California Bans Negative Amortization Loans
Oct 16th, 2009
On Monday, October 12, 2009, Gov. Schwarzenegger signed Assembly Bill 260 which, effective January 1, 2010, will ban negative amortization loans and preclude mortgage brokers from earning special fees on these high risk loans. According to the Bill’s author, Assemblyman Ted Lieu, the intent is to ban the practices that led to the foreclosure crisis that eventually triggered the recession which we now suffer. This will be good news for some but offers no assistance for the millions who remain at risk of losing their homes under their existing negative amortizing loan contracts. Although lenders will stop making such loans, they have been extremely resistant to cleaning up (modifying) such loans.
As those of you who have followed my Blogs know, the negative-amortization loan was a program offered by lenders to make loans to people who couldn’t qualify for normal fixed rate loans. Because they were marketed on a very low teaser start-rate, a great many gullible borrowers signed up believing the promises that they could later convert to fixed rate or “flip the home” for a profit. Both of these incentives were the unintended consequences of our Government’s desire in the late 1990s to expend home ownership and the American Dream. The result was that millions of people got loans to buy homes they could not really otherwise afford. When the adjustments started happening and the homes couldn’t be flipped, this expansion of the American Dream quickly became a worldwide nightmare that we’re still dealing with.
The sad reality in all of this is that the lenders were very familiar with the dangers of adjustable rate loans from the problems in the 1980’s but it didn’t stop them from taking the fees up front and setting up this house of cards which had to collapse. Hopefully this new law will stop such risky practices in the future and compel the lenders to be trustee stewards of their investors’ monies and their borrowers’ expectations.
Possibly this new law will add additional fuel to the legal arguments raised by attorneys seeking to stop foreclosures of these high-risk and now illegal loans. Since it is not retroactive, it does not have any legal effect on existing loans but certainly may influence a judge or jury in determining whether a loan was predatory.
If you have specific questions about your liability, foreclosure, or any legal issue, feel free to contact me at sjbeede@bpelaw.com or call us at (916) 966-2260 for a phone or personal appointment. Need help Coping with an Upside Down Loan? Checkout Steve’s audio-seminar and e-book at: http://www.stevebeede.com/copingwithanupsidedownmortgage/.





















