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Countrywide, Wachovia show mortgage market foolishness

Are you a Countrywide borrower who fell delinquent? Are you worried that they may have cooked the books about how much you owe? A federal judge has ruled that an investigation of Countrywide on this allegation can continue. Florida, Georgia, Ohio and Pennsylvania are among the states probing the nation's largest independent mortgage lender. There's a lot of smoke surrounding Countrywide on this one, so Clark thinks there's got to also be some fire. But really this is just a sideshow with what's gone on in the mortgage marketplace.

A recent Wachovia internal memo leaked to the media claimed the bank would discontinue its option-payment loans program. Such loans -- also called negative amortization loans -- were being pushed under the Pick-A-Payment tag. But the internal announcement now seems to have been premature. You should avoid the Pick-A-Payment choice at all costs because the balance on the loan actually rises over time. Here's how it works: If you borrow $100K at 6%, the bank only calculates the interest as if it were at 1%. The other 5% goes straight to your balance every month. Wachovia has been pushing the Pick-A-Payment plan, but that hasn't been a smart business move; negative amortization loans only increase the likelihood of default. This really highlights the lack of common sense in the housing market.

Clark is amazed that the federal government has not pushed for meaningful disclosure in mortgage lending. There were proposed rules about 3 years ago to demand full, plain English disclosure when you sign a mortgage. But the banks and brokers went berserk and showered Capitol Hill with money to get the proposal stifled. Don't hold your breath waiting for a change in policy -- instead check out a disclosure form developed by the American Enterprise Institute. We got into mess because so many people did the wrong thing. What we need is somebody to stand up and make sure we do the right thing going forward.

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