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Housing crisis spreads the pain

Borrowers with good credit falling behind, facing foreclosure

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Special Report: Financial Meltdown

Published: May 29, 2009

NEW YORK - A record 12 percent of home­owners with a mortgage are behind on their payments or in foreclosure as the housing crisis spreads to borrowers with good credit.

And the wave of foreclosures isn't expected to crest until the end of next year, the Mortgage Bankers Association said yesterday.

The foreclosure rate on prime fixed-rate loans doubled in the last year, and now represents the largest share of new foreclosures.

Nearly 6 percent of fixed-rate mortgages to borrowers with good credit were past due or in foreclosure.

At the same time, almost half of all adjustable-rate loans made to borrowers with shaky credit were past due or in foreclosure.

The worst of the trouble continues to be centered on California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida, which accounted for 46 percent of new foreclosures in the country.

There were no signs of improvement. The number of newly laid-off people requesting jobless benefits fell last week, the government said yesterday, but the number of people receiving unemployment benefits was the highest on record.

These borrowers are harder for lenders to help. President Obama's recent loan modification-and-refinancing plan might stem some foreclosures, but not enough to significantly alter the crisis.

"It may be too much to say that numbers will fall because of the plan. It's more correct to say that the numbers won't be as high," said Jay Brinkmann, the chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association.

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