CURRENT CREDIT CRUNCH AND GROWTH OF SUB-PRIME LENDING
Current Credit Crunch and Growth Of Sub-Prime Lending; Is This A Viable Business Model For Lenders? A UK Perspective
Table of Content
CHAPTER-I: INTRODUCTION3
Objectives of the Study4
Significance of the Study4
CHAPTER-II: LITERATURE REVIEW5
Sub-prime Mortgage Meltdown: A Global Context5
Why the Sub-prime Market Fell6
The Housing Market Slowdown7
Relaxed Underwriting Standards7
Early Payment Defaults10
Impact of the Sub-prime Meltdown14
Impact on Individual Borrowers15
Modifications of Defaulted Loans15
Regulatory and Legislative Responses16
Statement on Sub-prime Mortgage Lending16
Restructuring Loans17
Predatory and Abusive Practices18
Secondary Market Liability19
Regulatory Patchwork19
Is Sub-Prime Lending Is a Viable Model For Lenders?20
Changing Circumstances22
Understanding and Flexibility23
A Sharper Focus25
Incorrect and Insulting26
CHAPTER-III: METHODOLOGY28
CHAPTER-IV: RESEARCH FINDINGS AND DISCUSSION31
Market Size and Profile35
Institutional Structure38
Arrears and Possessions41
The Credit Crunch and the Sub-prime Market47
CHAPTER-V: CONCLUSIONS51
Future Diemensions53
References55
Appendices59
Figures59
Tables63
CHAPTER-I: INTRODUCTION
Throughout the first half of 2007, the growing crisis in the US sub-prime mortgage market received increasing attention in the UK, where a sub-prime mortgage market has also grown up since the mid-1990s. At this stage the interest arose from a concern that a similar meltdown in the sector with spiralling defaults, institutional failure and the exposure of widespread reckless, fraudulent and predatory lending might occur in the UK, so tipping the wider housing market into recession. [Springett (2007) provides a good example of this line of thought]. The subsequent impact of US sub-prime crisis on the liquidity of world money markets impacted on the UK mortgage market in a rather different way as higher costs of financing mortgages from the wholesale markets kicked in and the range of riskier mortgage products declined, reducing not only the supply and price of new mortgages, but threatening higher risk borrowers wishing to re-finance their mortgages.
The core evidence of risk in the sector is drawn from a census survey of members of the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML - the trade body that represents some 98 per cent of the residential mortgage industry) that we conducted in 2006. In this survey we distinguished between 'prime' and 'non-prime' lending (the latter defined as 'impaired credit' and self-certificated). This is supplemented with evidence from other research reports, articles in academic and trade journals, published official and survey statistical data, web-based information provided by institutional players, as well as newspaper reports.
Objectives of the Study
The objective of the study is to discuss the current credit crunch and growth of sub-prime lending in the context of United Kingdom as well as overall in the world. The paper also discusses whether it is a viable business model for lenders or not.
Significance of the Study
The study is significant because in the previous as well as in the recent months, there have been almost daily reports on the looming economic crisis that may result from widespread delinquencies in sub-prime mortgage loans-loans with higher interest rates and fees that are made to borrowers with impaired or limited credit histories, or to first-time borrowers. After all the sound and fury, two questions remain: "How did this happen?" and "How will this end?"
The fascination with the sub-prime mortgage meltdown is partly due to the sheer size of the market, and partly to the ...