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Monday, August 11, 2008
Terry Coxon :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Horrible Housing Bill
by Terry Coxon
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Congress has recently passed a big-dollar measure that’s been advertised as a partial fix for the problems of the real estate market and also for the related woes of mortgage lenders. Once again, Congress is offering a bailout without considering the fallout.

Help for Troubled Debtors

The law would authorize the Federal Housing Administration to guarantee up to $300 billion in mortgage “work-outs.” To qualify, a borrower must demonstrate an inability to meet the payments of his existing mortgage, and his lender must agree to write down the loan balance and transfer it to a new mortgage with a lower, fixed interest rate. It’s estimated that the FHA’s $300 billion authorization would quiet the moans of about 400,000 sick mortgages.

Help for first-time buyers

This legislation offers real estate novices a tax credit of up to $7,500 on a first-time home purchase. The credit is repayable to the government over 15 years or from any gain on a sale, which makes it, in effect, an interest-free loan. The new law also would temporarily increase Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s credit lines with the U.S. Treasury, and it allows the federal government to buy billions of dollars worth of stock in the two companies.

Help for low-income housing programs

The law also establishes a trust fund to receive fees from Fannie and Freddie and then use the money to help low-income housing programs run by individual states.

Lots of help. And help is good, isn’t it? But consider the likely effects of the housing law.

Help for troubled debtors will reduce the supply of housing coming onto the market, since there will be fewer foreclosures. The tax credit for first-time buyers and the lifeline to keep Fannie and Freddie in the business of supporting the mortgage industry will encourage more home purchases – more demand for housing. While the effect may not be dramatic, the combination of fewer foreclosure sales and more buyers will retard the decline in housing prices.

That’s nice if you are trying to sell, but for the economy it is more of an anesthetic than a cure. Real estate is in trouble because years of government subsidies (tax favors, loan guarantees and easy money) pushed prices to artificial heights. There is no way to undo the damage except to face up to it and let prices find their natural level. At best, the new law will drag the process out. At worst, the new law will keep the process from reaching a healthy completion.

A hurt for first-time buyers

And all that help actually hurts the people you’d think need help the most. To the extent it slows the decline in housing prices, the housing bill works as an opportunity-denier for people who today can almost, but not quite, afford to buy a house.

Continued incumbency for the inept

The troubles at Fannie and Freddie were bought and paid for by management’s years of over-leveraging. A bankruptcy trustee would have fired the people responsible. Instead, the housing law protects the two companies from insolvency, thereby allowing inept management to keep their subsidized jobs and have a shot at making still more trillion-dollar mistakes.

More encouragement for the incautious

It’s a stern truth: rescuing troubled borrowers gives encouragement to other people who are inclined to take risks too lightly. The children will be watching as the adults who borrowed recklessly are bailed out. Next year’s overextended borrowers are being schooled today.

More government deficits

All the help the government is providing costs money. The credit lines to Fannie and Freddie and the implicit guarantee of their debts may cost a lot of money. The last thing the politicians want to do is to decide who ultimately will pay for all the help. So they add the cost to the government’s debt. They’ll let tomorrow pay.

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About The Author
Terry Coxon is the author of Keep What You Earn and Using Warrants,the co-author (with Harry Browne) of Inflation-Proofing Your Investments, and Senior Editor with Casey Research
 
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Hey,
Maybe I should let my mortgage lapse, let the gov't pay down some of the balance, and then have a nice, new lower payment. All I have to do is fail to make my mortgage payments like the rest of the clowns who failed to do so.

Not so fast part deux
Many more billions will go to the other 'crat gang, the plaintiff lawyers, who are ready to file discrimination suits on behalf of yet another 'crat gang, the the "poor minorities" in every court in the land. These billions are not in the bill of course. OFHEO decided that Fannie and Freddy will need at most $25bn in recapitalization and probably none at all, but they leave the possibility that the true amount is unknown, which means the actual price of this bill could be in the trillions.
This bill does nothing to slow down the foreclosure train or the slide in home values.
It will make a few mafia buds very very rich.




