Prime Rate Credit

May 8, 2008

Higher Percentage of Banks Report Stringent Lending Practices

Filed under: Mortgages — CleanedUpCredit @ 6:05 pm

Although banks have historically had a set of criteria to go by when lending money to an individual or couple for the purpose of purchasing a home with it (in other words, a mortgage loan), many admittedly let some of the criteria either slip by or be minimally qualifying in years past, which analysts say is part of why we are facing one of the largest mortgage and subprime meltdowns ever which is just now coming to light now.

However, if it’s been a lesson to anyone, it’s been a lesson to major lenders that they need to tighten the noose on their lending practices, meaning they had to better screen candidates for mortgage loans so that they could keep both themselves out of hot water by avoiding bad loans, and the consumer, by not letting them get in “over their heads” so to speak, by taking on too big a mortgage for their salary and other forms of compensation to cover over the duration of the loan, typically 30 years.

A survey taken in April of major lending banks found that over 2/3 of the banks reported they had adopted tighter lending restrictions and new criteria and guidelines, including proof required of income, before they let a consumer sign on the dotted line and purchase a home with money borrowed from their institution.

Not only that, but banks are also severely tightening (compared to years ago), their restrictions on lending for credit cards and other common loans as well, extending their caution into other fields of concern, since consumers have generally overextended themselves in these areas, which many analysts say has also led to the current economic conditions and “credit crunch”, as it has been termed.

Banks have grown more concerned as well because with the erosion of current credit including mortgages, loans and credit card delinquencies, they are forecasting that even more loans are going to go bad in the near future, only further pulling back on their profits and putting them in the red, so to speak. There are of course some banks that have avoided this crisis as greatly as they can, but most are in some form of trouble because of one thing or another, and many think it will be years before they and consumers recover from this debacle.

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