Big
Banks Could Rake In Up To $12 Billion Because Of HARP 2.0
The Huffington Post |
By Bonnie Kavoussi Posted: 06/18/2012
11:38 am Updated: 06/18/2012 11:38 am
A
government program meant to help struggling homeowners will at minimum help
some struggling banks.
Big banks could rake in as much
as $12 billion in revenue by refinancing the mortgages of
homeowners that owe more on their homes than they are worth, according to an
analysis by Nomura, a Japanese bank, cited by the Wall Street Journal.
The
government last year announced an expanded version of HARP, known as HARP 2.0,
which was meant to allow underwater
borrowers that were current on their payments to refinance their
mortgages at market rates. Instead, the program has allowed big banks to charge steep fees and above-market interest rates,
all while refinancing mortgages they
already handle, according to several news outlets.
Meanwhile,
the homeowners getting their mortgages refinanced through the government
program, known as the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP, are likely to
save as little as $2.5 billion, the WSJ calculates.
Today, roughly one in five homeowners are
underwater on their mortgages, according to CoreLogic. Underwater
homeowners are more likely to default on
their mortgages than homeowners that are not underwater, multiple studies have
found.
In
March, American Banker reported that
big banks have been profiting from HARP 2.0 by charging higher interest rates
to existing borrowers. Amherst Securities came to a
similar conclusion that month, saying banks were "charging
higher rates to HARP borrowers and... earning massive profits on
originations."
HARP 2.0 benefited banks from
the outset, allowing them to shift the liability from big banks to Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac -- two government-sponsored enterprises -- for underwater
mortgages refinanced through HARP 2.0 that go into default after big banks
offload their mortgages onto Fannie and Freddie, The Huffington Post's Zach
Carter reported last October. Fannie and Freddie previously were able to force
the big banks that sent them ineligible loans refinanced through HARP that fall
into default to pay for the losses.
All
that said, HARP 2.0 has helped some
underwater homeowners emerge from the shadow of overwhelming debt, according to
the San Francisco Chronicle. John Oliver of Vallejo,
California, will save $171,000 because of his new JPMorgan Chase
loan, he told the San Francisco Chronicle.
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