Not so fast
Yes the bill is horrible but for different reasons. First of all the refi part ($300bn) is a total dud; only a moron would accept the conditions (1.5% rate higher than the going market, 3% upfront fee to the government, sharing the upside with the government upon the sale of the home) - AND the mortgage holder (bank) has to accept the Dodd "haircut" - set the loan amount at 85% of the current, DEPRESSED value of the home, without regard to the original loan amount. This is voluntary as to the lenders. How many of them are going to step up and say Here I am, Get your sheers?
So there won't be anywhere near 400,000 folks helped by this tragic JOKE.
Then the $7,500 "loan" to first time buyers: It's actually a tax CREDIT, so if you paid that much or more to the feds you get it back, but if you're a small business guy with a thin margin and thin taxes this ain't gonna help you none. Then you need to pay it back over 15 years or when you sell. So there won't be that many takers here neither.
The disgusting part is the $30 billion to be distributed to state governments so those lovely entities can buy houses, fix them up and then rent or sell them to "low income" people. Many decent 'hoods will be destroyed - they are not going to touch the gang-run 'hoods to be sure - and the extremely corrupt money-sucking machines at state and city level are ready to vacuum every last penny. This $30 bn is nothing more than cash envelopes from the big dons in the 'crat mafia to the soldiers in the field to keep them loyal. Those who fear that this part of the bill turns state governments into private real estate developers should relax and watch the $bn's magically melt away.




This DC System of Corporate Whoredom
is designed to transfer any corporate debt incurred by their good ol' lobbyist buddies in Corporate America directly to We The People, to endlessly add to the "national debt", a convenient PC term to hide what is actually going on here - debt transfer - corporate welfare - corporate socialism. The government we have in DC is Socialist except American style Socialism is government of, by, and for the Corporations and paid for by the taxpayers. In Russia, Socialism was the other way around. This is Socialism disguised as Capitalism. It is EVIL what these guys are doing - STEALING US BLIND! It uses such PC catch phrases as "Compassionate Conservatism", "Comprehensive Immigration Reform", "bailout of troubled homeowners facing imminent foreclosure", "prescription drugs benefit for Seniors", "universal healthcare" and "AIDS drugs bill for poor dying Africans" to justify doing the same thing every time - TRANSFER CORPORATE DEBT or CREATE CORPORATE PROFITS BY ADDING TO THE NATIONAL DEBT - WE THE PEOPLE! They have bailed out the airlines, Chrysler, and Wall Street firms going down in flames all on the taxpayers' dole. It is insidiously evil SOCIALISM disguised as "looking out for the economy". Bull Manure! The guys in DC we have elected are just Corporate America's whores. How else can you explain how out of touch our elected officials are with the American People? How else can you explain how our elected officials almost shoved McShamnesty down our throats??? It's as if DC is occupied by a foreign alien government because for all intents and purposes it is! Vote 3rd party if you really want to see "CHANGE" and haven't yet fallen for the quadrennial, GOP, Chicken Little, "The Sky is Falling" Syndrome! You will NEVER change DC by supporting the current 2-party ship of fools!

If...
that $300 billion is a real figure, look for $200 for a barrel of oil and, $5-6 a gallon for gas, sometime after the election. The money has to come from somewhere, and ever increasing inflation is what we've gotten from Bush and Congress for the last five years, consistent with their spending.

Tragically True
The legislators who voted for this monster should be ejected asap.

Real Reason for Help
If the housing market was allowed to reach its real values, the property taxes would likely drop in half along with the housing prices. That would throw most entities that rely on property taxes, such as schools, into a financial crunch. They would have their income basically cut in half.

But maintaining the housing prices artificially as this bill will do will maintain the present taxing base. It is almost impossible to get your property tax lowered anywhere in the country as it is. Just think of the problems that you'd have if the value of your house fell and the taxing entities decided they couldn't afford that much cut in taxes.

Just Another Failed Pelosi Policy
Chaulk another failed policy up for Pelosi's failed Democratic Congress. The worst rated ever.

I agree with the article that the foreclosure segment of this chapter needed to happen to bring prices back down to a realistic level. They are so far over priced no average citizen can buy one our only hope of falling prices was just vanquished with the Congress' writing and passing of this bill. The President was pressured into signing and will get blamed but it should have never made it to his desk.
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