By Devona Walker, The Loop
Predatory lending practices have not only led to the collapse of the U.S. and global financial markets, but also represent the most massive loss of wealth for African Americans in U.S. history.

The group studied the effect of subprime loans on minority communities and says they are already seeing real physical signs of this financial distress: a dramatic increase in abandoned homes, the devaluation of neighboring houses, increased crime, struggling commercial centers and tax base erosion.
"It's important to realize just how much ground middle- and working-class Black Americans have lost in the subprime crisis," said Amaad Rivera, a United for a Fair Economy spokesman and co-author of the report.
Blacks are estimated to have lost between $71 billion and $92 billion in wealth as a direct result of the subprime crisis in the past eight years. Latinos are estimated to have lost between $75 and $98 billion of wealth during the same time period.
Why is this a minority problem?
The short answer is that predatory lenders disproportionately targeted them. As a result, the subprime mortgage crisis will cost minority homeowners 40 percent more wealth than white homeowners in similar circumstances.
"There's no doubt in looking at the data ... these predatory loans were targeted at racial minorities," said Austin King, a spokesman for Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now. "Even when you zero out all the other factors like income and credit scores, even then a high-income African American was still as likely to be sold a subprime loan as a low-income white person."
Data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act shows that about 40 percent of black subprime borrowers could have qualified for cheaper mainstream loans. But they were steered into exotic, more expensive mortgages.
"Nobody really expected (borrowers) to be able to pay at that higher level. It was a mechanism to generate refinance opportunities, and the borrowers were destined to inevitably end up in foreclosure in a downturn market," said Paul Leonard, California director for the Center for Responsible Lending.

Comments: (28)
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By: ML on 12/16/2008 3:15PM
I think all minorities need to generate a class action law suit against these lenders that marketed these substandard products to us. No, they did not make us sign on the doted line, but the mortgage contracts that were signed were very difficult to understand, even to a person that is very educated.
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By: Don on 12/16/2008 3:44PM
It isn't just "predatory lenders"... it is also about lying borrowers....people who took out loans knowing they couldn't keep up the payments and hoped that home equity would continue to grow so they could pay off the loan quickly at a profit and move on... all that "flip this house" mentality caused by GREED, not COLOR.
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By: Greta Johnson on 12/21/2008 12:03AM
Lets give ourselves AN OPPORTUNITY to TAKE OUR LIFES BACK.
Ca$h Up better control of your income here....
For real .....
Just take a peek at this ===>>> http://TPP-Blings.Homestead.com
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By: gstig49 on 12/28/2008 1:13PM
People are trying to persue the great american dream of having something that they can call their own. Those of us that want to make this dream a reality sometimes get taken in by being offered a means to support this dream. This does not mean that we are stupid it means that we are buying a little bit of hope but in the long run we are being taken in by these industries that see our despiration.
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By: VHM on 12/31/2008 5:49PM
My daddy told me as a young woman, "there are a lot of ways to part a fool from their money"! Let's take color out of this situation, and place accountability
where it belongs. Know what you are buying, and pay only what you can afford! Misery loves company, but all adults must be held accountable for their decisions. Life is the learning tree, and this is a bitter-sweet lesson a lot of AMERICANs are paying for in one form or another! KNOWLEDGE is power. Let's empower our child so they won't make the same mistakes....
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By: Kellye on 1/06/2009 3:06AM
Everyone wants to throw blame to this person or that if there is anyone to blame it is the mortgage brokers themselves. Greed caused them to put many people who would not normally get into this situation into it. Think about it ARM'S are nothing but ways to rip people off they should have never been put into the main stream of refinancing. If you are about to sign a loan and the broker tells you up front that your payment will be lets say $500 dollars but after 2yrs it will go up to $1900 dollars I guarantee you no one unless you are completely crazy would have signed up for these loans.
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By: illusions on 1/10/2009 8:46AM
Black people need to stop with the "American Dream" nonsense when it come to owning homes. That phrase "American Dream" is not what many of you think it is. It was only coined in the 1930's along with other famous marketing quotes such as "diamonds are a girls best friend". Another false idea in the black community is real estate brings you wealth, study the charts, graphs and data real estate has never been a "money maker" for the average joe. You would have made 10 times more if you invested $10K in the stocks in 1956 compared to buying a house that same year. Don't believe me asks some the folks in Cleveland, Detroit etc. Whats is all this kids need a backyard and a dog stuff? Watching too much fake 1950's Hollywood sitcoms again. I know many people whom are successful today and never lived in a tree lined street with SFH housing. We as blacks always fall for this brain washing marketing by the mainstream media.
Are the folks who a defaulting on their loans, planning on turning in that 300 C Hemi, Charger Hemi, Escalade, Navigator they purchased with the refi money from said loan? How bout all the Coogie, Coach, Prada clothing and purses? What about the 65" LCD/plasma TV one in the living room and one in the bedroom.
Stop putting all blacks in one category "Subprime Lending Has Robbed Blacks of Billions". Cause I was not robbed, I was not paying triple/quintuple for a home. I seen this coming and so did many other young and old. My younger sister was ready to buy a home for $450K, did the research and seen the owner paid $115K in 2000. What had changed or the price to skyrocket on that home. New medical research facility? Nope. New University? Nope. A company bringing 30,000 jobs in the city? Nope. Just some couple in their 50's whom wanted a young couple to fund their retirement.
To the author you obviously did not do your research, subprime is nothing. Alt-A and Option-Arm loan resets will make subprime seem minor.
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By: gyolie52 on 1/25/2009 12:26AM
The proudest moment in my life next to having my children, was the day of my closing 10 years ago. I finally felt as though I was working for something. I honestly didn't understand all of what was said but the bottom line. I work everyday and take care of my family and I never want to lose my home, therefore I pay the outrageous amount of money every month for my home. So tell me, who am I hurting? Citibank is robbing me blind, but I want my home. My interst rate went up from 7% to 11% over a 10 year period, but I want my home. I saw three families on my block lose their home to foreclosure, so sad, but I want my home. I feel I am a victim of predator lending, but I want my home. Am I wrong? I didn't read the fine print, I over extended myself, I let the american dream blind my sense of reason, but I want my home. I don't know exactly who's to blame for the mess the housing industry is in, my guess would be the banks and their outrageous greed. All I know is I want my home.
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