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 A beach massacre at a Jewish event in Australia killed 12. NFL star's routine drug test revealed a stunning diagnosis. Father and son killed 15 people on Bondi Beach, police say. Video shows bystander wrestling gun from shooter in Australia. Report an error