Philanthropic Responses to the Subprime and Foreclosure Crisis

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Philanthropic Responses to the Subprime and Foreclosure Crisis

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Title: Philanthropic Responses to the Subprime and Foreclosure Crisis


1
Philanthropic Responses to the Subprime and
Foreclosure Crisis
Solomon Greene Open Society Institute
Presentation at Kirwan Institute for the Study
of Race Ethnicity Convening on Subprime
Lending, Foreclosure Race October 2, 2008






2
Overview
  • Recent foreclosure trends and outlook
  • Interventions - emerging models, challenges and
    opportunities
  • Role of philanthropy

3
Recent Foreclosure Trends
4
Recent Foreclosure Trends
5
Foreclosure Outlook Rate Resets
6
Foreclosure Outlook Declining Prices
Annual Housing Price Appreciation in the U.S., 1Q
2008
Source Year-on-Year Housing Price Appreciation
OFHEO housing price index, 1Q 2008
7
Foreclosure Outlook Declining Credit
Home Loan Originations in the U.S. 19902009
(estimated)
Source HUD, Fannie Mae estimates (1998 forward),
Fannie Mae forecast
8
Foreclosure Outlook Declining Credit
Change in Home Purchase Loan Activity (2006 -
2007), by Race
Source NYU Furman Center for Real Estate and
Urban Policy analysis of HMDA 2006 and 2007 data
(forthcoming)
9
High Costs of Foreclosure
Source Sheltering Neighborhoods from the
Subprime Foreclosure Storm. Special Report from
the Joint Economic Committee. April 2007.
10
Intervention Timeline
11
Foreclosure Prevention Strategies
  • Education and Outreach
  • Financial literacy, consumer awareness and
    anti-predatory lending campaigns
  • Call centers and hotlines
  • Homeownership Counseling
  • Pre-purchase (credit counseling, financial
    counseling)
  • Post-purchase (refinance, loss mitigation)
  • Legal Representation (pro-bono, low-bono, legal
    services)
  • Counsel and advise
  • Predatory lending suits
  • Policy Advocacy Reform
  • Anti-predatory lending laws
  • Industry regulation and oversight
  • Financial products
  • Refinance products
  • Rescue funds or bridge loans

12
Foreclosure Prevention Challenges
  • Insufficient counseling capacity
  • Servicer bottleneck
  • Capacity constraints
  • First- v. second-lien holders
  • Competing tranches
  • Sustainability of loan modifications
  • Under water properties - debt exceeds value
  • Difficulty underwriting refinances or loan
    modification
  • Inability to dispose of property through
    pre-foreclosure sale

13
Foreclosure Prevention Emerging Models
  • Early warning systems Bel-Air Edison
    Neighborhoods Inc. Community Law Center
  • Coordinated service delivery Center for New
    York City Neighborhoods
  • Technological solutions Consumer Credit
    Counseling Services

14
Foreclosure Defense Strategies
  • Legal representation
  • Loss mitigation
  • Foreclosure defense
  • Legal reform
  • Settlement conferences and mediation
  • Moratoria
  • Bankruptcy courts

15
Foreclosure Defense Challenges
  • Timeline balance between foreclosure
    proceedings that are too fast and too slow.
  • Representation Extremely low rates of legal
    representation for foreclosed borrowers, even in
    judicial foreclosure states.
  • Negotiation Difficulty identifying party with
    legal authority to negotiate (i.e., securitized
    loans, MERS)

16
Foreclosure Defense Emerging Models
  • Court-ordered mediation and diversion Ohio
    Queens, NY Philadelphia, PA
  • Pro bono mobilization and training Civil
    Justice Maryland Pro Bono Resource Center
  • Standing challenges - Ohio cases

17
Community Stabilization Strategies
  • Minimize Displacement
  • Graceful exit strategies
  • Eviction defense
  • Relocation assistance
  • REO Property Reuse
  • Code enforcement and taxation of vacant
    properties
  • Acquisition and rehabilitation for resale,
    affordable rental housing, or adaptive reuse
  • Land banks and land trusts
  • Rent-to-own and leaseback programs

18
Community Stabilization Challenges
  • Tension between tenants rights and property
    disposition goals
  • Difficulty valuing properties
  • Lack of funds and expertise in acquiring and
    managing scattered-site properties
  • High holding costs
  • Title problems
  • Ensuring pipeline of credit-ready homebuyers

19
Community Stabilization Emerging Models
  • Acquisition and rehabilitation of REO pools
    HANDS, Inc. (Essex County, NJ)
  • Bulk negotiation and transfer National
    Community Stabilization Trust
  • Mission-driven broker - Neighborhood Housing
    Services of NY
  • Rescue funds New York Times Foundations
    Neediest Cases Fund

20
New Opportunities
  • State and federal anti-predatory lending
    legislation
  • Frank-Dodd bill
  • 300 billion credit facility within FHA to
    purchase non-performing loans
  • 3.9 billion in CDBG funds dedicated to
    neighborhood stabilization
  • Tax credit for homeowners buying foreclosed
    properties
  • Increased willingness of servicing industry to
    discount REO properties
  • Court reform initiatives
  • Increased awareness around renters issues and
    passage of local legislation to protect tenants
    rights in foreclosure
  • Linking REO reuse to workforce development,
    affordable housing and other community
    revitalization goals
  • Treasury bailout

21
Role of Philanthropy
  • Fund direct services (education and outreach,
    counseling, legal services).
  • Fund efforts at structural/policy change
    (organizing, policy research, impact litigation,
    etc.)
  • Leverage private-sector capital (PRIs, credit
    enhancement).
  • Serve as resource for generating critical
    information and sharing best practices (research,
    convenings, etc.).
  • Convene stakeholders, develop task forces and
    coalitions.

22
Big Picture
  • How can foundations help government and community
    groups overcome the servicer bottleneck to
    promote more and better loss mitigation and REO
    disposition strategies?
  • How can foundations support innovative models
    that demonstrate sustainable and affordable
    homeownership is viable and essential component
    of wealth building for communities of color?
  • How can foundations help eliminate racial
    disparities in credit markets and strengthen fair
    lending practices to avoid repeat of crisis?
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