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Monday, February 26, 2007

WSJ: Home Lenders Cut the Flow Of Risky Loans

by Calculated Risk on 2/26/2007 12:50:00 AM

From the WSJ: Home Lenders Cut the Flow Of Risky Loans

Fears about defaults are slowing the gusher of investor funds going to riskier segments of the mortgage market. That means less money available for "subprime" loans to riskier borrowers, forcing lenders to focus more on borrowers who can afford down payments and have well documented finances. With fewer lower-income Americans able to buy homes, downward pressure on prices will probably increase.

These pressures have intensified in recent days. The cost of insuring mortgage-bond holders against default risk, as measured by the so-called ABX index, has soared, deepening the concerns of investors in collateralized debt obligations, among the biggest holders of riskier mortgage bonds. Managers of some CDOs are delaying new offerings to "wait for the dust to settle," a process that could take weeks or months, says Chris Flanagan, head of CDO research at J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

"CDO managers and hedge funds still want to do CDOs, but the conditions are much, much tougher," David Liu, a mortgage analyst with UBS AG, adds.
Interesting. And on the same topic, Fleck shares another email: Subprime housing game is over
"... today (last Wednesday) is the first day where equity managers have been in to us, asking questions about subprime. Until today, most of the equity managers knew something bad was happening in subprime, but were prepared to assume it was not going to be a problem for the wider credit market, the economy, and so on. ...

Slowly but surely, people are starting to get it, and slowly but surely, I am starting to think that the tipping point in credit -- via a subprime-generated shambles in CDO (collateralized debt obligation) land -- is closer than anybody imagines."