Bernanke Calls for More Mortgage Relief

JEANNINE AVERSA | March 4, 2008 04:49 PM EST | AP

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WASHINGTON — Battling a dangerous wave of home foreclosures, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke called Tuesday for additional relief and urged lenders to help distressed owners by lowering the amount of their loans.

"This situation calls for a vigorous response," Bernanke said in a speech to a banking group meeting in Orlando, Fla.

Even with some relief efforts under way by industry and government, foreclosures and late payments on home mortgages are likely to rise "for a while longer," Bernanke warned.

Rising foreclosures threaten to worsen the problems in the housing market and for the national economy, which many fear is on the verge of a recession or in one already.

"Reducing the rate of preventable foreclosures would promote economic stability for households, neighborhoods and the nation as a whole," Bernanke said. "Although lenders and servicers have scaled up their efforts and adopted a wider variety of loss-mitigation techniques, more can, and should, be done," the Fed chief said.

One of the suggestions Bernanke made was for mortgage and other financial companies to reduce the amount of the loan to provide relief to a struggling owner. "Principal reductions that restore some equity for the homeowner may be a relatively more effective means of avoiding delinquency and foreclosure," Bernanke said.

Bernanke acknowledged this idea might be a tough sell to lenders. Lenders, he said, are reluctant to write down principal. "They say that if they were to write down the principal and house prices were to fall further, they could feel pressured to write down principal again," Bernanke said.

Bill Stevens, chief executive officer of CapitalBank in Greenwood, S.C., said: "We've been talking about it as bankers. It's a tough business decision."

Tom Loonan, vice president of the State Bank of Easton in Minnesota, suggested that debt relief for some who got in over their heads may anger others, who took out mortgages that they could afford. "There's going to be some animosity," he said.

Still, Bernanke suggested such longer-term permanent solutions may work better than shorter-term and temporary ones, where the distressed homeowner could find himself in trouble again. "When the mortgage is `under water' a reduction in principal may increase the expected payoff by reducing the risk of default and foreclosure," he said.

On Wall Street, anxious investors pulled the Dow Jones industrials down 45.10 points.

To date, permanent home mortgage modifications that have occurred have typically involved a reduction in the interest rate, while reductions of the principal balance of the loan have been quite rare, he said.

"Measures that lead to a sustainable outcome are to be preferred to temporary palliatives, which may only put off foreclosure and perhaps increase its ultimate costs," Bernanke said.

Brookly McLaughlin, spokeswoman for the Treasury Department, which has been leading the Bush administration's relief efforts, noted that foreclosures are expensive for both lenders and homeowners, giving parties an incentive to renegotiate a mortgage contract. However, "we're not going to dictate how those renegotiations should be accomplished," she said. "If lenders find that in some cases a principal writedown is less costly than foreclosure, then that is an option they have the incentive to consider."

More than half of the projected 1.5 million home foreclosure proceedings started in 2007 were on subprime loans given to borrowers with blemished credit histories or low incomes.

The housing collapse dragged down home values, clobbering these subprime borrowers. Many were left with mortgages that exceeded the value of their homes. They were further socked by low introductory rates on their adjustable mortgages resetting to higher rates, making their monthly payments difficult or impossible, to afford. Problems in the credit markets have made refinancing a mortgage harder.

This year, about 1.5 million loans _ representing more than 40 percent of the outstanding stock of subprime adjustable-rate mortgages _ are scheduled to reset to higher rates, Bernanke said. The Fed estimates that the interest rate on a typical subprime ARM slated to reset in the current quarter will increase to about 9.25 percent from just above 8 percent. That would raise the monthly payment by more than 10 percent, to $1,500 on average, he said.

Declines in short-term interest rates and a Bush administration initiative involving rate freezes will "reduce the impact somewhat, but interest rate resets will nevertheless impose stress on many households," Bernanke said.

Sheila Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., also said it's important to think long-term. "Repayment plans or brief deferrals of payments will not allow us to get past our current problems. They are analogous to `kicking the can down the road,'" she told lawmakers Tuesday.

On Capitol Hill, a number of measures have been offered to help stressed homeowners.

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, welcomed Bernanke's call for more action. "It is now clear that we will not be able to avert a more serious and prolonged economic slowdown if we don't address the problem of increasing mortgage foreclosures," Frank said. "Bernanke's willingness to work with us in a cooperative way, and his outline of the principles that we should be applying are very hopeful signs."

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Associated Press Writer Travis Reed contributed to this report from Orlando, Fla.

