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New Obama Foreclosure Plan Helps Banks At Taxpayers' Expense

Obama Foreclosure

First Posted: 10/24/11 02:19 PM ET Updated: 10/24/11 04:02 PM ET

WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration is introducing a new program on Monday designed to lower monthly mortgage payments for more troubled homeowners.

But a key new condition in the plan would shift the financial liability for refinanced loans from Wall Street banks to the American taxpayer. And by focusing on lower payments, the program does not confront what housing experts view as the core problem in the foreclosure crisis -- borrower debt that exceeds the value of one's home.

Faced with the weak response to the Home Affordable Refinance Program, the Obama administration is planning to open up the program to all borrowers who owe more on their mortgage than their homes' worth, commonly dubbed being underwater, and have not missed a mortgage payment. HARP had been limited to borrowers who owed up to 25 percent more than their home is worth. More than 22 percent of all home mortgages -- or 10.9 million homes -- are currently underwater, according to CoreLogic data. Fewer than 900,000 borrowers have elected to go through HARP to date.

The revised program also eliminates several fees associated with refinancing that can make the decision to refinance uneconomical for borrowers. But the potential benefit of the eliminated fees could be relatively small: If a few thousand dollars worth of fees made refinancing a bad deal for underwater borrowers, the ultimate benefits that refinancing can pose would remain limited.

On a conference call with reporters, White House National Economic Council Director Gene Sperling referred to the HARP expansion as "a win-win policy" that will result in "less defaults" and "fewer foreclosures." But one of the program's new terms will benefit private-sector Wall Street banks, potentially at the expense of taxpayers.

The newly expanded program would expunge legal liabilities associated with mortgages refinanced through the program for the original lenders of the mortgages. Each time a bank sent a loan to Fannie and Freddie, it certified that the loan met Fannie and Freddie's safe lending criteria. But many loans sent to the mortgage giants did not, in fact, meet those criteria. Currently, when borrowers default on those ineligible loans, the mortgage giants can "put back" the resulting losses onto the banks that pushed the loans.

Under the modified plan, "put back" liability at banks will be erased for any underwater mortgage that is refinanced through HARP, eliminating Fannie and Freddie's ability to sack lenders with losses in the event that the mortgage does not pan out.

If borrowers go through HARP, but decide after several months that the modest monthly savings do not outweigh owing tens of thousands of dollars more than their home is worth, taxpayer-owned Fannie and Freddie will have to take the full loss. Even if the original loan was sent to Fannie and Freddie with false or fraudulent guarantees from the bank -- promises that may directly be tied to the borrower's current financial problems -- banks will be immune from liability. Fannie and Freddie plan to charge banks "a modest fee" to extinguish this liability, but the administration has yet to determine what that fee will be.

While the revised program seeks to lower mortgage payments for underwater homeowners, the program does nothing to address the core problem -- owing more than the home is worth. Though borrowers may save hundreds of dollars a month in lower payments by refinancing, they routinely owe tens of thousands of dollars more than their homes are worth, even after receiving aid.

"In most cases people would probably be better off walking," said economist Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic Policy and Research.

During a conference call with reporters, Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan acknowledged that negative equity is a problem, and said the administration hopes to address the issue on other fronts. Donovan cited settlement negotiations with big banks over widespread allegations of foreclosure fraud and initiatives under the Home Affordable Modification Program, a separate Obama foreclosure-relief plan administered by banks, as key initiatives.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden have both objected to the foreclosure fraud settlement talks on the grounds that they give away too much to banks without investigating the scope of fraud problems in the system. The Home Affordable Modification Program has been a hotbed for the kind of borrower abuses that the administration is pressuring lenders to settle over.

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WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration is introducing a new program on Monday designed to lower monthly mortgage payments for more troubled homeowners. But a key new condition in the plan would shi...
WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration is introducing a new program on Monday designed to lower monthly mortgage payments for more troubled homeowners. But a key new condition in the plan would shi...
 
 
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12:36 PM on 10/30/2011
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/108xx/doc10878/01-13-FannieFreddie.pdf
Please read the CBO report on Fannie and Freddie..read where it says the administration does not want to include, as it should by law, the results of the accounting on both entities, in their budget.
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therightzwrong
re-elect al gore
04:39 PM on 10/27/2011
Principal Reduction- Clean Principal Reduction-Across the board. I paid 460k. I put down 165k. My current value 287k. Probably sell for 265k. My down payment is gone. I'm underwater and I've played completely by the rules. I've never been late on a mortgage payment. My retirement fund has been zapped by investors cashing out. I dont know what more they want .. Im O+ blood type.. maybe they want that?
ReaItors Are Liars
NAR is corrupt
04:43 PM on 10/27/2011
Why in the world did you pay $460k for a $250k house?
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4everright
My heart went boom
04:48 PM on 10/27/2011
so you negotiated the $460K price, right? If it would have appreciated in value and you sold it this week for $650K, were you going to share that profit with the taxpayers since according to you, they should be assuming the risk?
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Lorraine Danese
LorraineDanese1@aol.com
07:46 AM on 10/26/2011
No one wants to lose there home it's been a crazy 3 years if you are a homeowner I have never had problems until JP Morgan bought our morg :( 4 years ago !!
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Al Nava
Working-Class & Progressive Revolutionary Leader
11:00 PM on 10/25/2011
Right-wingers, Conservatives, Blue Dogs, Moderates, & Centrists (including Obama) are helping to destroy the Working-Class by favoring their Wall Street masters. If we (the non-sheep intelligent) People are to be victorious against their corruption, we must support, donate to, volunteer for, and vote only for Progressives and Progressive-Democrats, no matter what!

