Mortgage Woes
Mortgage delinquencies
The delinquency rate for mortgage loans on one-to-four-unit residential properties stood at 4.95 percent of all loans outstanding in More…
Mortgage woes push foreclosures to record high
Homeowners, struggling to deal with sharp increases in their adjustable mortgage. payments, got hit with a record More…
Treasury official: Housing woes 'far from over'
The full impact of the upheaval in financial markets “has yet to play out,” a top administration official said Wednesday, while stressing that the effect will be dampened somewhat by solid economic growth. More…
Senator introduces foreclosure legislation
Charles Schumer proposed Monday allowing two government-sponsored mortgage giants to take a bigger share of the home loan market to help stabilize More…
Senator introduces foreclosure legislation, Schumer wants caps. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac caps lifted to stabilize market
Sen. Charles Schumer proposed Monday allowing two
government-sponsored mortgage giants to take a bigger share of the home
loan market to help stabilize the troubled mortgage industry.
The New York Democrat introduced legislation to temporarily allow Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac to spend about $145 billion or 10 percent more than
current investment caps permit to fund new mortgages and refinance
existing ones.
Allowing the mortgage firms to expand their share of the $10.4 trillion
home-mortgage market would help “stem the rising tide of foreclosures
that is about to hit the economy,” Schumer said in a prepared statement.
Under Schumer’s proposal, half of the $145 billion would have to go to
refinance mortgages for borrowers who rates are scheduled to reset at
higher level by year-end.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. estimates 2.5 million mortgages
given to borrowers with weak credit will reset at higher rates by the
end of next year.
While Fannie and Freddie both say lifting the caps would help ease the
mortgage market’s troubles, the Bush administration has opposed the
move, arguing that they could pose a threat to the financial system’s
stability if their ability to assume new debt isn’t restrained and that
government supervision of them should be tightened before the caps are
increased.
Both companies are recovering from accounting scandals that emerged
earlier this decade. Last month, the companies’ federal regulator
rejected requests to ease the caps on mortgage loans or mortgage
securities they can hold in their portfolios.
Fannie Mae’s holdings of mortgages and mortgage-backed securities are
capped at $727.7 billion, while Freddie Mac’s are capped at $728.1
billion.
However, their share of the mortgage market has declined in recent years
from about 80 percent of mortgage-backed securities issued in 2001 to 44
percent of those issued last year, according to government statistics
that also include Ginnie Mae, a government agency that sells mortgage
securities.
Schumer also proposed raising the individual limit for home mortgages
that Fannie and Freddie are allowed to buy to $625,500 in expensive
areas. That limit is now at $417,000, below the median home price in
pricey areas along both coasts.
Congress created Freddie Mac in 1968 and Fannie Mae in 1936 to pump
money into the mortgage market by buying home loans from banks and other
lenders and bundling them into securities for sale to investors.
Fannie Mae shares fell 17 cents to $62.36 in afternoon trading while
Freddie Mac shares fell 52 cents to $58.80.
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