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On the Net:

Federal Reserve: http://www.federalreserve.gov/


 
 

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- Rule Of Law See Profile I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law permalink

If you can have "icing" on ass flavored kool aid, then this is it! The Only money that will come anywhere near the poor in this country will be filtered down through the same companies that fucked them in the first place. The only way even that will happen is if another 100 billion dollar suppository of cash is first inserted into the rectum of the Finance industry so that it can be deposited on us all over again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 03/05/2008
- Tom95134 See Profile I'm a Fan of Tom95134 permalink

I can just see what will happen. The ones that will get "relief" or have their balances lowered will be those FOBs (Friends Of Bush) who were out there speculating in the real estate market using sub-prime loans and betting that they can get out before the crash. Real people will get "squat" from this administration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 AM on 03/05/2008
- loki See Profile I'm a Fan of loki permalink

I wonder what would happen if we actually still made things here in America. Considering that most of the up and coming super powers are countries that actually produce things, and manufacturing and producing actual products is what made America into a great super power, wouldnt it make sense if we could do that again?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 03/05/2008
- gcallaghan See Profile I'm a Fan of gcallaghan permalink

Before we resume manufacturing things they must first reduce the country to third world status by eliminating everything from the lower middle class up to and including the richest 2nd percent. Then China, india and the other risen nations will offshore their manufacturing work back to us. Left becomes right, up becomes down and the neocons' job is complete.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 03/05/2008
- EinChicago See Profile I'm a Fan of EinChicago permalink

The problem is that we have had a luddite administration for the past 8 years that have ignored teh area where we could be "making" things (high tech, bio tech, etc.). The days of making plastic trinkets are never coming back. There simply isn''t a way to do it and pay a liveable wage for US standards. but we could be manufacturing and developing the high margin high tech industries, such as green technology.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 03/05/2008
- Jezdukowski See Profile I'm a Fan of Jezdukowski permalink

That makes a ton of sense, renewable energy, sustainable production, etc. Wouldn't have anything to do with oilmen running the country these past 8 years, now would it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 03/05/2008
- loki See Profile I'm a Fan of loki permalink

The Battle Cry of the American Capitalist. "MORE!!!"
They want MORE Government bail outs for their mistakes. MORE of other peoples Money to feed them so they can support their glutinousness habits. More Support and help from Government and the Laws.

Oh, but if it will cause anything to come out of their precious billions of dollars they have, then they are for less. Less Government. Less Regulation. Less is MORE for the American Capitalist.

I think a great comparison to put thinks into perspective is that the American Style Capitalist is just like Golum in Lord of the Rings. Overly Obsessed with their Precious. And for the ASC's , their Precious inst a ring, its Other Peoples Money

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 AM on 03/05/2008
- Sundialsvc4 See Profile I'm a Fan of Sundialsvc4 permalink

I concur with the other sentiments so-far expressed here: this is not "a subprime mortgage crisis." That crisis is only the tiniest tip of the iceberg of ... the morning after, when the leprechaun has left, and the gold you had coveted for so long the night before is but a pile of smelly straw.

America today is a nation that literally cannot manufacture its own shoes. We tried, recently, but had to close the factory and move it to China because none of the support-infrastructure needed to support such a factory exists(!) here.

Is this what you're hearing from the so-called political leaders? No. They are only now becoming dimly aware that Mr. Bernanke's magical money-knob appears to now be disconnected. It's beginning, maybe, to dawn on them that it's not simply that oil-prices are rising to dizzying heights, but that in fact the fundamentals of that market have not changed but the American Dollar is on its way to collapse. Its negotiated role as the world's oil-purchase reserve currency will very soon disappear, and America does not have the ability to alter that no matter how many countries she invades.

The national debt is clicking its way toward $1 Quadrillion, and how high does that number have to go before someone says, "Look! The Emperor Has No Clothes!"

Well, other nations on this planet have already reached that conclusion, and they know that this gives them all the non-military leverage they need to bring this arrogant and very-dangerous country crashing down without them having fired a shot. When the American economy falls, it will fall hard and fall fast and make 1929 look like good times. And when the last bit of debris falls to the ground, this nation will also realize that it is now owned by -- literally, owned by -- its mortal enemies, and that the White House and key chairs in the House and Senate and Court chambers are this morning inexplicably empty. The folks in Washington heard quite a number of small, fast airplanes taking off in the dead of night from the airport by the river. The thieves have made good their escape.

