Owners Of Del Mar Homes Are In Real Estate Safe Zone
Del
Mar homes seem to be nestle in one of few safe zones when it comes to
foreclosure. Owners of Del mar homes are thankful for this, but remain
concerned for the economy as a whole. Here's the scoop on what the Feds are
trying to do to salvage the mortgage crisis.The most recent data indicates
that, yes, foreclosures rose again in the 4th quarter of 2007. A number of
government agencies are trying to help reverse this trend. There are several
policies proposed and some already being implemented to address rising
foreclosures. But nearly all are attempting to alleviate the problem from the
"bottom up," rather than from the "top down." The bottom-up approaches involve
a work-out plan of current problematic loans. Let's look at several of them.
- The FHA Secure
Program offered through HUD allows borrowers to get out of their
high-interest rate, subprime loans into a lower-interest rate FHA loan if
they meet certain conditions. Those conditions include having some level
of housing equity and having demonstrated timely mortgage payments prior
to the time when interest rates reset at a higher level.
- Sheila Bair of
FDIC was one of the first to call for voluntary loan remodification.
Lenders' profit margins will be lower, but remodification is still better
for their bottom line than a foreclosure. Recently, she called for
systematic lowering of those resetting rates on 2/28 and 3/27 subprime
hybrid loans.
- Henry Paulson,
Treasury Secretary, called for essentially the same after bringing key
financial institutions together and putting the voluntary loan
restructuring into more concrete form. There are a lot of hoops a borrower
has to go through to qualify for the relief, however.
- Ben Bernanke,
Chairman of the Federal Reserve, has suggested lenders give a break to distressed
borrowers by lowering some portion of the loan amount. A lower remaining
principal will permit more manageable monthly mortgage payments for
borrowers. More importantly, the write-down of the principal changes the
homeowner's position from being under water (negative housing equity) to
above water. The idea is that borrowers can still make payments rather
than walk away.
- Senator Chris
Dodd (D-Connecticut) has proposed legislation that would permit bankruptcy
judges to modify the terms of the loans in order to make payments more
manageable.
- Martin
Feldstein, Harvard University professor, made an intriguing proposal of
immediately converting 20 percent of the existing loan balance into very
low interest-rate loans. The federal government will provide the
exceptionally low rates.
All of these proposals are
well-intended and most will help mitigate foreclosure
problems for mortgagees. But in addition to some aspects of these programs,
what is also needed - and could well be far more effective - is a top-down
solution: raising the housing demand. As I have written in this column
previously, there exists a significant pent-up demand. What we need now is to
get the home sales rolling. Rising home sales will lower housing inventory.
Lower inventory will help quickly stabilize home prices. A recent Boston Fed
study showed that home price movements - and not interest rate resets - are the
primary determinant of foreclosures. If households have less or negative
housing equity, then they have more of an incentive to default on mortgages and
simply walk away.
The
challenge is unleashing this pent-up demand into the marketplace. Consumer
pessimism is pervasive. The raising of the loan limit on FHA and Fannie/Freddie
backed loans will likely help unleash some of this demand as more households
will have access to lower interest rate loans. And while lower home prices can
also work to bring buyers to the market, they are no guarantee because lower
prices can also add to excessive pessimism and consequently hold off buyers.
So, what do I think we should do? What is critically
needed at this important point in the housing cycle is a measure to assuredly
and quickly raise home buying activity. This can be accomplished by providing a
home buyer tax-credit. A nationwide $5,000 tax credit (the same amount
currently in existence for home buyers in Washington, D.C.) would cost the
federal government $40 billion. Factoring in rising economic activity and
accompanying rising tax revenue, the true cost could be minimal or even
positively favorable. A reversal in the weakness in the housing market, which
has been subtracting about one percentage point off GDP growth, can add $40
billion to the U.S. Treasury - essentially offsetting the cost of the tax
credit. If the initial $40 billion cost is hard to swallow, how about a more
targeted tax credit for only first-time home buyers? That would cost the
government about $15 billion.
The
ongoing subprime loan mess and related foreclosure problems are due to past
lending mistakes. Current home buyers fortunately are not exposed to these
"errors in judgment." And these fresh buyers will also help save the day for
existing homeowners who are either defaulting or facing foreclosure. Rising
demand lifts all boats. There is a wide selection of safe mortgage products for
today's home buyers. Combine those safe mortgages with a home buyer tax-credit
and we have the makings of a solid housing market recovery. Because housing
nearly always leads the economy, a solid economic recovery will not be far
behind.
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