by jillayne » Thu Feb 21, 2008 7:55 am
La, la, la, la, la
Matthew, maybe a wave will be defaulting way before 2010, 2011.
I am no economist, but it would be interesting to try and predict early defaults on these. We could use Cagan's model and add in the psychological factors of the youwalkaway phenom, a continuing credit crunch, tightening of underwriting guidelines, an INCREASE in interest rates that is likely headed our way, and the recession that is now here.
Early payment defaults on all these will rise. But by how much?
There are some other unknown factors: An Obama election that provides as socialist solution for all these defaulting homeowners, actually, Hillary would probably do the same thing, and we must also not discount a new problem I see headed our way: Massive failure on the loan servicing level to keep up with all the defaulting homeowners.
The loan servicers are not staffed, trained and ready to handle the demand. I wonder what the servicer's capital base looks like? Do they have the money to pay for increased staff and all the increased expenses? If not, they will have to raise their fees on the banks.