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Minorities at Risk for Abusive Loans
But that month, a check from Wells Fargo Financial arrived at their Portland
home for the amount of $1,000. The couple were feeling financial strain since
Ira Cheatham had recently retired, so they decided to cash the check, taking
out a high-interest loan in the process.
Within weeks, a Wells Fargo representative called the Cheathams and urged them
to consolidate the loan and all of their credit-card debt into a single
mortgage. Cheatham said the representative promised him an interest rate
between 5 and 6 percent, which would lower the couple's monthly mortgage
payment. The Cheathams decided to accept the offer. A
short time later, a Wells Fargo employee arrived at the Cheathams' home with
paperwork to sign. According to Ira Cheatham, the employee failed to mention
that the loan they were signing contained a 9.9 percent interest rate instead
of the previously promised 5-6 percent. The new loan stripped away the
Cheathams' equity and raised their monthly mortgage payment to about 57
percent of their monthly income.
The Cheathams eventually decided to refinance their loan with another lender
at a 5 percent interest rate, but due to prepayment penalties at Wells Fargo,
the couple had to pay a $7,500 fee to escape their predatory loan.
The Cheathams were two of many minority victims who have borrowed subprime
loans and been saddled with prepayment penalties -- fees charged by lenders
when borrowers pay off a mortgage debt early.
In an e-mail, a Wells Fargo representative said customer confidentiality
prevented him from commenting on any specific complaint, but stated that
"Wells Fargo will not tolerate discrimination against, or unfair treatment of,
any consumer."
Wells Fargo customers "are given a choice: a loan with a lower rate and a
prepayment option or a loan with no prepayment option and a slightly higher
rate. It is up to the customer to decide which loan product meets their
needs," the representative said.
Subprime home loan borrowers who live in minority neighborhoods face a 35
percent greater chance of incurring prepayment penalties than borrowers living
in predominantly white neighborhoods, according to research released recently
by the CRL.
"Prepayment penalties in subprime loans are locking African-American families
out of the prime mortgage market and rolling back hard-earned economic
progress," said Hilary Shelton, Director of the NAACP Washington, D.C. Bureau.
Shelton called the prepayment penalties "discriminatory and injurious" and
evidence of African-Americans' "second-class" status in the subprime loan
market.
In addition to prepayment penalties, borrowers also pay higher interest rates
on subprime home purchase loans and receive no meaningful interest rate
reduction when they choose to refinance, according to the CRL's findings. The
CRL's research showed that 30-year subprime purchase loans with prepayment
penalties carried an interest rate 40 basis points higher than would otherwise
be expected. Based on these findings, researchers estimated that during the
life of these loans, Americans pay up to $881 million in extra interest on
purchase loans with prepayment penalties, according to the CRL.
"Not only do prepayment penalties lock borrowers into the higher-cost subprime
market or force them to give up the wealth they have built through home
ownership, but they also turn out to offer no benefit to borrowers in the form
of lower interest rates, as the subprime industry has claimed," said CRL's
president, Mark Pearce.
Prepayment penalties are evidenced in 70 to 80 percent of all subprime home
loans but are almost nonexistent in the prime mortgage market, said the CRL.
Such a discrepancy contributes to an ever-widening wealth and ownership gap
between whites and minorities. Thirty-five states regulate the use of prepayment penalties in home loans, and nine states ban their use completely. |
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