FDIC Chief Says More Mortgage Help Needed

FDIC Chief, Says More Help is Needed to Prevent Foreclosures

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — The nation’s top banking regulator warned Tuesday that help for troubled homeowners is failing to keep pace with the foreclosure crisis.

“We’re definitely behind the curve, and we fall further behind the curve every day,” FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair told an audience at the Fortune 500 Forum in Washington, D.C.

According to Bair, the nation’s financial system would be in much better condition today if earlier warnings she made about mortgage modification had been heeded.

Bair began sounding the alarm more than two years ago, warning that lenders had to shore up capital reserves to offset non-performing loans. In October 2007, she told lenders that they should start modifying more at-risk mortgages so borrowers could afford to stay in their homes.

Meanwhile the mortgage mess has ballooned, expanding beyond the housing market into the entire financial sector and the overall economy.

Both the government and the banking industry have tried to slow the mortgage meltdown. Hope Now, the Bush-administration led coalition of banks, loan servicers and community advocacy groups created to tackle the foreclosure problem, says it has has helped 2.7 million homeowners keep their homes since July 2007.

Lenders like JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500), Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) and Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) have all recently implemented new loan modification programs.

She told the Fortune 500 Forum that it’s not too late to step up foreclosure prevention initiatives.

“The sooner we do it the better,” she replied. “I see higher delinquencies growing through 2010.”

Acting now would help many families who would otherwise lose their homes. And that would benefit everyone.

“Attacking the financial problem at its roots is the fiscally responsible and smart thing to do,” she said.

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