Subprime woes spread, could last two years
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN

Play all audios:

A senior U.S. Federal Reserve staff member warned on Tuesday that subprime mortgage market troubles could last as long as two years, while a leading home builder posting a huge profit plunge
blamed subprime lending problems for worsening a soft housing sector. Further underscoring the troubles in the U.S. housing sector, economic data showed home prices fell at the start of
this year while consumer confidence waned in March, at least partly due to worries about real estate. Sandra Braunstein, director of the Fed's division of consumer and community
affairs, said problems with subprime mortgages, which are held by less credit-worthy borrowers, could persist for some time. "Although there are some indications that the market is
correcting itself, we remain concerned that over the next one to two years, existing subprime borrowers ... may face more difficulty," Braunstein told a House of Representatives
subcommittee in a hearing. Borrowers with already weakened credit are likely to be slammed further when their adjustable-rate mortgages reset to higher payments. Delinquency and foreclosure
rates will mount, Braunstein said in remarks prepared for a financial institutions subcommittee hearing. The Fed is reviewing its regulation on mortgage cost disclosures, she said. The head
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., a major bank regulator, and lawmakers on Tuesday also called for a national standard to crack down on predatory lending, which is seen as a primary
cause of the subprime mortgage crisis. Democrats in Congress are holding several hearings on predatory lending, the subprime mortgage crisis and its impact on the secondary mortgage market
before unveiling legislation to deal with the matter. The House subcommittee hearing is the first of these. HOME BUILDERS HURTING Economists say tighter lending standards could choke
off the ability of borrowers with compromised credit to take out new home loans, and thus dampen the broader economy. Home builders already are feeling the pinch from the subprime problems.
Lennar, the No. 3 U.S. home builder, on Tuesday reported a 73.4% profit plunge for the quarter ended Feb. 28, saying widening problems in the subprime sector stifled an already soft housing
market. The company's shares were recently trading lower. Lennar refrained from issuing new financial forecasts for the rest of the year due to market conditions. The subprime meltdown
is being worsened by a lack of home price appreciation -- and in some cases home price declines. The annual double-digit home price surges seen earlier this decade could have helped
borrowers bail out of homes that had grown too costly once interest rates reset higher. Recent signs point to sliding home prices in more regions, however. U.S. single-family home prices
fell in January, the first annual decline in over a decade, according to the Standard & Poor's/Case Shiller home price index for 10 metropolitan areas. Turbulence in financial
markets and higher gasoline prices helped erode U.S. consumer confidence in March, a separate report showed on Tuesday. "Seven-month highs in gasoline prices, stock market volatility
and the ongoing subprime debacle were the likely factors behind the weaker reading," said Ron Simpson, director of currency research at Action Economics in Tampa, Florida. Upheaval in
subprime mortgages will hurt ratings on collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs, and may bleed into lower-quality auto loans, according to credit rating agency Standard & Poor's.