| For release: Jan. 6, 2006
As Subprime Mortgages Increase, Lenders Increase
Prepayment Penalties and Down Payments:
St. Louis Fed Analysis
St. Louis, Mo. — As the market for subprime
mortgages has expanded rapidly in the past decade, much of the expansion
has been in the least-risky segment of the market. At the same time,
lenders of subprime loans have increased their use of prepayment
penalties and large down payments to offset losses from defaults.
Those facts emerge from an analysis by economists Souphala Chomsisengphet
and Anthony Pennington-Cross, who looked at the evolution of the
subprime mortgage market for the January/February issue of Review,
the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis' bimonthly journal of economic
and business issues. The publication is also available on the Reserve
Bank's web site: http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/.
Subprime lending is a relatively new and rapidly growing segment
of the mortgage market that expands the pool of credit to borrowers
who, for a variety of reasons, would otherwise be denied credit.
For example, some borrowers who would probably fail a credit history
requirement in the standard (i.e., prime) mortgage market have a
better opportunity to get credit in the subprime market.
Two potential benefits associated with subprime loans are an increased
number of homeowners and the opportunity for those homeowners to
create wealth.
"Because of its complicated nature, subprime lending is simultaneously
viewed as having great promise—and great peril," say
Chomsisengphet and Pennington-Cross.
Their analysis indicates that while the subprime market has grown
substantially, that growth has not been smooth. The market expanded
rapidly until 1998, then suffered a period of retrenchment. Now,
it is expanding rapidly again, especially in the least-risky segment
of the market.
Chomsisengphet and Pennington-Cross found that since 2000, the
focus of the subprime market has shifted by providing loans to borrowers
with higher credit scores, allowing larger loan amounts, and lowering
the down payments for fixed-rate mortgages.
They also note, however, that the use of prepayment penalties has
declined in the last few years because "the securities market
has adjusted to public concern about predatory lending and the regulation
of finance companies has changed."
In addition, their research shows that the subprime market has
provided a substantial amount of "risk-based pricing"
in the mortgage market by varying the interest rate of a loan based
on the borrower's credit history and down payment. In general, Chomsisengphet
and Pennington-Cross found that lenders of subprime loans typically
require larger down payments to compensate for the higher risk of
lower-grade loans.
Even with these compensating factors, however, Chomsisengphet
and Pennington-Cross conclude that borrowers with low credit scores
still pay the largest premiums.
With branches in Little Rock, Louisville and Memphis, the Federal
Reserve Bank of St.
Louis serves the Eighth Federal Reserve District, which includes
all of Arkansas, eastern
Missouri, southern Indiana, southern Illinois, western Kentucky,
western Tennessee and northern Mississippi. The St. Louis Fed is
one of 12 regional Reserve Banks that, along with the Board of Governors
in Washington, D.C., comprise the Federal Reserve System. As the
nation’s central bank, the Federal Reserve System formulates
U.S. monetary policy, regulates state-chartered member banks and
bank holding companies, and provides payment services to financial
institutions and the U.S. government.
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