Posts Tagged ‘mortgages’

No Accountability Here

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Not for the mortgage lenders, who screwed homeowners and were paid to do so by the government! The same regulators who allowed them to do this now give them a free pass!

It’s all about the lack of accountability. Not one person or institution responsible for nearly bankrupting the country has been held responsible, in fact the same old crowd continues to make money hand over fist, now that it has an explicit guarantee of another bailout whenever things go wrong.

Gorilla says: “Moral hazard? Surely you jest!”

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Shorter Mortgage Servicer Reform

Friday, March 4th, 2011

When you’re paid to screw homeowners, you screw them!

Now stop that!

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A Good Start, But…

Friday, February 11th, 2011

The Treasury’s had a good go at trying to understand and perhaps fix the housing mess.

The difficulty comes not in the analysis of the past, which is very straightforward and clear, but in the lessons to be learned, both in the present and in the future.

At present, the government guarantees virtually all the mortgages in the country. The cost of doing so is very high: more than $150 billion so far doled out to save Fannie and Freddie.

Clearly, the long-term objective should be to get the government out of the mortgage guarantee business, except in times of national emergency.

Equally important is to change the way Americans view housing: a home needs to be a place to live, not a savings and investment vehicle.

On the other hand, there’s no evidence that the private mortgage industry will take over all of the government’s business without some form of guarantee. Treasury proposes to fix this by setting up a reinsurance fund with contributions from the mortgage industry.

Whichever way the government eventually decides to go, the cost of mortgages will go up significantly and it will be more difficult for middle class Americans to qualify for a mortgage (lower income and poor Americans would continue to receive a subsidy, either for buying or renting).

On the other hand, if these ideas also included the end of the mortgage interest deduction (an excellent idea), it’s likely the price of houses will fall substantially (Gorilla’s guess is 20-30% from whatever today’s as yet unachieved bottom will be) and therefore future mortgages would be much smaller (and therefore more affordable).

Alas, this will all be a tough sell presently when 25% of Americans are already underwater on their mortgages and it’s extremely likely that prices will fall another 10-20% until supply and demand reach a more sustainable equilibrium.

It’s also the case that the banking industry and the mortgage industry will fight this tooth and nail. They want to continue securitizing mortgages for fun and profit, they don’t want to pay anything for creating idiotic levels of risk, and of course they expect the government to bail them out when the next bubble bursts.

So the guess is that there’ll be lots of sound and fury about Fannie and Freddie, but nobody in either party will do very much except tinker at the margins for at least another 5 years.

Gorilla says: “The unraveling is good, but at the moment the unraveling has just begun!”

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Pissing Away At FHA

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Not adequately reserved, the FHA insurance fund!

Insuring all those bad mortgages, and all the bad ones yet to come, is a pretty easy way to go bankrupt in the mortgage insurance business!

Gorilla says: “It’s All You Can Lose And The Taxpayer’s The Buffett!”

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This Week’s George T. Platter And Bait

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

The tidetime folklorist wonders whether happiness will run in a cramdown motion, or falter like a little boat upon the sea of denial.

The Platter: Pretend by Nat King Cole (Extend, Extend, Extend)

The Bait: The Classic Family Lure (NINJAs a specialty)

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Mods Cons

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

The Administration has reached its goal of 500,000 mortgage loan modifications ahead of schedule!

But how many of the loan mods will be permanent, rather than the extend and pretend approach the banks have used so far?

As of September 1, a total of 1,711 permanent modifications have been achieved, not exactly a triumph in a land where 4-7 million more foreclosures await.

So, if Geithner et. al. are now having more success in getting loan mods, we should see the number of permanent mods skyrocket.

If not, we should see the Congress revisiting cramdown.

Gorilla is not convinced: “Don’t hold your breath, mods cons feature in a lot of empty houses, including the two in Congress!”

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Lose Interest? Just Drop Off The Key, Lee!

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

Interest only loans, and the delinquencies and houses behind them, shall be dropping from the sky faster than you can say Professor Marvel!

Those taken out in 2003-06 will be resetting over the next 5-7 years. As a real estate professor quoted in the above article said, if you’ve got one of those “you’re cooked”.

Gorilla says: “You can be greedy and you can be stupid. But the interest on being both is usurious!!!”

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Drowning

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

48% of US homeowners to be underwater by 2011?

Deutsche Bank thinks so.

Currently, about 26% of homeowners are underwater, so clearly there’s an assumption that as unemployment rises, there will be more payment delinquencies and more of what’s called “ruthless” or “strategic” defaults, where borrowers simply mail in the keys and walk away.

And what’s being done about this? Next to nothing. The failure to get mortgage alterations into the bankruptcy process (so-called “cramdowns” wherein principal would be written off), coupled with the lucrative fees to be derived by mortgage servicers throughout the delinquency/foreclosure process, means there’s very little beyond the “extend and pretend” approach.

Prices have yet to hit bottom, and until they do there’s not much the banks will do to lend. Meanwhile, the Administration is just coming to grips with the hundreds of billions in losses they’re sitting on over at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Gorilla wonders: “How far down the road can you kick the can when the water’s above your neck?”

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This Week’s George T. Platter And Bait

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

The tidetime folklorist George T. Bluefish is wondering when the cramdown goes like jam down.

The Platter: “Turn Down Day” (Nothing on their mind but solvency)

The Bait: The Rig And Jig (beloved of loan servicers and their regulators in brackish water)

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