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Spacious Mid-Century with Stunning Views for Lease

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Housing Market “Just So” Story

Posted by leowalker on 27

Housing market Just So stories, taken from the American Thinker.  This pretty well disproves the narrative that it was corrupt Capital that ruined the housing market.  Let the facts (of record, not imagination) speak.

1933-1938
President Franklin D. Roosevelt initiated a series of “New Deal” reform programs designed to affect the mortgage market and homeownership. Fannie Mae, the Federal National Mortgage Association, was established to facilitate liquidity among lending institutions.
1968
As part of President Johnson’s Great Society reform plan, much of Fannie Mae became a private owned yet government chartered company, a government sponsored enterprise (GSE) providing authority to issue mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Fannie Mae buys home mortgages in order to preserve liquidity in the secondary mortgage market. Though private, it remained backed by the Federal government.
1970
President Nixon chartered Freddie Mac, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, as a GSE to compete with Fannie Mae. Designed to help grow the secondary mortgage market, Freddie Mac purchases mortgages from lending institutions to either be securitized as MBS and sold in the secondary market or held by Freddie Mac. At this time the secondary market for conventional mortgages was small.
1977
Sen. Proxmire (D-Wisconsin) introduced a “creeping socialism” community reinvestment Senate bill. Opponents argued the bill would allocate credit without regard for merits of loan applications, thereby threatening depository institutions. Proponents countered that it was only to ensure that lenders did not ignore good borrowing prospects in their communities. The bill’s sponsor stressed it would neither force high-risk lending nor substitute the views of regulators or those of banks.
President Carter, pressed by grassroots organizations — though opposed by the banking industry, signed into law the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). In the years following the Act has undergone several revisions.
To boost community development laws, CRA was a provision designed to stem bank “redlining,” the practice of drawing a red line around low-income communities and denying lending in these areas. The original intent of CRA was to encourage banks to foster homeownership opportunities in these underserved communities in which the lending institutions are chartered.
According to Section 801 of title VIII, “regulated financial institutions are required by law to demonstrate that their deposit facilities serve the convenience and needs [i.e., credit and deposit services] of the communities in which they are chartered to do business.” Accordingly, “regulated financial institutions have continuing and affirmative obligation” to meet these needs. Moreover, the title required each “appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency to use its authority when examining financial institutions, to encourage such institutions.”
1980s
With CRA came increased oversight of lending institutions to ensure they were giving credit to low- and moderate-income communities. Regulators expressed that CRA was not designed to compel credit allocation, nor did it require risky lending practices. Moreover, ECOA (Equal Credit Opportunity Act) and FHA, not CRA, were in place to address discrimination in lending. But community organization groups like the radical ACORN began efforts to reshape CRA into government-imposition, in accord with what “affirmative obligation” might suggest. They began pressing the semantic open door and stretching the “discrimination” provision to complain about enforcement of the regulations as lending institutions resisted bad lending practices in poor minority communities.
August 1989
To deal with the savings & loan fallout of the 1980s, Congress enacted the Financial Institutions Reform Recovery and Enforcement Act. In a move with ominous portent, FIRREA mandated public release of lender evaluations and performance ratings, resulting in added pressure on the banking industry. Such public oversight enabled bullying abuses of community organization groups like ACORN to further influence bank lending practices.
1990s
With the mechanisms in place, the community organizing groups began developing directed strategies to exert more and more pressure on the lending industry in the cloak of complicity with CRA. Community organizer Barack Obama worked closely with ACORN activists. Employing the radical Alinsky intimidation tactics Obama had learned and was teaching — “direct action” — activists crowded bank lobbies, blocked drive-up teller lanes and demonstrated at the homes of bankers to browbeat risky lending in poor and minority communities. Those who resisted were accused of racism to the media and government officials.
The agitators could now stall or hijack bank mergers by filing complaints of non-compliance against the institutions. Lawsuits alleging redlining and racism began flooding the court system. With the prospect of expansions and mergers threatened, banks settled cases and, significantly, increasingly made loans they would not have normally made. The net effect, as ACORN litigation increased, was that credit standards lowered.
Initially the GSEs resisted purchasing these risky mortgages but eventually the Clinton Administration instructed them to substantially increase the percentage of these mortgages in their portfolios. The government-backed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac of the Clinton reforms became “a feeding trough,” in the phrase of Peter Ferrara.
The poor communities and their exploitive leaders benefited from the capitalization with a surge of homeownership, at least on the surface. Wall Street benefited from increased sales of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and guaranteed mortgage-backed securities, as the housing market benefited from new capital channeled from Fannie and Freddie. And the GSE heads profited, with political support in Washington in the form of campaign contributions.
In the period 1989-2008, topping the list of recipients of contributions from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, Sen. Dodd (D-Connecticut), who received $165,400. Second on the list is Sen. Obama (D-Illinois), receiving $126,349 with only three years in the Senate. Rep. Frank (D-Massachusetts), received $42,350.
February 1990
Madeline Talbott, a well-known radical ACORN leader and banking industry agitator, challenged the merger of a Chicago thrift, Bell Federal Savings and Loan Association, who responded that they were being bullied into irresponsible “affirmative-action lending policy.”
1991
ACORN interfered with a House Banking Committee meeting for two days protesting a move to bring CRA reform.
1992
Enforcement of CRA was “sporadic,” as the Washington Times notes, until a Federal Reserve Bank of Boston study asserted that there were “substantially higher denial rates for black and Hispanic applicants than for white applicants.” Co-author Lynn Browne was approached by co-author Alicia Munnell to do the study because “community activists were complaining that mortgage loans were not being made in minority communities.”
According to the Times, however, “the study had mishandled statistics on minority default rates. When the errors were accounted for, the same study showed no evidence that nonwhite mortgage applicants were being discriminated against.”

Frank Quaratiello, writing in the Boston Herald, cites Stan Liebowitz, “My guess is that they were interested in finding a particular result.” Said Liebowitz, “Richard Syron was head of the Boston Fed at the time. He went on to be the head of Freddie Mac. They were looking for mortgage discrimination and they found it.”

