's say-so, that it would increase interest rates and
-- horror of horrors -- benefit lawyers and law firms.
The MBA has supported other measures such as pre-foreclosure counseling, the
use of mortgage revenue bonds to refinance subprime loans, and the strictly
voluntary Hope Now loan workout program. These measures may be worthwhile, but
the cost to lenders is minimal and so far, the results have been modest.
Not surprisingly, consumer groups support an expansion of bankruptcy judges'
jurisdiction to encompass residential mortgages. AARP, the AFL-CIO, ACORN and
the Center for Responsible Lending are among the groups in favor of this
proposal. These groups believe the federal government should put more pressure
on lenders to help homeowners who are in danger of foreclosure, and a
Congressional Budget Office report said lenders might have more incentive to
modify loans if bankruptcy judges had the power to impose such concessions.
The MBA deserves plenty of credit and kudos for the success of its "Stop the
Cram Down" effort. The group did exactly what such groups are supposed to do,
which is to protect the interests of their own members -- no matter how narrow
or parochial those interests may be.
But at the end of the day, the win on this one should have gone to the
homeowners.
Bankruptcy isn't pretty, and recent changes to the U.S. bankruptcy code have
already made the process more onerous. Yet bankruptcy serves a legitimate and
important public policy purpose, which is to give people in dire straits a fair
and reasonable way out of their extremities. Bankruptcy shouldn't be just
another form of Dickensian debtors' prison. It should offer real relief and an
opportunity for folks who've experienced hard times to get a fresh start.
As the law stands today, home-loan lenders are a favored class of creditor in
the bankruptcy system. In fact, residential owner-occupant mortgages are perhaps
the only type of debt that bankruptcy judges aren't allowed to modify. Judges
can alter loans backed by cars, boats, farms, manufacturing plants, mobile
homes, vacation homes and investment properties.
Of course, there should be limits to bankruptcy judges' power, and the
proposed legislation contained plenty of them, perhaps even too many. Relief
would have been offered only to homeowners who faced imminent foreclosure, who
had a subprime or nontraditional loan such as an interest-only or payment-option
adjustable-rate mortgage, and whose income wasn't sufficient for them to afford
their mortgage payments. Bankruptcy judges would be required to set commercially
reasonable interest rates on modified mortgages and wouldn't have been allowed
to reduce loan balances to less than the home's market value.
Homeowners who've been forced into bankruptcy deserve a chance to keep their
homes if they can afford to make reasonable mortgage payments, and bankruptcy
judges are in a good position to make that call.
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« March 17
Thursday, June 5
by
Vincent Bindi
on June 5, 2008 08:34AM (PDT)
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