Good morning.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 AM on 03/05/2008
- MilwaukeeDan See Profile I'm a Fan of MilwaukeeDan permalink

The US better hope that Russia and China don't come to the conclusion that NATO, as an organization, can easily be destroyed in the Balkans. If shit would hit the fan there, where would the troops come from? Our Sec Def Gates has been begging the Euros to contribute troops to "fight terror" in Afghanistan, with no luck. Pat Buchanan and others have called NATO a paper tiger. Do you actualy think Europeans would go and fight for the Kosovo Albanians? Don't count on it. This is not just a mortgage crisis, it's a crisis of leadership.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 PM on 03/05/2008
- MilwaukeeDan See Profile I'm a Fan of MilwaukeeDan permalink

Sun, the only way this country is going to change is if we go through a scenario you put forth and it's going to hurt like never before. When I started working, I had the priviledge of working with several gentlemen that lived through the great depression and 2 Germans that survived Nazi Germany. Did they have some eye opening stories to tell about hard times.

As for your shoe comment, how true. Nike is a marketing company that manufactures everything overseas for pennies so they can pay millions to Tiger Woods and the thugs that play in the NBA to promote their products. Levi's, that great American brand, is all made in Mexico, Colombia, Sri Lanka, ect. The barrel for the M1Abrams tank is made in Germany, we make the rest, but it's pretty useless without it. America is in the twilight of its empire, if you don't believe a lib like me, ask Pat Buchanan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 03/05/2008
- qofdisks See Profile I'm a Fan of qofdisks permalink

It is called "tooling" my friend. It is a normal call out cost when making anything. All the tooling is in China along with proprietary knowledge required for tooling up. We have sent our intellectual property to China as well as paid to build all the tooling over there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 AM on 03/05/2008
- VivaZapata See Profile I'm a Fan of VivaZapata permalink

He could give a damn about the mortgage defaulters; his real aim is a savings and loan style bailout with the dollar the loser. When the dollar is the loser, the American worker is too. Time for the rich to pay their fair share of taxes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 AM on 03/05/2008
- Macready See Profile I'm a Fan of Macready permalink

no surprise here and the dollar will continue to fall and the recession will bite deeper into the American economy and pelosi still won't put impeachment on the agenda but will continue to cave to the chimp . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:21 AM on 03/05/2008
- dadw5boys See Profile I'm a Fan of dadw5boys permalink

You ask the mortage lenders to reduce the principle because they loans were over valued from the beginning.

Why not jail a few property apparisers for collusion with the loan companys to over value and create larger loans to sell for a percentage of the finders fees.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 AM on 03/05/2008
- qofdisks See Profile I'm a Fan of qofdisks permalink

What does it mean exactly to "reduce the principle"? Does it mean that more of my mortgage payment will actually reduce my principle? I have paying a mortgage for 5years at 6.5 and my debt has only gone down 2-3 thousand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 AM on 03/05/2008
- WIpatriot See Profile I'm a Fan of WIpatriot permalink

Well, q, it depends. How long is the loan, how much, and what are you taxes for escrow?
Look at your statement. If you're paying less than $100 per month toward your principal, then it makes sense.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 03/05/2008
- EinChicago See Profile I'm a Fan of EinChicago permalink

How is that possible? Admittedly, my fixed mortgage rate is only 5.125 but over 3 years it has already gone down by almost 20,000.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 03/05/2008
- Novista See Profile I'm a Fan of Novista permalink

I'm beginning to suspect the banks don't want to play the Barnacle's game because they don't want to admit how many mortgages were sold on. After all, the asset securitization of CDOs, SIVs, and the other alphabet schemes had to come from somewhere.

The conventional wisdom is that banks lose money when they have to foreclose. Crocodile tears. If they do hold the majority of mortgages, let them stand firm on principle -- and since many are technically insolvent rather than just illiquid, the next heap of resets should tank them completely. Serves them bloody right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 AM on 03/05/2008
- kae See Profile I'm a Fan of kae permalink

Benny's just a paid player on Team Amero.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 03/04/2008
- McWorker See Profile I'm a Fan of McWorker permalink

Long time fan, first time post on the huffpost.

