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Borrowers Are Out In the Cold

It's no longer just people with bad credit who are feeling the squeeze. Americans with good credit at all income levels are now caught in a full-blown credit crunch.

Christopher Wahl for Newsweek
Big Chill: Even with good credit, Mike and Ann Todd had a tough time refinancing the mortgage on their Michigan home
 
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David Stoyka, a senior account executive at Marx Layne & Co., a public-relations firm in Farmington Hills, Mich., was surprised to receive a letter in January from Countrywide Financial Corp. The mortgage lender had frozen access to his $25,000 home-equity line of credit, on which Stoyka and his wife owe about $16,000. "I had never missed a payment, and have excellent credit," he says. But with housing values declining, wary lenders are turning off the spigots, even to residents of tony Grosse Pointe Farms.

Six hundred miles to the east, a drama is transfixing New York's real-estate community. Harry Macklowe, one of the city's largest landlords, was unable to refinance $7 billion in short-term debt taken out to buy a portfolio of New York office buildings in 2007. He's been feverishly negotiating with lenders to stave off default. Macklowe has put the iconic General Motors Building on the block in an effort to raise cash.

From homeowners in Michigan to Wall Street financiers, Americans at every income level are caught in a full-blown credit crunch. While problems in housing-related credit are now familiar even to casual readers of the financial pages, the rot of bad debt is spreading. "In addition to mortgages, there are also indications that people are straining in credit cards, auto loans and student loans and default rates are starting to rise," says Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics at New York University.

That's bad news for a country that already seems on the brink of recession. If America's $14 trillion economy is a high-powered engine, credit is the motor oil that helps it run smoothly. When the lubricant is in short supply, the economy—like an engine—is more prone to knocks and stalling. "A year ago it was 'no borrower left behind'," says Adam Levin, president of Credit.com, the San Francisco-based consumer-education firm. "Now it's 'no borrower is getting on the train'."

To a degree, today's credit crunch is the inevitable and entirely predictable flipside of the credit binge of the past several years. Banks that have taken 10-figure write-downs and credit losses on subprime mortgages and other soured debt are raising capital from foreign sources, and generally hoarding cash. Finance, like physics, is subject to Newtonian laws. And as Newton's third rule of motion notes, every action inspires an equal and opposite reaction. "The wild euphoria of a year ago devolved into abject pessimism and almost panic in some quarters of the credit market. It has gone from free flowing and cheap to bottled up and increasingly more expensive," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moodys/Economy.com.

As in past credit dry spells, high-risk corporations and homeowners with poor credit face the prospect of paying more for debt. But in this, the first debt drought of the 21st century, the impact is evident in unexpected places. Due to the well-documented subprime losses—and to the generally weak housing market—caution has spread to the entire home-lending industry. In the Federal Reserve's January survey, 55 percent of U.S. banks said they had tightened lending standards on prime mortgages in the past three months, while 60 percent had done so for home-equity lines of credit. Lenders are focusing the types of loans they can sell to Fannie Mae, or Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored entities that purchase mortgages meeting strict criteria. According to Inside Mortgage Finance, in the fourth quarter of 2007, 68 percent of all new mortgage debt was so-called agency debt. The upshot? "Anyone who doesn't have a big down payment or equity in their home or good credit may be out of luck when it comes to getting a mortgage," says Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance.

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: christinaluvly @ 05/12/2008 2:52:30 AM

    Comment: What happens to students like me who went to private college for their undergraduate studies and now pursuing a Master's degree with two classes left only to find that they have reached their aggregate lifetime loan limits? As a single mother I have no resources and am trying to better my life by ensuring that I have a worthwhile education behind my belt so that I can remain successful in this competitive job market. I am two classes away from earning my MBA and college has very expensive for me especially since I have had to pay for housing, book, etc. totally off loans. I do not have family or friends who are able to co-sign for me to get private loans and my credit score is no where near high enough. I have searched and searched through 1000's of resources only to find that a person in my position is completely out of luck. My regret is that the school nor the lender informed me that the aggregate limits applied to both undergraduate and graduate combined as I was under the impression from my Stafford entrance information that it would be seperate amounts. With 2 classes left this whole situation has left me truly desperate for any and all forms of help. Any suggestions?

  • Posted By: debuke @ 04/01/2008 12:07:00 PM

    Comment: stupid americans? that's a short sighted statement. who has the cash to buy cars and homes outright? credit creates the middle class. unless you want everyone storing all of their cash in banks and not putting it in the economy.

  • Posted By: Virgiee66 @ 03/06/2008 2:10:26 PM

    Comment: Stupid americans living beyond their means and whining as victims of their own stupidity. Serves you right. JayMM is right on all counts.

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