Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Housing Push for Hispanics Spawns Wave of Foreclosures
WSJ ^ | 010409 | SUSAN SCHMIDT and MAURICE TAMMAN

Posted on 01/04/2009 6:56:46 PM PST by Fred

click here to read article


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120121-129 next last
To: Liz; M. Espinola
I posted information about this practice in 2004 and 2005. Mortgage shills jeered and blasted me with insults. In 2006, I took a month and traveled all over California. Reported faithfully what was observed. Also pointed out the Russians were running very sophisticated property scams. And said the Russkies had infiltrated the construction industry.

The criminals and shills again threw nasty insults my way. Over 2,000 hacking attacks were launched from corporate web sites. I tried and tried to warn everybody. Nobody listened. Even the FBI were ordered to 'back off.' Orders came direct from the top in D.C. The criminals are in charge now. They are flush with $ Trillions in bailout money.

I know what is coming next. Check my freeper page for an audio file near the top about martial law and yada yada.

101 posted on 03/06/2009 5:18:56 PM PST by ex-Texan (Ecclesiastes 5:10 - 20)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 98 | View Replies]

To: ex-Texan; AuntB; TADSLOS
I tried and tried to warn everybody about mortgage scams and that the Russians were running very sophisticated property scams and had infiltrated the construction industry. Nobody listened. Even the FBI were ordered to 'back off.' Orders came direct from the top in D.C.

Remember that Bush sent Rove to La Raza to tell them US laws would NOT be enforced so that Third Worlders could come here for a "better life."

Bush/Rove also propagated the sap-happy notion that once Third World criminals, rapists, robbers, auto wreckers, and child molesters experienced "freedom," they would become so enamored with democracy, they would drop their criminal ways and embrace America, and all it stands for.

(waiting for hysterical laughter to die down)

102 posted on 03/06/2009 5:36:27 PM PST by Liz (I was like Snow White, then I drifted. Mae West (on liberalism).)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 101 | View Replies]

To: ex-Texan
Oh yes, I do remember the fuss and abuse you ( and I ) took from the "Kumbaya Free Trade - All is Well Crowd". You were called a 'pimpblog/blogpimp'? and I was called a racist....

True enough, we get the last laugh, but Lordy ... what a cost.

103 posted on 03/06/2009 5:54:10 PM PST by investigateworld ( Abortion stops a beating heart)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 101 | View Replies]

To: Liz; ex-Texan
More here:

HNMA Marketing Strategy

Rick Davis and the Homeownership Alliance:

Homeownership Gap Widens For Blacks

104 posted on 03/06/2009 6:27:19 PM PST by TADSLOS ( Join the Conservative Revolution! http://falconparty.com/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 102 | View Replies]

To: ex-Texan
I vividly remember the low life shills lurking on here (most have vanished) who were constantly screaming that everything you were documenting was 'foolishness, nonsense and lies', concerning the big banking's sub-prime scams, the inflated housing bubble about to burst and the accompanying Wall Street meltdown in stages, and even when the visible financial cracks began to display, the vicious attacks continued since the truth was being told.

This element's worst enemy is the truth.

105 posted on 03/06/2009 8:12:54 PM PST by M. Espinola (Freedom is not 'free'.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 101 | View Replies]

To: Liz

I’ll have to remember that one.


106 posted on 03/06/2009 9:59:18 PM PST by philman_36 (Pride breakfasted with plenty, dined with poverty, and supped with infamy. Benjamin Franklin)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 100 | View Replies]

To: philman_36; Grampa Dave; jla; TADSLOS; AuntB; raybbr
Here's a goodie.

When someone derides you----says you are paranoid, bitter, judgemental or xenophobic about toxic mortgages (and other illegal criminality). Just say:

"Mmmmmmm.....you oughta write a manual on how sucking up to illegals improved your sex life. "

"Oh, and be sure to set aside an autographed copy for Obama."

NOTE: Can insert another suckup's name for Obama.

107 posted on 03/07/2009 5:46:22 AM PST by Liz (I was like Snow White, then I drifted. Mae West (on liberalism).)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 106 | View Replies]

To: Liz

>snicker<


108 posted on 03/07/2009 6:28:41 AM PST by philman_36 (Pride breakfasted with plenty, dined with poverty, and supped with infamy. Benjamin Franklin)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 107 | View Replies]

To: Liz
"Aren't those illegals 'sposed to be mowin' the lawn and not sleeping?"

