Mortgages for illegal immigrants getting more common
SEATTLE When he came to Seattle from Los Angeles
eight years ago, the married father of three young
sons wanted to buy his family a home.
Nothing fancy three bedrooms, in a neighborhood
close to schools and with a yard big enough for
the boys to romp about.
He'd landed a job in the construction industry
that paid good money, and he had a tidy sum to
put toward a down payment. But it's what he didn't
have that worried him the most:
A legitimate Social Security number.
A credit file.
Legal immigration status.
"I was very honest with my Realtor from
the start," he said. "I told him I didn't
have a Social Security number and that I was undocumented.
He said it wouldn't be a problem."
Mortgages to illegal immigrants were rare in
1999 when he closed on a $144,000 home in Federal
Way, Wash. But they've become more common as a
still-small but growing number of brokers and
lenders see potential in the nation's burgeoning
immigrant population particularly Latinos.
That's not to say the practice is widely accepted.
Some lenders won't touch these loans, in part
because illegal immigration is such a controversial
issue in this country. And in many cases, lenders
who do make these loans charge higher interest
rates.
The buyer from Federal Way, who asked that his
name not be used because of the stigma associated
with illegal immigration, applied for a mortgage
through a national bank. Instead of a Social Security
number, he used an individual taxpayer identification
number known as an ITIN which the IRS issues to
foreign nationals for paying taxes on money they
earn in the U.S.
The man's employer wrote him a letter of support,
and instead of a credit score, his history of
paying rent, utilities and other bills served
as his credit history.
"Getting a loan should not be about immigration,"
said Arturo Gonzalez, housing director for Seattle's
El Centro de la Raza, which operates a community-based
program for helping illegal immigrants buy homes.
"Do you work? Do you pay your bills?
"It's not illegal for an undocumented immigrant
to buy a house in this country."
But the Federation for American Immigration Reform,
a national group opposed to illegal immigration,
believes federally regulated financial institutions
should not be making loans to people in this country
illegally.
"It's aiding and abetting encouraging people
who are breaking the law," said the group's
spokesman, Ira Mehlman.
Among the nation's estimated 12 million illegal
immigrants, many of whom build dream homes for
American families, are those who long for a home
of their own.
After years in the U.S., often paying taxes and
often at the same jobs, a growing number of illegal
immigrants are seeking ways to achieve that quintessential
American dream.
In Seattle, El Centro de la Raza, which mainly
serves Seattle-area Latinos, has worked with two
small local lenders, Plaza Bank and Liberty Financial,
to help illegal immigrants obtain mortgages.
Since this spring, El Centro has closed a handful
of mortgages.
"There's huge demand for these kinds of
loans," said Jean Withers, Northwest regional
director at Acorn Housing, a Chicago-based community
organization that operates a program to help low-
to moderate-income and illegal-immigrant households
buy homes.
"We have to remember that for people who
leave family to come to the United States, and
are able to buy a home, it is both a personal
dream, a family dream and a sign of success."
Latinos account for the largest proportion of
the illegal immigrants in the U.S. Legal and illegal,
Latinos are the nation's fastest-growing ethnic
group, increasing by about 1.7 million people
a year.
By the end of the decade, Latino purchasing power
is expected to approach $1 trillion a year, from
$735.6 billion last year, according to a study
by the University of Georgia's Selig Center for
Economic Growth.
"The Hispanic community places a high value
on home ownership," said Mary Mancera with
the National Association of Hispanic Real Estate
Professionals. "It's the center of hearth,
home and family.
"They don't take the responsibility of making
mortgage payments lightly."
With all the controversy surrounding illegal
immigration, lenders aren't leaping in large numbers
to offer these loans.
The loans are complicated, and despite statistics
that show low delinquency rates lower than in
the traditional market some lenders see them as
unproven and risky.
In some cases, borrowers pay for that risk with
interest rates from legitimate lenders that can
be one or two percentage points higher than the
prevailing market rate, and rates from predatory
lenders that can be twice as high.
"That's a real problem," said Bruce
Dorpalen, Philadelphia-based director of housing
counseling at Acorn, pointing out that the interest
rates on Acorn loans are at or below market rate.
In predatory situations, "people face rapidly
escalating adjustable-rate mortgages, prepayment
penalties, balloons and lots and lots of fees,
junk fees."
But perhaps the biggest obstacle for lenders
is the lack of a secondary market for loans to
illegal immigrants.
Housing finance companies Freddie Mac and Fannie
Mae, which purchase home loans from lenders and
repackage them for sale to investors, won't touch
mortgages to illegal immigrants, leaving lenders
to hold and service them in-house, a strain on
capital.
It is not clear how many loans to illegal immigrants
are being written here or across the country,
since no single agency monitors this line of business.
While some big national banks like Wells Fargo
are offering them in test markets in California,
others, like Acorn's lending partner, Citibank,
extend them only in areas where they do business.
Some borrowers go directly to mortgage brokers,
who then shop lenders for the best deal.
Many would-be borrowers have Social Security
numbers that aren't legitimate, raising a red
flag as soon as they try to use it to apply for
a loan.
Roberto Molina, a real estate agent with Coldwell
Banker in Federal Way, said he receives calls
regularly from immigrants with questionable Social
Security numbers asking if they can buy a house.
"I don't know these folks. So I say, `I don't
know if you can buy a home. Let's run the numbers
and see.'"
The home buyer from Federal Way said he paid
a rate of 8.5 percent for his mortgage, at a time
when the going rate was around 6 percent.
A year ago when he was able to obtain his green
card, the government gave him a valid Social Security
number. He asked the banks to reflect that number
on his mortgage papers.
It felt good, the 36-year-old said. "I no
longer had to worry about what would happen to
the house if I were sent back." |