Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don’t Mix

By Ilyce Glink | Apr 20, 2009 |

Last week’s bit of unwelcome news: Michigan’s unemployment rate has shot up to 12.6 percent in March. At least that’s the official unemployment rate. The unofficial unemployment rate (which includes everyone who has stopped looking for a job, or who is working part-time instead of full-time, or who gave up and went back to school, etc.) is somewhere around 20 percent, or maybe higher.

Twenty percent unemployment is starting to sound a lot like the Great Depression’s 25 percent unemployment. The only good news is that what’s happened to Michigan isn’t happening anywhere else. Or, is it?

Well, you wouldn’t want to be looking for a job in Oregon. The unemployment rate rose from 10.7 percent in February to 12.1 percent in March, the biggest jump in the country. South Carolina’s unemployment rate is now 11.4 percent (are they taking stimulus yet?); it’s 11.2 percent in California, 10.8 percent in North Carolina, 10.5 percent in Rhode Island, 10.4 percent in Nevada, and 10 percent in Indiana. A bunch of other states, including Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Georgia and Florida are all have unemployment rates hovering just below the double-digit threshhold. (CNN’s interactive unemployment map shows each state’s level of unemployment.)

It’s no coincidence that the number of foreclosures have started to shoot up again. The major lenders put their foreclosure programs on hold in January and February in order to see what kind of housing plan President Obama would put forward in March. Since then, lenders have been assessing who can refinance or who can be helped with a loan modification.

Here’s some more unwelcome news: If you’re out of a job, you’re no longer eligible for a refinance or a loan modification. Lenders are looking at the growing backlog of delinquent mortgages and are starting to pull the plug. Foreclosures jumped 46 percent in March (over March 2008), to the highest rate in history.

The lenders’ reaction all comes down to basics: If you don’t have a job, you might be able to string it along for awhile, making your payments. But eventually, if you’re unemployed long enough, your money will run out. And once you drain your reserves, you’ll stop making your mortgage payment.

Which is why the number of foreclosures can and will continue to grow and why lenders have clearly decided to take their medicine now, so they can get back to business (read: profitability and fat paychecks) as quickly as possible.

 
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  •  
    1

    jfree85

    04/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    "If you?re out of a job, you?re no longer eligible for a refinance or a loan modification."

    More bad news for people out of work. Those unemployment numbers just look scarier and scarier.

  •  
    2

    Ilyce Glink

    04/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    The current bank profits are coming largely from higher fees being charged to consumers who are able to refinance. But if unemployment continues to rise, that profit will have to fall. Also, if people are refinanacing at 50-year low rates, what's the incentive to refinance again? Could be a refi-bubble.

  •  
    3

    CE7000

    04/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    it's interesting to see the components of the "unofficial unemployment rate" I never would have known!

  •  
    4

    Ilyce Glink

    05/13/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    @CE7000 I have to give credit where credit is due: John Challenger (of the outplacement firm Challenger, Grey and Christmas) first enlightened me. He told me years ago, while I was covering jobs and the economy for WGN-TV, that the official unemployment rate leaves out a huge swath of the population. It was fascinating then but is even more important today.

  •  
    5

    Emily_N

    06/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    Many people are looking for job these days, especially that we are suffering fro economic downturn where many are being affected by mass layoffs. If you think job searching is the easiest proposition, well you might be wrong. Job boards aren't exactly exploding. The unemployment rate is the highest it's been in over 20 years, and there isn't a lot of ways for a person to get the fast cash they need, or a steady paycheck. Online job searching has become prevalent over the last decade. Most unemployed people are turning to online job ads, most without much success. But persistence will pay off, even if you need to get low interest loans or cash advances, you just have to keep job searching.

  •  
    6

    Ilyce Glink

    06/16/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    @emily_N

    Searching for a job is important. But it's also important to add networking to the mix. I've found that by telling people what I want to do, I am much more likely to network my way to the people I need to know to make it happen.

    Thanks for your comment.

  •  
    7

    JayleneH

    06/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    Unfortunately, the word budget has gotten a bum rap - it is basically just a PLAN. When you budget, you're spending on paper, on purpose, before the month begins. But many people view a budget as a straight jacket that keeps them constrained. American budgeting was thought to be like honesty in government ? nonexistent. However, American budgeting is making a bit of a comeback, as the savings rate has increased and more people are concerned with unemployment and protecting themselves. You have to admit it is a shame that Congress hasn't gotten the idea about how to balance a budget. The deficit is growing ? and the stock market is starting to make some rebound as the stimulus plan might be conceivably working. Ben Bernanke, Chair of the Federal Reserve, predicts recovery beginning in late 2009, but also predicts there will be depleted Social Security funds. If only our elected leaders, many of them educated, could have practiced a bit more American budgeting instead of making short term loans.

  •  
    8

    Ilyce Glink

    06/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    @jaylene H: I don't think the loans we're taking out are short-term. It isn't like Congress is going to pay them off in the next 5 years or even have a balloon loan come due in 10 years. The trillions of dollars being spent will be paid off over many years and will ultimately be inherited by our grandchildren, I think.

    Thanks for visiting the site and for your comment.

  •  
    9

    Scoot123

    07/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    American budgeting was thought to be like honesty in government ? nonexistent. However, American budgeting is making a bit of a comeback, as the savings rate has increased and more people are concerned with unemployment and protecting themselves. You have to admit it is a shame that Congress hasn't gotten the idea about how to balance a budget. The deficit is growing ?
    http://www.seksizlesek.com

  •  
    10

    marlena21

    07/27/09 | Report as spam

    The last news

    In June, 38 states and the District of Columbia recorded over-the-month unemployment rate increases, 5 states registered decreases, and 7 states had no change. Nonfarm payroll employment decreased in 39 states and the District of Columbia, increased in 10 states, and was unchanged in 1 state.Instead of taking sildenafil citrate people try to search a job

  •  
    11

    Ilyce Glink

    07/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    @scoot123

    I don't think anyone in America thinks the federal government is particularly honest about how it budgets its cash. In fact, there is pork all through the budget - and pet projects get funded that provide limited benefits to the general public. The deficit will continue to grow until the economy is back on its feet - and at that time it will be up to the President and his government to figure out how we're all going to grow up and pay it off.

    Thanks for your comment.

  •  
    12

    Ilyce Glink

    07/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    @marlena21

    Overall, the true picture of unemployment in this country is dismal. More than 16 percent of Americans are unemployed, under-employed, working fewer hours than they'd like or have given up looking and gone back to school.

    Jobs, in my mind, are very closely tied to real estate. If the unemployment numbers continue to rise, we're not going to see real estate turn around in any sort of meaningful way soon.

    For more on this topics, take a look at my story on Jobs and the Economy are Still Tied Together.

    Thanks for your comment.

  •  
    13

    odle

    08/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    I think to overcome this unemployment problem, as workers we must always be ready in terms of termination of employment. Therefore, if see any signs of going bankrupt company, the better as we continue to work to find another job as an alternative option if the time of the dismissal. What do you think?
    regards,
    stop dreaming start action

  •  
    14

    simoncutts

    10/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lenders Say Unemployment and Mortgage Refinancing Don't Mix

    Jobs, in my mind, are very closely tied to real estate. If the unemployment numbers continue to rise, we're not going to see real estate turn around in any sort of meaningful way soon.
    sildenafil

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