"Silly Alfalfa! They own the $500,000 house!"

109 posted on 03/07/2009 6:41:43 AM PST by jla
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 107 | View Replies]

To: Fred

Save Energy and Electrons.

Just say Illegals. That drives them, their supporters and the mediots even more in sane.

They are not immigrants. They are illegals!


110 posted on 03/07/2009 7:26:44 AM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: holyscroller

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2007/04/13/carollloyd.DTL

Minorities are the emerging face of the subprime crisis
By Carol Lloyd, Special to SF Gate

Friday, April 13, 2007

When Alberto and Rosa Ramirez began looking for a home, they never imagined that 18 months later they would personify a national real estate crisis. It’s not that they bought a house with walls crawling with toxic mold or inherited an insane neighbor next door or, even, God forbid, that they didn’t buy at all. They bought, and they love, their slice of the American Dream.

“It’s all very nice and beautiful,” Rosa tells me through a translator. “The neighborhood is very peaceful. The problem is not with the house at all. It’s the price of the house.”

Indeed, in a different era (when housing prices were lower), their story might have been one of those bootstrap tales about homeownership transforming immigrant lives. The husband and wife work as strawberry pickers in the fields around Watsonville, and each earns about $300 a week. They have three children. Not only did they dream the impossible dream, they managed to finance it.

It all began when they were talking to another family about escaping their subsidized apartments and getting a real house. The other couple — Jesus Martinez and his wife, who also have three children — work as mushroom farmers, earning about $500 a week each when there is work. The two couples decided to pool their resources and begin house-hunting. Given their total income, they estimated that they could afford payments of $3,000 a month. They spotted an ad in the local magazine La Ganga for Maria Avila of Rancho Grande Real Estate and called her.

“We wanted to live in Watsonville,” says Rosa. “But [the real estate agent] said the houses there were older and more expensive.” One of the first homes they were shown was a “new” four-bedroom, two-bath house in Hollister for $720,000. When the Ramirez’s heard the price, they worried that they couldn’t afford it.

But the couple says they were assured them it was possible. “The monthly payment was supposed to be $4,800, but then after we bought it, it went up to $5,378,” says Rosa, speaking of their zero-down mortgage with a one-month “teaser rate.” “Our agent told us that once we refinanced, we could get the payments down to $3,000 or less.” For a number of months Avila, who arranged for the loan with New Century Mortgage, paid the difference between what the buyers had said they could afford — $3,000 — and the actual loan payment. According to the buyers, this arrangement was supposed to carry them over until the group refinanced.

The money-saving refinance failed to materialize, and eventually, Avila stopped subsidizing their current mortgage. (According to my analysis of interest rates during the period, hitting the $3,000 number would have been virtually impossible under any circumstances. An interest-only $720,000 loan at a 5 percent interest rate [15-year fixed] yields a $3,000 mortgage, but such mortgage rates weren’t available to anyone, much less a laborer with low income, no down payment and no other assets. Plus, that doesn’t count another $750 a month in taxes and insurance.) The two families continued to make the payments, sometimes sacrificing basic necessities, other times borrowing more. “It was very difficult,” Rosa says. “Sometimes we would eat less, and we took out personal loans from Bank of America.”

(Maria Avila and Rancho Grande Real Estate declined to comment. Earlier this month, New Century Mortgage, the nation’s second largest subprime mortgage lender, filed for bankruptcy. It’s also facing a federal criminal probe.)

Last November, the families stopped paying their mortgage and sought the advice of Pamela Simmons, an attorney who specializes in predatory-lending cases. Upon reviewing the loan documents, they discovered more bad news. Despite the intention that both couples would be buying the home together (they’d submitted income information for three of the four buyers), the loan was made exclusively in Alberto Ramirez’s name. This meant that he was solely responsible for the debt. The couple also discovered that the home wasn’t nearly as valuable as they thought: When a new real estate agent valued the house, he told them he’d list it between $560,000 and $580,000. They have sent a letter of demand to Rancho Grande, claiming the brokers breached their fiduciary duties by selling Alberto Ramirez a home he couldn’t afford. Rancho Grande declined comment.

How did a strawberry picker earning $15,000 a year qualify for a loan of $720,000? The answer, say the experts, lies in a lending industry that got too innovative for its own good.

