US | foreclosures Foreclosures Soar in Q4 Borrowers' poor credit, not rate resets, blamed for latest spike By Nick McMaster Posted Mar 6, 2008 1:55 PM CST Copied Counselor Jose Trevino fills out paperwork for a family at a seminar for families facing foreclosure in Stockton, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 1, 2007. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez) (Associated Press) Home foreclosures and mortgage delinquency in the US saw record highs in the last three months of 2007. Reuters reports that 0.83% of US loans entered foreclosure in the fourth quarter, close to double the 0.54% of the same period in 2006. Mortgage delinquency hit 5.82%, the highest since 1985 and a percentage point higher than the year-ago period. Most mortgage classes saw increasing failure, but subprime loans led the pack with a delinquency rate of 17.31%. Many had worried that a rise in interest rates on adjustable-rate, subprime mortgages would spur increased failure, but a Mortgage Bankers Association rep blames the borrowers’ poor credit: "The current delinquencies are due to credit quality rather than resets." Read These Next President warns Exxon over its wary response to Venezuela. Golden Globes ends with an upset. Another social, easy-to-learn racket game is spreading. Nikki Glaser jokes about Epstein files at the Golden Globes. Report an error