According to Quaratiello, Syron became Freddie Mac CEO and chairman in 2003 and “faced increasing pressure to buy up more and more risky mortgages, some of which the Boston Fed’s guide had, in effect, served to legitimize.” Regarding Syron’s total compensation in 2007 of $18.3 million, Liebowitz reportedly quipped, “Nice reward for presiding over unprofessional research behavior, bankrupting Freddie Mac and crippling our financial system, all in the name of politically correct lending.”

September 1992
The Chicago Tribune described the ACORN agenda as “affirmative action lending.” And, writes Kurtz, “ACORN was issuing fact sheets bragging about relaxations of credit standards that it had won on behalf of minorities.”
October 1992
Congress, enacting the Federal Housing Enterprises Financial Safety and Soundness Act of 1992, allowed legislation to “amend and extend certain laws relating to housing and community development.” The Act created the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) within HUD to “ensure that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are adequately capitalized and operating safely.” It also “established HUD-imposed housing goals for financing of affordable housing and housing in central cities and other rural and underserved areas.”
Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) warned about the impending danger non-regulated GSEs posed. As the Washington Post reports, his concern was that Congress was “hamstringing” the regulator. Complaint was that OFHEO was a “weak regulator.” Leach worried that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were changing “from being agencies of the public at large to money machines for the stockholding few.”

Rep. Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts) countered, as the Post reports, “the companies served a public purpose. They were in the business of lowering the price of mortgage loans.”