Last week, a coalition of civil rights groups, including the National Council of La Raza, the Center for Responsible Lending and the NAACP, called for a national six-month moratorium on foreclosures — after observing that the subprime crisis disproportionately affected minorities. “The point is to just take time out and provide services to families who might be vulnerable as a result of payment shock,” says Janice Bowdler, senior policy analyst for housing for the National Council of La Raza, referring to the hybrid loans that begin with low fixed rates, then jump to adjustable-rate mortgages. Bowdler adds that they are hoping many homeowners can avoid foreclosure by taking advantage of such financial tools as changing their current loan terms or refinancing.

According to NCLR, “[f]orty percent of Latino families and over half of African Americans who receive home loans get higher-cost mortgages, predominately subprime loans.” In a study released last month, an analysis of 2005 federal mortgage lending data of large subprime originators in six metropolitan areas, African American borrowers were 3.8 times and Latino borrowers were 3.6 times more likely to receive a higher-cost home purchase loan than white borrowers. One argument is that these groups naturally get subprime loans because they have bad credit or are buying in riskier neighborhoods. But according Fannie Mae, there is an enormous lending disparity across the nation: One study found that 50 percent of all borrowers qualified for a cheaper loan than the one they eventually got. They even discovered that female buyers tend to get higher-cost loans than male counterparts.

But for Rosa and Alberto Ramirez and many others like them, a foreclosure moratorium won’t help. It’s not that a better loan would have remedied their situation — it’s that they can’t afford the home they bought. “Many of my clients can’t afford their homes in any circumstance,” says Simmons. “I have a dishwasher who bought a house and never even moved in. The moment he saw the first payment, he knew he couldn’t afford it.”

Indeed, the Ramirez family exemplifies a type of new buyer that didn’t exist a decade ago. Neither Rosa nor Alberto speaks English, so they were completely dependent on their real estate agent and their mortgage broker for advice and to translate and educate them about the process. “In other business transactions in California, if you negotiate in Spanish, you are required to provide translations of all documents. But real estate contracts are exempt from this,” explains Simmons, who currently has 30 active cases and sees her potential caseload growing by the day. “There’s a large increase in the amount of borrowers reaching out to lawyers with subprime loans. I’ve gotten to the point that I have to say to a lot of people, ‘I can’t represent you, I have too many clients.’ It’s astounding to me. I neither expected nor have I seen anything like this in all the years I’ve practiced law. It’s as if in real estate it’s gone back to the Wild, Wild West of San Francisco in the 1800s.”

Simmons says that she’s seeing more non-English-speaking clients — mostly Latinos but also one Filipino — who had little understanding of what they had gotten themselves into. “I meet with a lot of clients who have negative-amortization loans who are stunned to find out that their payments are not even covering their full interest,” she says, mentioning a couple she met that morning whose adjustable negative-amortization payments had risen beyond their ability to pay. “The wife is crying — it was awful. I had the very sad task of explaining to them that they cannot afford their home. Forget about actually paying off their home in 30 years — they can’t afford the interest-only payments.”

Maeve Brown, co-founder of Oakland-based Housing and Economic Rights Advocates, says most of her clients fall into one of two categories. There are the non-English-speaking, first-time home buyers who “buy homes that they can’t afford, with mortgage brokers raking in the fees and an added twist that the homes are often substandard and they are appraised above their actual value.” The other kind of cases involves seniors — often African American — who are persuaded to refinance their homes with more expensive adjustable-rate loans that carry steep prepayment penalties.

“Buying a housing is a complex process,” says Brown. “I think we’ve been sold a bill of goods about the American dream: that it’s fast, it’s fun, it’s easy. Well, it’s not easy — it’s really complex. The ideal would be that every buyer retain their own counsel to protect them from their realtor and their broker, because though there are great agents and brokers out there and they have a fiduciary duty to represent your best interests, in the end, it’s a contract and you’re on the hook for it.”

Regarding subprime lenders going bankrupt, she has “no sympathy whatsoever. They created this monster.”


