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One in Every 200 Residential Loans Were Fraudulent

Nationwide, one in every 200 residential loans funded last year, totaling $14 billion, involved fraud, according to First American CoreLogic.  Despite what looks like an unsettling amount of shadiness lurking within the mortgage market, the company says the fraud rate has been steadily declining for the past three years and is now about 25 percent lower than when it peaked in the third quarter of 2007.

Since then, First American notes, lenders have been more aggressive in curtailing mortgage fraud – a prudent reaction considering banks have been forced to buy back billions of dollars in fraudulent loans sold to investors during the boom, when standards were lower and many loans were made without verifying the applicant’s information.  "In 2010, 2011, and 2012 you won’t see nearly the amount of [fraud] reports that you’re seeing today," said Tim Grace, SVP of fraud analytics at First American CoreLogic.

First American CoreLogic says 25 percent of foreclosures show fraud in the initial application, and as much as 70 percent of early payment defaults show indications of fraudulent activity in the application process.  The company’s conclusions are based on its analysis of 80 million loans passing through its proprietary national fraud data repository.

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  1. Comment by Bob
    April 5th, 2010 at 9:40 am

    It is nice to see that we are trending in the right direction. Based on the time it takes to get loans approved these days, I would guess that the fraud rate will be extremely low going forward.

  2. Comment by Willy
    April 21st, 2010 at 8:04 am

    It wouldn’t surprise me if every Stated/Stated loan was fraudulent. Loose lending practices and maybe some greed to make a quick buck by lending institutions allowed these loans to get through. After all, how could they not know that these high risk loans would not end up as foreclosures later on. Even those hybrid initial low interest loans that adjusted upward after 36 months were doomed. It’s not rocket science and any 5th grader could see it was risky business. The lenders knew it was a risky venture and it blew up in their face. Then they ran crying to the government asking for bail out money to save them. Now we are all having to pay for it. Thanks.


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