September 1993
The Chicago Sun-Times reports an initiative led by ACORN’s Talbott with five area lenders “participating in a $55 million national pilot program with affordable-housing group ACORN to make mortgages for low- and moderate-income people with troubled credit histories.” Kurtz notes that the initiative included two of her former targets, Bell Federal Savings and Avondale Federal Savings, who had apparently capitulated under pressure.
July 1994
Represented by Obama and others, Plaintiffs filed a class action lawsuit alleging that Citibank had “intentionally discriminated against the Plaintiffs on the basis of race with respect to a credit transaction,” calling their action “racial discrimination and discriminatory redlining practices.”
November 1994
President Clinton addresses homeownership: “I think we all agree that more Americans should own their own homes, for reasons that are economic and tangible and reasons that are emotional and intangible but go to the heart of what it means to harbor, to nourish, to expand the American dream. . . . I am determined to see that you have the opportunity and together we can make that opportunity for the young families of our country. I am committed to a new and unprecedented partnership between industry leaders and community leaders and Government to recommit our Nation to the idea of homeownership and to create more homeowners than ever before.”
June 1995
Republicans had won control of Congress and planned CRA reforms. The Clinton Administration, however, allied with Rep. Frank, Sen. Kennedy (D-Massachusetts) and Rep. Waters (D-California), did an end-around by directing HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo to inject GSEs into the subprime mortgage market.
As Kurtz notes,“ACORN had come to Congress not only to protect the CRA from GOP reforms but also to expand the reach of quota-based lending to Fannie, Freddie and beyond.” What resulted was the broadening of the “acceptability of risky subprime loans throughout the financial system, thus precipitating our current crisis.”
The administration announced the bold new homeownership strategy which included monumental loosening of credit standards and imposition of subprime lending quotas. HUD reported that President Clinton had committed “to increasing the homeownership rate to 67.5 percent by the year 2000.” The plan was “to reduce the financial, information, and systemic barriers to homeownership” which was “amplified by local partnerships at work in over 100 cities.”
Kurtz concludes, “Urged on by ACORN, congressional Democrats and the Clinton administration helped push tolerance for high-risk loans through every sector of the banking system — far beyond the sort of banks originally subject to the CRA. So it was the efforts of ACORN and its Democratic allies that first spread the subprime virus from the CRA to Fannie and Freddie and thence to the entire financial system. Soon, Democratic politicians and regulators actually began to take pride in lowered credit standards as a sign of ‘fairness’ — and the contagion spread.”
Attorney General Janet Reno, with a number of bank lending discrimination settlements already, sternly announces, “We will tackle lending discrimination wherever it appears.” With the new policy in full force, “No loan is exempt; no bank is immune.” “For those who thumb their nose at us, I promise vigorous enforcement,” reiterated Reno.
1997
HUD Secretary Cuomo said “GSE presence in the subprime market could be of significant benefit to lower-income families, minorities, and families living in underserved areas . . .”
1998
By falsifying signatures on Fannie Mae accounting transactions, $200 million in expenses was shifted from 1998 to later periods, thereby triggering $27.1 million in bonuses for top executives. James A. Johnson received $1.932 million; Franklin D. Raines received $1.11 million; Lawrence M. Small received $1.108 million; Jamie S. Gorelick received $779,625; Timothy Howard received $493,750; Robert J. Levin received $493,750.
April 1998
HUD announced a $2.1 billion settlement with AccuBanc Mortgage Corp. for alleged discrimination against minority loan applicants. The funds would provide poor families with down payments and low interest mortgages. Announcing the Accubank settlement, Secretary Cuomo said, “discrimination isn’t always that obvious. Sometimes more subtle but in many ways more insidious, an institutionalized discrimination that’s hidden behind a smiling face.”
Before the camera, Cuomo admitted the mandate amounted to “affirmative action” lending that would result in a “higher default rate.” The institution would “take a greater risk on these mortgages, yes; to give families mortgages who they would not have given otherwise, yes; they would not have qualified but for this affirmative action on the part of the bank, yes. It is by income, and is it also by minorities? Yes. . . . With the 2.1 billion, lending that amount in mortgages which will be a higher risk, and I’m sure there will be a higher default rate on those mortgages than on the rest of the portfolio.”
May 1999
The LA Times reports that African Americans homeownership is increasing three times as fast as that of whites, with Latino homeowners is growing five times as fast, attributing the growth to breathing “the first real life into enforcement of the Community Reinvestment Act.” This breath of “life” mandated that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buy mortgages with deviant down-payments and debt-to-income ratios which allowed lenders to approve mortgages for lower-income families that would have been denied otherwise.
By now all pretense had disappeared, lending practices were based upon concerns of discrimination in the banking system regardless the consequences. The administration threatened to veto a bill passed by the Senate which had “shortsightedly voted to retrench” CRA, as the advocative Times put it.
Under pressure, Fannie Mae was resisting increased targeting, arguing that the result would be more loan defaults. Barry Zigas, heading Fannie Mae’s low-income efforts, argued, “There is obviously a limit beyond which [we] can’t push [the banks] to produce,” the Times reported.
Fall of 1999
Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers warned, “Debates about systemic risk should also now include government-sponsored enterprises, which are large and growing rapidly.”
September 1999
With pressure from the Clinton Administration, Fannie Mae eased credit requirements on loans it would purchase from lenders, making it easier for banks to lend to borrowers unqualified for conventional loans. Raines explained that “there remain too many borrowers whose credit is just a notch below what our underwriting has required who have been relegated to paying significantly higher mortgage rates in the so-called subprime market,” reported the New York Times.
With this action, Fannie Mae put itself at substantial risk in the event of an economic downturn. “From the perspective of many people, including me, this is another thrift industry growing up around us,” warned Peter Wallison. “If they fail, the government will have to step up and bail them out the way it stepped up and bailed out the thrift industry.” The danger was known.
September 1999
A study by Freddie Mac, confirming earlier Federal Reserve and FDIC studies, contradicts race discrimination arguments for CRA. The study found that African-Americans with annual incomes of $65-$75,000 have on average worse credit records than whites making under $25,000, showing that the difficulty in qualifying was not because of race but because of bad credit records. The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas accordingly entitled a paper “Red Lining or Red Herring?”
2000
The National Community Reinvestment Coalition instructed on how to exploit the new CRA regulations, “Timely comments can have a strong influence on a bank’s CRA rating.” NCRC asserted, “To avoid the possibility of a denied or delayed application, lending institutions have an incentive to make formal agreements with community organizations.” That is, the mere threat to intervene in the CRA review process had equipped the ACORN groups for the massive shakedown.
Moreover, ACORN had been given a compelling incentive, as CRA allowed the organizations to collect a fee from the banks for their services in marketing the loans. The Senate Banking Committee had estimated that, as a result of CRA, $9.5 billion had gone to pay for services and salaries of the organizers.
Winter 2000
City Journal warned that the Clinton administration had turned CRA into “a vast extortion scheme against the nation’s banks,” committing $1 trillion for mortgages and development projects, most of it funneled through the community organizers.
March 2000
Rep. Richard Baker (R-Louisiana) proposed a bill to reform Fannie and Freddie’s oversight in a House Subcommittee on Capital Markets.
Rep. Frank (D-Massachusetts) dismissed the idea, saying concerns about the two were “overblown” and that there was “no federal liability there whatsoever.”
Treasury Undersecretary Gary Gensler testified in favor of GSE regulation. He argued that the bill would promote private market discipline, increase transparency and preserve market competition, reducing the potential for subsidized competitors to distort financial markets.
Fannie Mae spokesmen responded by calling the testimony “inept,” “irresponsible,” and “unprofessional.”
Wallison of the American Enterprise Institute testified to the subcommittee that the bill was “a milestone in Congressional efforts to gain control of the Government Sponsored Enterprises.” He added that the “political courage and stamina that was required to introduce this bill and to continue to press it forward cannot be overstated.” He emphasized that the bill was only an “interim step in the necessary process of dismantling the GSEs and eliminating both their threat to the taxpayers and to the private financial sector of our economy.”
Wallison explained why Fannie and Freddie “pose a serious problem for both the public and private sectors.” First, they contain an inherent contradiction. “It is a shareholder-owned company, with the fiduciary obligation to maximize profits, and a government-chartered and empowered agency with a public mission. It should be obvious that it cannot achieve both objectives. If it maximizes profits, it will fail to perform its government mission to its full potential. If it performs its government mission fully, it will fail to maximize profits.”
He sounded an alarm on a “vicious and dangerous cycle.” “Fannie and Freddie must grow in order to maintain their profitability and hence their high stock prices, but there is no countervailing check on their growth – no effective competition, no required government approvals, and no fear in the financial markets that there is any risk associated with financing this growth. Moreover, their fiduciary obligations to their shareholders require them to exploit their subsidy to the fullest extent possible. These are agencies that are – in the fullest sense of the phrase – out of control.”
Congressional Democrats and GSE representatives vigorously attacked any such criticism. “We think that the statements evidence a contempt for the nation’s housing and mortgage markets,” rebuffed Sharon McHale, Freddie Mac spokeswoman. Congressional Democrats and GSE representatives prevailed.
June 2000
Fred L. Smith Jr., writing in Investor’s Business Daily, recalls testifying before the House Financial Services Committee that GSE “special privileges create a serious hazard to the market, to taxpayers [and] to the economy.” He warned that these GSEs were “strange organizations, neither private-sector fish nor political-sector fowl” and that “as a result, no one is quite sure how these entities should be evaluated or held accountable.” These new debt portfolios “will certainly increase the likelihood of a Fannie-Freddie default.”