E-mail from a friend today:
"Mark my words, there will be a bailout of homeowners unable to repay." I think he's right and the irresponsible, insecure, gullible, and uneducated will get a free pass. The responsible working class will pay.
This will be disguised, spun, and rammed down our throats just like other 'emergencies' from drunk driving to WMD and the "failing" social security system. Social Security that has US treasury bills (often referred to as IOUs by interested parties and the puppets that repeat after them) instead of cash. You can't force change on people without a crisis.
This is a fine country with fine people built on solid principles that have gone awry. It's been referred to as an experiment by those that don't give it much of a chance. I'm leaning that way, don't have the same values as my fellow citizens, and feel like an indentured servant not a free man.
Let's start a poll to pick the date the first large US bank closes its doors. I'm thinking maybe October 2008?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 PM on 03/04/2008
- WorkingClass See Profile I'm a Fan of WorkingClass permalink

There will be no "bail out" of the un-rich. The rich consider it bad business and the working class will no longer be working. Live in the garden shed. Burn the McMansion in the stove. Forage for acorns and insects. Support the troops.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 AM on 03/05/2008
- ErnestineBass See Profile I'm a Fan of ErnestineBass permalink

Allow me to be the first to welcome you to the "shark cage", McWorker!

Your friend is right; the "disguised, spun, and rammed down our throats" bed sheet economics being sold as 450 TCPI Egyptian bed linens are sometimes not as finely woven as advertised...

Hang out here on a regular basis...and learn.

But be sure to wear a hat, darlin'. Sometimes the shit do rain!

heh heh EB

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 03/04/2008
- Aquinas See Profile I'm a Fan of Aquinas permalink

Weird how the Republicans are against Socialism and for Private Enterprise except when they're in trouble. Then, they want the government to bail them out with billions of public dollars. Principles are cheap I guess.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 03/04/2008
- GreedyOldPsychopaths See Profile I'm a Fan of GreedyOldPsychopaths permalink

"The contented and economically comfortable have a very discriminating view of government. Nobody is ever indignant about bailing out failed banks and failed savings and loans associations... But when taxes must be paid for the lower middle class and poor, the government assumes an aspect of wickedness. " - Galbraith

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 AM on 03/05/2008
- Rule Of Law See Profile I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law permalink

Care to recommend an easy to read book by Ken?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:28 PM on 03/05/2008
- ErnestineBass See Profile I'm a Fan of ErnestineBass permalink


Yessiree...truly ironic, ain't it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 AM on 03/05/2008
- fedupbanker See Profile I'm a Fan of fedupbanker permalink

It is about time we brought our troops home from Iraq, avoid the 12 billion dollars per month being added to our deficit for this war and spend some money on hiring banking regulators that will audit all the fraudulent activity that is prevalent in the industry. Greed is what has caused this problem. They keep putting blame on the "liar loans", meaning the borrowers intended to defraud the bank but I guarantee that 99% of the time, a bank employee was involved in the :restructuring" of the loan to make it work around the bank guidelines, with the blessing from their managers. This is a worlwide crisis, which has been impacted by our governments' lack of oversight in US mortgage banking practices. Mortgage fraud is a federal crime and we need our government to start doing their job and jail these unscrupulous lenders.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 PM on 03/04/2008
- AZM See Profile I'm a Fan of AZM permalink

The working stiff is broke. For too many years he/she has had to ransom possessions via second mortgages and the pawn shop in order to feed the kids. Now, there no longer is equity in the home, no health insurance. The working stiffs cannot afford to buy stuff . Meanwhile the C"s (CEO, COO, CIO) are getting fat salaries, stock options, golden parachutes. But, they don"t buy more stuff with that additional money. On a fraction of one year"s salary they can buy all the lunches and dinners they can eat for the next hundred years. When they get a raise, or more stock options, or some other kind of windfall, they plow that money into the stock market. So, while the C"s trade stocks among themselves, the stocks go down because merchandise languishes on the shelves, driving stocks further south! You want the stock market to go up? Simple, cut back on executive remuneration and let a little more of that compensation trickle down to the working stiffs! The world is not flat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 PM on 03/04/2008
- joebaggadonuts See Profile I'm a Fan of joebaggadonuts permalink

It's _not_ a mortgage crisis.

It's a valuation adjustment occurring amid a liquidity squeeze and a dollar devaluation with a strong commodities demand adjustment to accommodate overheated growth in China and India. Layered atop that is a confidence drop based on observed credibility deficits of government and business officials, further squeezing liquidity and concomitantly raising commodities prices. Add to that the incessant talks about more wars. One reason it affects mortgages is that lenders are afraid or unable to make new loans at low rates, because the rate of expected decline in the dollar denominated repayment's value is assumed to be insufficient to cover the entry on their books of the new loan.

Nor do they any longer know how much real estate is worth, nor how much the dollars will be worth when used to repay the loan. That's why there's a decoupling of the mortgage rates on offer relative to the Fed's interest rate numbers. Even with stellar creditworthiness, lending to a home purchaser is more than ever an act of faith. And as any good Republican knows, trust only in God, all others pay cash. Why make another loan? Just close the banks and go home.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 PM on 03/04/2008
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