Have read that the subprime loans and ARMs were used to swindle people out of their assets using the houses as bait.
Also, here is an interesting recent article from the Sacramento Bee:
Foreclousure in Full Boom
In ominous signs of more to come, capital region default notices also hit record highs during first quarter of 2007
By Jim Wasserman
Bee Staff Writer
There's a new kind of "For Sale" sign appearing in the region's neighborhood's - offering property repossessed by the bankcs -- and there will be more, according to the newest round of statistics.
Both notices of default, the first sign that homeowners are having trouble making payments, and foreclosures reached historic highs across much of the Sacramento area during January, February, and March, a property research firm reported Monday. [Does that qualify as a soft landing, as soft as a drop onto a sheet resting gently on anvil from a drop from 500 feet, perhaps?]
Among many who received a default notice in March after missing payments was Mary Ann Wilson of Elk Grove. [Elk Grove is mostly a particularly repulsive dysfunctional piece of metastasizing cancer of sprawl thrown out here for the benefit of Bay Area commuters and developers.]
"We had our house built in 2003, and we were both working, both making very good money [That is a low class expression.], and in June 2006 I got sick," she said.
The slow descent into default on a home equity loan [equity removal operation] ended Monday when the house was sold in a short sale in which lenders accepted less than owed to avoid greater losses.
"It was very difficult, very emotional, very hard for us," Wilson said Monday two weeks after major surgery.
The statistics behind such stories are the newest indication of stress in one of California's most troubled major housing markets. They come as spring sales already are slowing amid a glut of resale inventory and tightening of borrowing standards by lenders.
Defaults: Hangover Linked to Loans Surge of 2005 [aka Time to Pay the Pied Piper or Ask Not for Whom the Loan Surges for it Surges for You]
Real estate industry analysts call the region's dafaults an echo from the surge of home loans made during the summer of 2005 as the region's real estate market soard. That summer, capital region buyers stretched [went into hock] their hardest to buy homes [take out loans to temporarily occupy wooden boxes they couldn't afford], with about 76 percent using adjustable rate loans, according to DataQuick Information Systems of La Jolla.
Many of those loans, as well as refinancings to tap housing boom equity for things like swimming pools and cars, are resetting to higher payments and pressuing the area's economy.
"You can't party that hard and not have a hangover. You just can't do it," said Keith McLane, who watches the market as principal of Carmichael-based West Coast Home Auctions, which ofers sellers a quick sale for a lower price.
Notices of default -- issued after a homeowner [debt slave] -- misses at least two monthly mortgage payments -- reached their highest levels ever duing this year's first quarter in Amador, El Dorado, Sacramento, Sutter, Yolo, and Yuba counties, DataQuick reported.
The number of defaults stopped rising only in Placer County. Nevada County remains below previous highs reached in the 1990's, DataQuick reported.
First-quarter foreclosure numbers also reached highs across mch of the rgion -- in Sacramento, Placer, El Dorado, Yolo, and Sutter counties -- according to DataQuick, which tracks county property records.
DataQuick said 1,505 homeowners [heavily indebted mortage borrowers] in Amador, El Dorado, Nevada, Placer, Sacramento, Yolo, and Yuba counties lost their houses to foreclosure during January, February, and March. That's up from 865 the previous three months.
DataQuick reported just 143 foreclosures in the 8-county region in the first first quarter of 2006.
"A lot of these lenders are going to end up with an awful lot of properties," said Pam Canada, executive director of Sacramento-based Neighborworks HomeOwnership Center, which counsels people with mortage trouble.
"It's been difficult these past weeks particularly. There's more of a tone of desperation from people we're finding now. They have very few alternatives."
DataQuick attributed part of the record-breaking numbers to a greater supply of homes and loans in the Sacramento region since previous records were established during the recession-plagued mid-1990's. But the bigger factor is a combination of risky 2005 and 2006 loans and falling home prices that make it difficult for owners [debtors] to refinance out of trouble. Even in a time when the economy continues to generate job growth, selling the house is becoming harder.
"It makes all the sense in the world," said Andrew LePage, DataQuick analyst. "This is probably the weakest (housing) market in the state, and showing some of the biggest year-over-year declines in home prices and some of the slowest sales."
Still, the Sacraemnto region has plenty of troubled company. Statewide, defaults reached a 10-year high during the year's first quarter. Among major urban counties Riverside and Contra Costa counties also had record levels of defaults, DataQuick reported.
Nationally, Yuba County ranked ninth and Sacramento 16th among more than 1000 counties for the percentage increase of defaults from the first quarter of 2006, according to ForeclosureS.com, a Fair Oaks - based Web site that tracks them for intestors. Placer and El Dorado counties ranked 19th and 20th.
Alexis McGee, the site's president and co-founder, said many of those in default are first-time buyers [borrowers].
" I don't think a lot of them are going to stick," she said. [No, they will just get stuck by the banks, spectulators, and mortgage brokers. It is the American and English and capitalist way.

]
The Bee's Jim Wasserman can be reached at (9916) 321 - 1102 or
jwasserman@sacbee.com.