Rep. Paul Kanjorski (D-Pennsylvania): “Mr. Smith, that is almost a fallacious argument,” adding that rapid growth of GSE debt holdings was nothing to worry about as it simply reflected “inflation and the growth of population. “Everything, proportionately, is that much larger.”
Rep. Marge Roukema (R-New Jersey): “very few banks or S&Ls could, even in this day and age, even now, meet the stress-testing requirements which Fannie and Freddie are required to meet.”
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-New York) regarding the Treasury Department line of credit: “It is really symbolic, it is obsolete, it has never been used.” “Would you explain why it would be important to repeal something that seems to be of little use?”
Smith: “as long as the pipeline is there, it is like it is very expandable. . . . It is only $2 billion today. It could be $200 billion tomorrow.”
Because of Democrat obfuscation, Smith’s “tomorrow” arrived in 2008 when Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson put Fannie and Freddie into conservatorship.
April 2001
Fiscal Year 2002 Budget declares that the size of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is “a potential problem,” because “financial trouble of a large GSE could cause strong repercussions in financial markets, affecting Federally insured entities and economic activity,” says a White House release.
July 2001
Subcommittee hearing on a bill proposed by Rep. Baker to transfer supervisory and regulatory authority over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and abolish the OFHEO.
Rep. Paul Kanjorski (D-Pennsylvania) responded: “This bill would dramatically restructure the current regulatory system for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In my opinion, it also represents a solution in search of a problem. Nearly a decade ago, Congress created a rational, reasonable, and responsive system for supervising GSE activities, and that system with two regulators is operating increasingly effectively. H.R. 1409 would unfortunately interrupt this continual progress.”
March 2002
Business Week interview with Fannie Mae Vice-Chairman Jamie Gorelick about the prospects for the coming year:
Gorelick: “we are expecting a very, very strong 2002.”
Gorelick: “We believe we are managed safely. . . . Fannie Mae is among the handful of top-quality institutions. . . . . And we have consistently exceeded every standard that the examiners have set for us.”
May 2002
In an OMB Prompt Letter to OFHEO, the President calls for the disclosure and corporate governance principles contained in his 10-point plan for corporate responsibility to apply to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
February 2003
OFHEO reports that “although investors perceive an implicit Federal guarantee of [GSE] obligations . . . the government has provided no explicit legal backing for them,” warning that unexpected problems at a GSE could immediately spread into financial sectors beyond the housing market, according to a White House release.
2003
Rep. Richard Baker (R-Louisiana), chairman of the House Financial Services subcommittee with GSE oversight over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, was informed by OFHEO “on the salaries paid to executives at both companies,” according to the Washington Post. Reportedly, “Fannie Mae threatened to sue Baker if he released it, he recalled. Fearing the expense of a court battle, he kept the data secret for a year.” “The political arrogance exhibited in their heyday, there has never been before or since a private entity that exerted that kind of political power,” he said.
June 2003
Freddie Mac reported it had understated its profits by $6.9 billion. OFHEO director Armando Falcon Jr. requested that the White House audit Fannie Mae.
July 2003
Sens. Chuck Hagel (R-Nebraska), Elizabeth Dole (R-North Carolina) and John Sununu (R-New Hampshire) introduced legislation to address Regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The bill was blocked by Democrats.
September 2003
In an interview with Ron Insana for CNN Money, Rep. Baker warned, “I have concerns that if appropriate resources aren’t allocated for internal risk management, the consequences will be far more severe than just a real estate slowdown. The losses would fall quickly through the capital these companies have and down to shareholders and taxpayers. These companies have some of the lowest capital margins of any financial institution in the nation, yet, at the same time, they are two of the largest. The concern is that if something doesn’t work out the way they predict, the American taxpayer could be called on to pay off the debt in some sort of bailout.”
The New York Times reports that the Administration recommended “the most significant regulatory overhaul in the housing finance industry since the savings and loan crisis a decade ago,” calling for new supervision of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by the Treasury Department. Reportedly, Congressional Democrats “fear that tighter regulation of the companies could sharply reduce their commitment to financing low-income and affordable housing.”
Treasury Secretary John Snow testifies that Congress enact “legislation to create a new Federal agency to regulate and supervise the financial activities of our housing-related government sponsored enterprises” and set prudent and appropriate minimum capital adequacy requirements, says a White House release.
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts): “I do not think we are facing any kind of a crisis. That is, in my view, the two government sponsored enterprises we are talking about here, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are not in a crisis. . . . I do not think at this point there is a problem with a threat to the Treasury. . . . I believe that we, as the Federal Government, have probably done too little rather than too much to push them to meet the goals of affordable housing and to set reasonable goals.
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts): “These two entities – Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – are not facing any kind of financial crisis. . . . The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing.”
Rep. Melvin Watt (D-North Carolina): “I don’t see much other than a shell game going on here, moving something from one agency to another and in the process weakening the bargaining power of poorer families and their ability to get affordable housing.”
October 2003
Fannie Mae discloses $1.2 billion accounting error.
November 2003
Council of the Economic Advisers Chairman Greg Mankiw warned, “The enormous size of the mortgage-backed securities market means that any problems at the GSEs matter for the financial system as a whole. This risk is a systemic issue also because the debt obligations of the housing GSEs are widely held by other financial institutions. The importance of GSE debt in the portfolios of other financial entities means that even a small mistake in GSE risk management could have ripple effects throughout the financial system,” from a White House release.
Mankiw explains that any “legislation to reform GSE regulation should empower the new regulator with sufficient strength and credibility to reduce systemic risk.” To reduce the potential for systemic instability, the regulator would have “broad authority to set both risk-based and minimum capital standards” and “receivership powers necessary to wind down the affairs of a troubled GSE,” says a White House release.
February 2004
Fiscal Year 2005 Budget again highlights the risk posed by the explosive growth of the GSEs and their low levels of required capital, and called for creation of a new, world-class regulator: “The Administration has determined that the safety and soundness regulators of the housing GSEs lack sufficient power and stature to meet their responsibilities, and therefore . . . should be replaced with a new strengthened regulator,” reports a White House release.
Mankiw cautions Congress to “not take [the financial market's] strength for granted.” Again, the call from the Administration was to reduce this risk by “ensuring that the housing GSEs are overseen by an effective regulator,” says a White House release.
June 2004
Deputy Secretary of Treasury Samuel Bodman spotlights the risk posed by the GSEs and called for reform, saying “We do not have a world-class system of supervision of the housing government sponsored enterprises (GSEs), even though the importance of the housing financial system that the GSEs serve demands the best in supervision to ensure the long-term vitality of that system. Therefore, the Administration has called for a new, first class, regulatory supervisor for the three housing GSEs: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banking System,” the White House reports.
September 2004
OFHEO reported that Fannie Mae and CEO Raines had manipulated its accounting to overstate its profits. Congress and the Bush administration sought strong new regulation and authority to put the GSEs under conservatorship if necessary. As the Washington Post reports, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac responded by orchestrating a major campaign “by traditional allies including real estate agents, home builders and mortgage lenders. Fannie Mae ran radio and television ads ahead of a key Senate committee meeting, depicting a Latino couple who fretted that if the bill passed, mortgage rates would go up.” Again, GSE pressure prevailed.
October 2004
Rep. Baker again warned about the coming crisis in the Wall Street Journal: “Then there’s the lesson of a company, Frankenstein-like, seemingly grown so powerful that it can intimidate and arrogantly flout all accountability to the very government that created it.”
Baker adds, “Although their bonds bear the disclaimer ‘not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government,’ the market does not believe it and looks right past the companies’ risk strategies to the taxpayers’ pockets.”
In a subcommittee testimony, Democrats vehemently reject regulation of Fannie Mae in the face of dire warning of a Fannie Mae oversight report. A few of them, Black Caucus members in particular, are very angry at the OFHEO Director as they attempt to defend Fannie Mae and protect their CRA extortion racket.
Chairman Baker (R-Louisiana): “It is indeed a very troubling report, but it is a report of extraordinary importance not only to those who wish to own a home, but as to the taxpayers of this country who would pay the cost of the clean up of an enterprise failure. . . . The analysis makes clear that more resources must be brought to bear to ensure the highest standards of conduct are not only required, but more importantly, they are actually met.”
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-California): “Through nearly a dozen hearings where, frankly, we were trying to fix something that wasn’t broke.”
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-California): “Mr. Chairman, we do not have a crisis at Freddie Mac, and particularly at Fannie Mae, under the outstanding leadership of Mr. Frank Raines.”
Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-New York): “And as well as the fact that I’m just pissed off at OFHEO, because if it wasn’t for you I don’t think that we’d be here in the first place, and now the problem that we have and that we’re faced with is: maybe some individuals who wanted to do away with GSEs in the first place, you’ve given them an excuse to try to have this forum so that we can talk about it and maybe change the, uh, the direction and the mission of what the GSEs had, which they’ve done a tremendous job. There’s been nothing that was indicated that’s wrong, you know, with uh Fannie Mae. Freddie Mac has come up on its own. And the question that then presents is the competence that, that, that, that your agency has, uh, with reference to, uh, uh, deciding and regulating these GSEs. Uh, and so, uh, I wish I could sit here and say that I’m not upset with you, but I am very upset because, you know, what you do is give, you know, maybe giving any reason to, as Mr. Gonzales said, to give someone a heart surgery when they really don’t need it.”
Rep. Ed Royce (R-California): “In addition to our important oversight role in this committee, I hope that we will move swiftly to create a new regulatory structure for Fannie Mae, for Freddie Mac, and the federal home loan banks.”
Rep. Lacy Clay (D-Missouri): “This hearing is about the political lynching of Franklin Raines.”
Rep. Ed Royce (R-California): “There is a very simple solution. Congress must create a new regulator with powers at least equal to those of other financial regulators, such as the OCC or Federal Reserve.”
Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-New York): “What would make you, why should I have confidence? Why should anyone have confidence, and uh, in, in you as a regulator at this point?”
Armando Falcon, OFHEO Director: “Sir, Congressman, OFHEO did not improperly apply accounting rules. Freddie Mac did. OFHEO did not fail to manage earnings properly. Freddie Mac did. So this isn’t about the agency engaging in improper conduct. It’s about Freddie Mac.”
Rep. Christopher Shays (R-Connecticut): “And we passed Sarbanes-Oxley, which was a very tough response to that, and then I realized that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac wouldn’t even come under it. They weren’t under the ‘34 act, they weren’t under the ‘33 act, they play by their own rules, and I and I’m tempted to ask how many people in this room are on the payroll of Fannie Mae, because what they do is they basically hire every lobbyist they can possibly hire. They hire some people to lobby and they hire some people not to lobby so that the opposition can’t hire them.”
Rep. Artur Davis (D-Alabama): “So the concern that I have is you’re making very specific, what you have correctly acknowledged, broad and categorical judgments about the management of this institution, about the willfulness of practices that may or may not be in controversy. You’ve imputed various motives to the people running the organization. You went to the board and put a 48-hour ultimatum on them without having any specific regulatory authority to put that kind of ultimatum on ‘em. Uh, that sounds like some kind of an invisible line has been crossed.”
Rep. Christopher Shays (R-Connecticut): “Fannie Mae has manipulated, in my judgment, OFHEO for years. And for OFHEO to finally come out with a report as strong as it is, tells me that’s got to be the minimum not the maximum.”
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts): “Uh, I, this, you, you, you seem to me saying, ‘Well, these are in areas which could raise safety and soundness problems.’ I don’t see anything in your report that raises safety and soundness problems.”
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-California): “Under the outstanding leadership of Mr. Frank Raines, everything in the 1992 Act has worked just fine. In fact, the GSEs have exceeded their housing goals. What we need to do today is to focus on the regulator, and this must be done in a manner so as not to impede their affordable housing mission, a mission that has seen innovation flourish from desktop underwriting to 100% loans.”
Rep. Lacy Clay (D-Missouri): “I find this to be inconsistent and a and a rush to judgment. I get the feeling that the markets are not worried about the safety and soundness of Fannie Mae as OFHEO says that it is, but of course the markets are not political.”
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts): “But I have seen nothing in here that suggests that the safety and soundness are at issue, and I think it serves us badly to raise safety and soundness as kind of a general shibboleth when it does not seem to me to be an issue.”
Rep. Don Manzullo (R-Illinois): “Mr. Raines, 1.1 million bonus and a $526,000 salary. Jamie Gorelick, $779,000 bonus on a salary of 567,000. This is, what you state on page eleven is nothing less than staggering.”
Rep. Don Manzullo (R-Illinois): “The 1998 earnings per share number turned out to be $3.23 and 9 mills, a result that Fannie Mae met the EPS maximum payout goal right down to the penny.”
Rep. Don Manzullo (R-Illinois): “Fannie Mae understood the rules and simply chose not to follow them that if Fannie Mae had followed the practices, there wouldn’t have been a bonus that year.”
Rep. Christopher Shays (R-Connecticut): “And you have about 3% of your portfolio set aside. If a bank gets below 4%, they are in deep trouble. So I just want you to explain to me why I shouldn’t be satisfied with 3%?”
Franklin Raines, Fannie Mae CEO: “Because banks don’t, there aren’t any banks who only have multifamily and single-family loans.”
Franklin Raines, Fannie Mae CEO: “These assets are so riskless that their capital for holding them should be under 2%.”
January 2005-July 2006
Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Nebraska), co-sponsored by Sens. Sununu and Dole and later Sen. McCain, re-introduced legislation to address GSE regulation.
“The bill prohibited the GSEs from holding portfolios, and gave their regulator prudential authority (such as setting capital requirements) roughly equivalent to a bank regulator. In light of the current financial crisis, this bill was probably the most important piece of financial regulation before Congress in 2005 and 2006,” reports the Wall Street Journal.
Greenspan testified that the size of GSE portfolios “poses a risk to the global financial system. It would be difficult, if not impossible, to bail out the lenders [GSEs] . . . should one get into financial trouble.” He added, “If we fail to strengthen GSE regulation, we increase the possibility of insolvency and crisis . . . We put at risk our ability to preserve safe and sound financial markets in the United States, a key ingredient of support for homeownership.”
Greenspan warned that if the GSEs “continue to grow, continue to have the low capital that they have, continue to engage in the dynamic hedging of their portfolios, which they need to do for interest rate risk aversion, they potentially create ever-growing potential systemic risk down the road . . . We are placing the total financial system of the future at a substantial risk.”
Bloomberg writes, “If that bill had become law, then the world today would be different. . . . But the bill didn’t become law, for a simple reason: Democrats opposed it on a party-line vote in the committee, signaling that this would be a partisan issue. Republicans, tied in knots by the tight Democratic opposition, couldn’t even get the Senate to vote on the matter. That such a reckless political stand could have been taken by the Democrats was obscene even then.”
April 2005
Treasury Secretary John Snow again calls for GSE reform, “Events that have transpired since I testified before this Committee in 2003 reinforce concerns over the systemic risks posed by the GSEs and further highlight the need for real GSE reform to ensure that our housing finance system remains a strong and vibrant source of funding for expanding homeownership opportunities in America. . . . Half-measures will only exacerbate the risks to our financial system,” from a White House release.
May 2005
At AEI Online, Wallison warned that “allowing Fannie and Freddie to continue on their present course is simply to create risks for the taxpayers, and to the economy generally, in order to improve the profits of their shareholders and the compensation of their managements. It is a classic case of socializing the risk while privatizing the profit.”
January 2006
Chairman Greenspan, in a letter to Sens. Sununu, Hagel and Dole, warned that the GSE practice of buying their own MBS “creates substantial systemic risk while yielding negligible additional benefits for homeowners, renters, or mortgage originators.” He stated, “. . . the GSEs and their government regulator need specific and unambiguous Congressional guidance about the intended purpose and functions of Fannie’s and Freddie’s investment portfolios.”
March 2006
Sens. Sununu and Hagel introduced an amendment to a Lobbying Reform Bill directing GAO to study GSE lobbying and requiring HUD to audit the GSEs annually.
May 2006
After years of Democrats blocking the legislation, Sens. Hagel, Sununu, Dole and McCain write a letter to Majority Leader William Frist and Chairman Richard Shelby expressing demanding that GSE regulatory reform be “enacted this year” to avoid “the enormous risk that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pose to the Housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole.”
May 2006
Sen. McCain (R-Arizona) addressed the Senate, “Mr. President, this week Fannie Mae’s regulator reported that the company’s quarterly reports of profit growth over the past few years were ‘illusions deliberately and systematically created’ by the company’s senior management. . . . Fannie Mae used its political power to lobby Congress in an effort to interfere with the regulator’s examination of the company’s accounting problems. . . . OFHEO’s report solidifies my view that the GSEs need to be reformed without delay.”
McCain stressed, “If Congress does not act, American taxpayers will continue to be exposed to the enormous risk that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pose to the housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole. I urge my colleagues to support swift action on this GSE reform legislation.”
April 2007
Sens. Sununu, Hagel, Dole, and Mel Martinez (R-Florida) re-introduced legislation to improve GSE oversight.
April 2007
In “A Nightmare Grows Darker,” the New York Times writes that the “democratization of credit” is “turning the American dream of homeownership into a nightmare for many borrowers.” The “newfangled mortgage loans” called “affordability loans” “represent 60 percent of foreclosures.”
September 2007
President Bush: “These institutions provide liquidity in the mortgage market that benefits millions of homeowners, and it is vital they operate safely and operate soundly. So I’ve called on Congress to pass legislation that strengthens independent regulation of the GSEs . . . the United States Senate needs to pass this legislation soon.”
2007-2008
The housing bubble began to burst, bad mortgages began to default, and finally the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac portfolios were revealed to be what they were, in collapse. And the testimony is evident as to why. As Wallison noted, “Fannie and Freddie were, I would say, the poster children for corporate welfare.”
September 2008
Rep. Arthur Davis, whose testimony is found above in October 2004, now admits Democrats were in error: “Like a lot of my Democratic colleagues I was too slow to appreciate the recklessness of Fannie and Freddie. I defended their efforts to encourage affordable homeownership when in retrospect I should have heeded the concerns raised by their regulator in 2004. Frankly, I wish my Democratic colleagues would admit when it comes to Fannie and Freddie, we were wrong.”
Today 2008
The narrative is of another socialist experiment failed, this time a massive federal effort, imperiling the whole US banking industry. Facing this economic disaster, will an informed American people put their trust Obama’s socialist ideology to bring remedy? To do so is to trust in an acetylene torch to put out the fire.

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History of the Housing Market, Soviet Style

Posted by leowalker on 18

It was said in the old Soviet Empire that the past is always changing, the future is always the same.  As policies and those who championed them fell out of favor in the endless internecine power struggles that wracked the communist system history was re-written to give the impression that the new policy had been the only policy all along.  In practical terms this meant that books were redacted to proclaim the current truth, and photographs were retouched to erase people who were formerly close to the Party power structure and were now either residing in Siberia or had returned to room temperature.  Regardless of these changes the proletariat knew but dared not say that the future would remain bleak and hopeless.

Now that tactic is being employed by Barney Frank, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, in describing his relationship with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: he was for it before he was against it but not so much really.  One might think that his previous support for Fannie and Freddie might have something to do with special relationships within these organizations (Shhhh!), but that does not explain why he was in such illustrious company on that bandwagon.  All these folks had been cheering as the Fannie and Freddie rollicked along for quite a long time.  But now, it seems that the gravy train has chugged its last chug so it can be buried at last.

We can only hope.

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Mortgage Interest Deduction – A Thing of the Past?

Posted by leowalker on 13

The current Administration is again making plans to reduce or do away with the Mortgage Interest Deduction entirely.  This was proposed last year, and before that in 2005.  On those occasions cooler heads prevailed and the deduction was allowed to continue.  Now it looks like it’s up for review again.   The Administration figures it can “save” about $208,000,000,000.  Of course, 208 billion is a drop in the bucket in today’s budgets, still it is money, and given the governement’s love of spending, every dime they can squeeze out of Taxpayers R Us is grist for the mill.  And this is a government with exceptionally large and voracious mills.