111 posted on 03/07/2009 7:33:14 AM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: Fred; Liz; philman_36; Travis McGee; Ernest_at_the_Beach; tubebender; SierraWasp

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2200626/posts

USA Today Reports That Most Foreclosures Are In 35 Counties
USA Today ^ | March 6, 2009 | aas

http://search.yahoo.com/search?ei=utf-8&fr=slv8-hptb5&p=Most%20foreclosures%20are%20in%2035%20counties&type=


112 posted on 03/07/2009 7:39:16 AM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Grampa Dave
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2200626/posts

I was there.
113 posted on 03/07/2009 7:47:19 AM PST by philman_36 (Pride breakfasted with plenty, dined with poverty, and supped with infamy. Benjamin Franklin)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 112 | View Replies]

To: Liz

“It deals with illegal aliens using stolen Social Security numbers and false immigration documents to apply for a home loan.”

In the past two years my wife and I have known or met several young Mexican America women, who have had their SS #’s stolen. Often when/how they find out about it is when they file their taxes and try to get their legal tax refund. They are told by IRS that they had filed earlier and the refund checks had been sent out.

At first my wife didn’t understand why these young Mexican America women were the targets of identity theft besides the small tax refunds. Everytime, she brought up that question, I gave her the Duh award for the day.


114 posted on 03/07/2009 7:47:48 AM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: philman_36

I know. I was just keeping you in this growing expanding loop.


115 posted on 03/07/2009 7:48:42 AM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 113 | View Replies]

To: Grampa Dave
I know. I was just keeping you in this growing expanding loop.
Many thanks.
116 posted on 03/07/2009 7:51:33 AM PST by philman_36 (Pride breakfasted with plenty, dined with poverty, and supped with infamy. Benjamin Franklin)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 115 | View Replies]

To: ex-Texan; Liz

During that time most evenings and on Saturday and Sunday afternoon, many malls in California had tables set up sign up illegals for fraud based mortgages. Apparently many of these tables were staffed with illegals to help with the translation and to spread the word about owning a home for free.

Recently, we found out that the Flea Markets whose main customers were illegals had booths to sign up illegals for fraud based mortgages.


117 posted on 03/07/2009 7:54:31 AM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 101 | View Replies]

To: Grampa Dave

Thanks,...that is real interesting!


118 posted on 03/07/2009 9:04:49 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (What happened to my IRAs)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 112 | View Replies]

To: Grampa Dave
According to that article....

Eight counties in Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada generated 25 % of the foreclosure's...

Clark in Nevada ... would be Vegas... Phoenix has several counties...Maricopa County I think...So Cal ....Riverside and San Bernardino ...San Diego...Imperial...

Kern county around Bakersfield perhaps...

119 posted on 03/07/2009 9:14:15 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (What happened to my IRAs)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 112 | View Replies]

To: All; Grampa Dave; Liz; Fred; AuntB; rabscuttle385; tubebender
Interesting stuff:

IDAs of the City of Phoenix & Maricopa County
Priority Lending Areas

The City of Phoenix and Maricopa County IDAs seek to further expand homeownership opportunities in specified areas called Priority Lending Areas. Up to 20% of the Home in Five 2007A-2 Single Family Bond Program is available under the following special terms:

• Up to $8,000,000 of funds available for loans in Priority Lending Areas.

• A special low mortgage rate of 6.34% is available only in these areas.

• All borrowers purchasing a home within a Priority Lending area receive a 6.00% grant for down payment and closing cost assistance while funds are available. The non-repayable grant is based on the original loan amount.

• Borrowers must also meet the bond program requirements as set forth below.

ELIGIBLE MORTGAGORS:

1. First-time Homebuyers: Cannot have owned a home in the past 3 years (except in "Targeted Areas"). Targeted Areas are census tracts designated by HUD as underserved in mortgage loan origination. Qualified Veterans are exempt from the first-time homebuyer requirement.

2. Maximum Family Income: Non-Targeted Targeted Families of 3 or more $74,203 $77,542 Families of 2 or fewer 64,524 74,203

3. Maximum Home Cost: Non-Targeted Targeted 1-Family Residence $311,625 $380,875

ELIGIBLE LOAN TYPES: FHA/VA/RHS/Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac eligible conventional (30-year, fixed rate)

For further information or to obtain a list of the participating lenders, please visit the websites below or contact:

The City of Phoenix IDA at (602) 262-6602

The Maricopa County IDA at (602) 506-7294

The City of Phoenix TTY (602) 534-5500

www.mcida.com

www.phoenix.gov/housing/sfmrbp.html

See map of the allowed areas at the PDF Linked above....

120 posted on 03/07/2009 9:23:11 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (What happened to my IRAs)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 119 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120121-129 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson