Friday, January 11, 2013

Home loans on Long Island drop by two thirds 2005 thru 2011, lending virtually non-existent in some Long Island neighborhoods

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1/10/13, "Data show LI home loan numbers plummet since 2005," Newsday, (Long Island, NY), Marshall, McDermott

"The number of Long Islanders getting home loans has fallen by nearly two-thirds since 2005 -- when the housing market was heating up -- according to federal housing data.

Low-income and minority communities were especially affected, with fewer than a dozen home loans approved in some neighborhoods in 2011, compared with the hundreds each year that were originated just six years before.

Mortgage market experts attribute the lending downturn to far tougher loan standards, combined with higher unemployment rates, lower incomes and lower credit scores in pockets of the region, as well as home value declines. What's more, Long Islanders have become far less likely even to apply for loans, the data show.

The falloff in lending could make it even more difficult for many economically struggling Long Island communities to make a comeback....

The data showed that, for the most part, denial rates have not increased significantly. Instead, area residents are far less likely to apply for loans at all. The result: a lack of home buying and home lending, especially in minority and low-income areas, that then leads to less economic activity.

Lending is now virtually nonexistent in some Long Island neighborhoods. U.S. Census tracts in communities from Central Islip and Brentwood to Hempstead and Roosevelt had hundreds of loans originated in 2005, while in 2011, they had fewer than 30, the data showed. In one census tract in Wyandanch, for instance, 307 home loans were originated in 2005. 

In 2011, that number was just 13.

New loans to blacks and Hispanics across Long Island sank 86 percent from 2005 to 2011, compared with a 56 percent drop for whites during the same period, the data showed. Newsday's analysis found minorities were less likely to apply for those loans in the first place.

"It's devastating," said Elaine Gross, president of Erase Racism, a Syosset-based organization that promotes equity, of Newsday's analysis of the data. "It may be telling us a really horrible story about just how badly blacks and Latinos were hit with the economic downturn."

Gross said she worried that financial institutions have overreacted in response to the housing market's collapse....

But Bethpage Federal Credit Union chief executive Kirk Kordeleski said lenders are handling the changing market appropriately, for the most part.

"The people that are in a more stretched position aren't getting loans regardless of what neighborhood they're in," said Kordeleski, whose credit union specifically advertises in underserved areas.

The lending decline isn't limited to the higher-fee, higher-interest rate loans known as subprime, the data showed. While subprime lending has all but disappeared on Long Island, there was also a big drop-off in the number of standard, or prime, loans. The number of prime home loans fell by 52 percent since 2005, the data showed.

Overall, the decline in lending is "staggering," said Michael McHugh, president and chief executive of Continental Home Loans in Melville....

The effect on communities is severe if people aren't borrowing to improve their homes or aren't buying homes in the first place.

That's especially true for homeowners who haven't been able to refinance to lower interest rates, Kordeleski said.

"It does have a negative effect on the local economy," he said. "That's not putting money in people's hands to spend.""...

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