The effect on the housing market will be devastating.  It is not bad enough that we have not yet recovered from the collapse of 2007, nor that banks are manipulating the market by controlling the shadow inventory, nor that mortgage applications have dropped 40% since the $8,000 Federal tax credit expired in April, 2010.  Having hung, drawn and quarted the housing industry nothing will do but to drop a white  phosphorus grenade into the remains. 

The thinking (if indeed it can be called that) is that this tax credit is an entitlement of the rich.  As we all know, the rich must be punished for having the bad grace to have actually earned wealth, thus helping out the “little guy”.  I don’t know about anybody else, but I’ve been around to see the rich punished in this way a time or two, I’m still waiting for my benefit. 

If that logic isn’t cockamame enough for you, the fact is that doing away with the Mortgage Interest Deduction is a tax increase that punishes home owners at all levels of the economic spectrum.  To start with, it will dis-incentivise millions of prospective homeowners by making their effective annual costs higher than they otherwise would have been.  Secondly, millions of home owners will find that they can no longer afford to own a home and give up home ownership either through forced sales or foreclosure.  It will drive the price of homes downwards, pushing more homeowners underwater and shoving those already underwater deeper.  Lower home prices will result in lower local tax revenues for schools and municipal services.  Oh, and it will reduce the Federal tax revenues which were being “saved” in the first place. 

LORD, save me from Congress saving me money.

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Whither the California Housing Market?

Posted by leowalker on 24

Well, I wish I could say that I was right that prices were going to decline.  The fact is they have not.  The reason is that the banks have been very successful at keeping their toxic assets off the market, which I did not think that they would be able to do.  So the shadow inventory is growing and will continue to grow for the next couple of years until either something pops or they bleed off their accumulated defaults over the course of the next ten years or so.  Will they be able to do that?  I don’t see how, but they’ve made a fool out of me so far.

Having successfully held inventory at artificially low levels for months, they have released a larger number of properties for sale, there are 41% more properties for sale in May than there were in February of 2010, just in time for the Summer selling season.  But even this massive increase is only a drop in the bucket.  Nationwide 7% of all homes are in mortgage default; in California, 20% of all home owners are 30 or more days late on their mortgage payments, 6.98% are over 90 days late but not yet in the foreclosure process; 10% o California homes are already are already formally in the foreclosure process.

These are grim numbers.  They are not going to get better any time soon. All this means that mortgage defaults will increase over time at a much faster pace than the banks are taking them back and doling them out to the market.

Despite all the hoopla over declining unemployment numbers, the decline is so minuscule, and so tenuous that it does not look reliable to me.  I remain a pessimist.  32 States have quietly borrowed over $37,800,000,000 from the Federal Government to cover extended unemployment benefits, California alone got $6,900,000,000 of that.  Does that make you feel optimistic?  “Do you feel lucky, punk?  Well do ya?”

Of course that money came directly from Taxpayers-R-Us.  Except that the money isn’t really there which means that it was borrowed in our name.  Which means that we’ll have to pay it back with interest over time; it gives our grand kids something to look forward to.

But of course the only place the money gets borrowed is by the Federal Reserve, which is neither Federal, nor a bank nor has any reserves.  Recent Fed auctions have been somewhat disappointing, seems not so many people want to lend money to Uncle Sam based on the full faith and credit of the US Government. Consequently the Fed has been buying it’s own bonds.  This works because they can print their own money (don’t try this at home, folks).

Of course when the Fed prints money backed by nothing but hot air the value of money falls.  Then the value of money falls it takes more money to buy things: inflation.  Inflation makes us all poorer because out money buys less.  Inflation hasn’t been a big problem for a while, although it has been eating steadily at us at about 2%-4% per year, year over year for a long time.

When inflation goes up sharply, then the Fed has to cut interest rates to slow the inflation rate down.  Once interest rates are raised then it gets harder to borrow money, especially for big ticket items like houses.  When borrowing becomes costlier fewer people will be able to do it.  Which means that fewer people are going to be able to buy a home under those circumstances.  Which will mean that sellers will either have to hang on to their properties or lower their prices until buyers can afford them.

So, to answer the question: Whither the California Housing Market?  As long as supply is held in check and interest rates are held at artificially low levels, the housing market will prosper.  Once either or both of those circumstances changes, as it will, then the housing market will surely slow.  I am still bearish on housing in California.  We are currently in a sort of Indian Summer which of it’s nature cannot last.

There is a correlative question to the former: should I buy now or not?  There are good arguments either way.  In the overall I’d say for now, buy.  Why?  Because although you’ll be paying higher prices in the short term, even when prices fall they will be driven up again by inflation.  Further, you’ll be borrowing at ridiculously low interest rates and paying it back in inflated dollars.

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Well This Is Unexpected – NOT!

Posted by leowalker on 5

ABC reports:

Government-backed mortgage giant Freddie Mac today asked for $10.6 billion in additional federal aid after reporting a loss of $8 billion in the first three months of this year.

To date Freddie Mac has been provided with around $51 billion in government funds. The new aid would bring the total assistance to the lender to over $61 billion.

Late last year the Treasury Department essentially agreed to provide a blank check to Freddie Mac and fellow government-backed lender Fannie Mae when the agencycontroversially removed the cap on federal support for the lenders.

Sigh.  Really makes me long for the good old days when we were just sure that Fannie and Freddie were sound, carefully watched and regulated by those paragons of unimpeachable virtue, those steely eyed guardians of the public weal, yea, verily, Congress!

We knew it was coming, so it is not surprising that that Fannie and Freddy will keep on coming back for more, again and again, until something happens to tear them away from the government teat.  I guess it is true after all, that government can do things which no one else can do, or would want to do: endlessly nourish that which is big to fail.

I wonder how much of those billions Congress dished up (courtesy of Taxpayers R Us) will be rolled back to Congress as campaign contributions?

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Nice Discussion of The Gov’t's Latest Home Market Gambit

Posted by leowalker on 6

Mark Calabria over at the Cato Institute has a nice (in part because it’s brief) discussion about the housing market and the Administration’s latest attempt to help struggling homeowners.

