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Federal Reserve Finds Banks Tightening Mortgage Lending Standards

Monday, August 13, 2007

WASHINGTON —  The nation’s banks, in response to the subprime lending mess, are making it tougher for high-risk borrowers to get mortgages they can’t afford, and are moving to tighten lending standards across the board — even for borrowers with good credit.

The Fed said it found that 56.3 percent of banks responding to a survey reported that they had tightened their lending standards for subprime mortgages, loans offered to borrowers with weak credit histories.

But the tightening of the mortgage-lending belt is pinching more than just the less-than-creditworthy loan seekers.

The Fed survey found that even on prime loans, which offer traditional payment options such as 30-year mortgages to borrowers with strong credit histories, 14.3 percent of the banks responding said they had tightened their lending standards "somewhat."

The survey found that 40.5 percent of banks responding said they had tightened loan standards for so-called nontraditional mortgages. The Fed defines this category as adjustable-rate loans with multiple payment options, interest-only mortgages and products referred to as "Alt-A" loans that offer such features as limited verification of incomes.

The Fed's latest quarterly survey of bank loan officers found them responding to growing troubles in subprime mortgage lending. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported recently that the percentage of subprime loans that were 30 or more days past due climbed to 15.75 percent in the first three months of this year, a record high and up from 14.44 percent in the final three months of last years.

Related

The crisis in subprime lending has sent shock waves through other parts of the financial system and caused big drops in the stock market in trading last week amid worries about whether an expanding credit crunch could do serious harm to the overall economy.

The Fed joined with other central banks around the world to add extra money to the banking system in an effort to bolster confidence.

The crisis in subprime lending reflects an overall slump in the housing market following a boom period in which sales and home prices had both soared.

With sales now falling and prices stagnant, potential buyers are having trouble getting loans because of tighter lending standards, a development that many economists fear will make the housing slump even worse.

The Fed survey said that 38 percent of the banks responding had reported weaker demand for traditional mortgages, while 44 percent of the banks that offered subprime loans reported weaker demand for those loans.

The Fed last week kept a key interest rate unchanged while noting tighter credit conditions for some households and businesses.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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