If you're with me, become a fan.
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10:39 PM on 10/25/2011
More bandaid "fixes" that will actually make problems worse in the long term. And hey, let's let banks of the hook to boot. Not to mention this is only applicable to Fannie and Freddie mortgages. Can't anyone come up with any real solutions? Anyone? Anyone?
09:42 PM on 10/25/2011
Can either of these two methods work to resolve the mortgage refinancing problem?
1.Have Obama set up a refinancing bank, and systematically take mortgages in default, may be a
hundred per week, maybe more, and let the government payoff the mortgages of these homes on the spot. When the funds have paid off the mortgages, and they are not longer under water, then have a government backed entity, Fannie Mae clone, that will refinance the home with a new mortgage
immediately, not through a private bank or finance company. Thus, the home owner is saved, and has a new fairer loan to pay down for the next 30 years, on a reduced value home.
2. Have the mortgage holder of the underwater mortgages be forced to re-value the homes down to fair market value, now, and eat the difference between what the old mortgage value was and what the re-assessed value is today. The banks owe us that.
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09:31 PM on 10/25/2011
This is a restricted (Fannie/Freddie only) and VOLUNTARY program. A bold move would have been to nationalize the banks when they were insolvent on crack like Citi and BAC and force them to convert mortgages to 2% to all credit worthy people. Only the big banks have access to the low interest money.

This is smoke and mirrors.
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WSWatchdog
citizen
07:57 PM on 10/25/2011
The above piece states : "But a key new condition in the plan would shift the financial liability for refinanced loans from Wall Street banks to the American taxpayer. And by focusing on lower payments, the program does not confront what housing experts view as the core problem in the foreclosure crisis -- borrower debt that exceeds the value of one's home."

Obama and his team are smart, it's most of America , especially the Obama Zombies that are fuls. They will continue to try to pull stuff like this until people stop believing everything they watch on TV and coming out of Oblablas mouth...which is NEVER.
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Byron Renty
Progressive Thinking
06:49 PM on 10/25/2011
Let's see, do something to keep people in their homes, instead of waiting for a do nothing house, or the Mitt Romney plan to throw you out of your house, have investors buy it for pennies, then rent the house out. A bunch of people bellyaching about what it doesn't do when the other guy wants to throw you out of your house so fat cats can make a profit? Stop whining, and get with reality! If you want to save your house here's a way to do it! If you support Romneys plan you deserve to lose your house cause he wants to speed up foreclosures so you'll be kicked out if your house sooner! With a do nothing republican house, he's doing what he can do! Unlike republicans in the house!
12:45 PM on 10/30/2011
Take a look at this CBO report..it shows how many bad mortgages are being held within Fannie and Freddie, which since these entities were taken over by the gov, should be reported on our budget and are not. They are not reported because if the general public knew that we would add 3 trillion to our debt, and over 2 more people would be homeless, as a direct result of corrupt practices by Franklin Reynes and Barney Frank..there would be no more Dems as we know them. All of this was facilitated by Chris Dodd, the former Sen from Conn and the former head of the finance committee. By the way, he chose not to run for reelection because of his own sweetheart mortgage, given by Frank Mozilla.
We are in a huge pickle now and this administration is involved in the largest coverup albeit known to financial lenders, perpetrated on the American public.
Don't get angry..just read the report, then get angry.http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/108xx/doc10878/01-13-FannieFreddie.pdf
Please read the CBO report on Fannie and Freddie..read where it says the administration does not want to include, as it should by law, the results of the accounting on both entities, in their budget.
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Byron Renty
Progressive Thinking
02:32 PM on 10/30/2011
Been there and done that, again, where's the republican plan to keep people in their homes? That is the point! And what I'm seeing from republicans is forclose faster! I already know Dodd Frank was a BAD DEAL for everybody, but it did get GOP support because the GOP had congress when it was passed! The GOP answer has been DO NOTHING. There is no magic bullet that fixes everything, I mean I could also talk about unfunded wars and how much that added to the budget along with the Bush tax cuts that are still adding trillions to the budget why aren't you talking about that? zAnd the torture the Bush administration engaged in which they should be prosecuted for, and I could keep going on and on and on... So the bottom line is what are the republicans doing to keep people in their homes? The line for the GOP is NOTHING!!!!
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Carolab
Just another hostage of the poopy heads
05:32 PM on 10/25/2011
Prof. William Black & Zach Carter: Obama’s Housing Plan Misses the Mark

http://www.dylanratigan.com/2011/10/25/prof-william-black-zach-carter-obama%e2%80%99s-housing-plan-misses-the-mark/
04:19 PM on 10/25/2011
What the hey. This is a drop in the bucket compared to BoA/Merrill shifting $75,000,000,000,000(that's trillion) worth of derivatives into a subsidiary that is FDIC(taxpayer) insured. At this point, it really doesn't make any difference anymore. We're toast
03:56 PM on 10/25/2011
This is exactly what they did in Latvia. Shift all the risk on to the homeowners and they went one step farther by pushing people to get co-signers for the loans. That way when the real estate market crashed and the home was foreclosed, the homeowner and all the co-signers were on the hook for the losses from the mortgage vs the foreclosure sale price. That's why most Latvians have left the country.
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kaymettee
03:37 PM on 10/25/2011
Whatever happened to all the scholars that Obama brought from Harvard? Aren't they doing the job he wanted them to do or are they just payback jobs for them? Naturally Obamas new plan will mostly help the banks and screw the taxpayers as usual. If it was a good plan he wouldn't have to bypass Congress. His Presidency has turned into a reign of a dictator. We all know what happens when dictators rule, the people become very unhappy. Well that's sort of like his presidency.

stuff
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Frank Stanek
02:56 PM on 10/25/2011
Everything Obama has done has been at the tax-payers expense. Where's the shock in any of this?
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