Forestalling Foreclosures Redux

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Huff and Puff and Re-inflate the Housing Bubble

Posted by leowalker on 25

Both new home sales and existing home sales are down again this month. What’s different is that the declines in sales have become so regular that they are no longer a surprise.  The surprise is that anyone expected them to do anything else in this economy.  There has been a lot of happy talk for the last year or so about how the economy is recovering, yet the numbers don’t support those claims, and I don’t see anything happening that would lead me to think so.  When an economy recovers business picks up and employment with it.  Now we have the Administration telling us that 10+% unemployment is the new normal.  Given that those numbers are jiggered to start with and that here in California it is actually higher than that it is no surprise that housing is down.  I am not the only one to notice all those For Lease signs along the commercial districts I drive through every day and the ever growing squads of homeless folks where there were none before.  Makes me long for the good old days of 2004 when we were told that 5.1% unemployment was last seen during the Great Depression (which actually was about 17% over the course of those 12 years, and those were pre-jiggered numbers).

But a solution has been found!  Here in the Land of the Bust (no, not the Playboy Mansion) the California legislature has allocated $200,000,000 for more State tax credits to first time home buyers, doubling the amount allocated to the purpose last year.  No, seriously, and Governator signed it.

Full speed ahead!  This time the Titanic really is unsinkable.   We don’t need no steenkin common sense!  We’re going to re-inflate the housing bubble to save us from the lingering effects of the housing bubble!  Yay!  Break out the bubbly, let’s celebrate!

Say, what?

Oh my goodness, where do I start?

Housing inventories are down.  Nobody who has equity and can help it wants to sell in this market, and most people don’t have equity and so can’t sell in the traditional way.  Thousands and thousands of people who should have been foreclosed on over the course of the last year and a half are still in their homes and  not paying their mortgages.  These people should be dong short sales but are just riding it out until something happens to put an end to their misery.  A lot has happened: moratoria, freezes, false hopes based on weak and ill-conceived government programs, the banks’ unwillingness to acknowledge their losses. Meanwhile there are still loads of buyers out there who think that the market has bottomed out and want to get their $8000 of “free” government cheese.

Meanwhile California has dug itself into a $20,000,000,000 hole and can’t get out.  With tax revenues plunging despite substantial tax increases, continuing job losses, skilled workers and entire businesses fleeing the State for sunnier economic skies and impending bankruptcy what do our political masters do?  They do what they always do: double down on deficit spending.  Why do you ask?  Still clinging to the Keynesian economic model (which was discredited seventy years ago and repeatedly since then) they seek to stimulate the goose to lay more golden eggs not by feeding it, but by giving it a suppository.

This will only drag the crisis out even further, as it always does when government tries to solve government created problems with taxpayer dollars.  The system is clogged with toxic assets which need to be purged.  Keeping people who can’t afford their homes from experiencing the pain of foreclosure makes as much sense as helping people suffering from food poisoning retain the meal that gave it to them.  The process is unpleasant, messy and smelly, but it is necessary.  The sooner it gets done the sooner its over.  So lets stop with the phony solutions and do what we all know has to be done.

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Coming into the light

Posted by leowalker on 20

The massive shadow inventory is about to come in to the light. Shadow inventory refers to those properties which would have been foreclosed and resold by now were it not for various extraneous incentives (here and here, for example) skewing the market. Mortgage lenders have been reluctant to foreclose on delinquent mortgages for fear that dumping that much inventory  that quickly would depress the market and make their losses that much greater. Further, once a mortgage is officially in default it impacts the way profit and loss statements are reported to the FDIC and to the stockholders. Reports showing lots of toxic inventory will drive stock prices down, prompting frowny faces :-( all around.

There are consequences to this. There is not as much inventory available in the market as would normally be expected. Naturally homeowners with equity are reluctant to sell at depressed prices unless forced by outside pressure to do so. Home owners with negative equity can’t sell unless they are willing and able to kick in a big chunk of change from their own pockets. This has had the consequence of driving prices upwards as would-be home owners who were unable to buy during the peak of the market find that they are now able to do so and are competing for limited available inventory. Lower priced homes in particular are receiving multiple offers resulting in bidding wars. Bidding wars create social proof that this is a good time to buy, feeding the frenzy even further.

Meanwhile the shadow inventory grows. Banks have been refraining from issuing Notices of Default. I have spoken to numerous home owners who have not made a mortgage payment for over a year and haven’t heard a peep from their banks. Many Notices of Default and Notices to Sell are filed but the bank fails to follow through with the foreclosure. In both these cases the bank is letting the home owners stay as caretakers for what will necessarily become their property, thereby avoiding costs for maintenance, insurance and taxes for which they would become responsible the moment they become the owners. Of course many of these delays are the result of homeowners trying to work out a loan modification (only about 1% are successful!) or a short sale (on which more in a moment). And very often the bank takes the property back in foreclosure and does not put it on the market (I see a lot of this), sometimes becoming the landlord either for the previous owner or new tenants, sometimes they just leave it vacant.

The result is that in many communities the number of homes actually on the market is dwarfed by the number of homes facing foreclosure. In many cases the ratio is grater than 2:1 and even 3:1.

It is not going to stay that way. The FDIC has taken notice of the banks’ practice of hiding their toxic inventory. They shut down over 100 banks last year (Remember IndyMac, Wachovia & Washington Mutual?) and is on track to shut down over 200 this year. The word from the FDIC is, “Clean up your toxic inventory or we will do it for you.” And the banks said, “Yessir!” Funny, they never say that to me.

The FDIC is not the only agency of the government taking notice. Our political masters in Congress have made several ham fisted attempts to clean up the housing bubble mess they’ve created (they were for it before they were against it, but not really). Now, finally, like any blind squirrel worth his salt, Congress has finally found a nut, and what is even more special, has not devoured it forthwith but made it available to Taxpayers-R-Us. ‘Course it’s gonna cost Taxpayers-R-Us, but not too bad. Who’d ‘a thunk it?

The hammer is coming down, finally, on all those homeowners who’ve been on the brink of foreclosure for the last year and a half, as well as the many thousands who have yet to undergo the process and who inevitably will as the economics of their situation becomes unmanageable. At long last there is a way to restore the market to some form of rational balance and help homeowners in trouble exit their predicament with a modicum of grace and a minimum of pain.  You can get more info over here.

What happened to this poor shlub doesn’t have to happen to anybody facing foreclosure.

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Nicky Explains the Problem in a Nutshell

Posted by leowalker on 15

Here’s a great little video on the government’s role in the housing crisis.

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