The home mortgage buy-up has already been approved; Update: McCain camp confirms no additional fund request
posted at 11:05 am on October 8, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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Last night, conservatives groaned in unison when John McCain launched his “new” initiative to renegotiate the principal on home mortgages with owners approaching bankruptcy. Some called this a “second bailout”, and others predicted a massive hit on home values nationwide. In fact, this is nothing terribly new nor innovative, and it has as much chance of preserving home values as it does of eroding them.
First, lenders already have begun modifiying mortgages, including principal, and for very good reason. Foreclosures create massive losses for lenders, and they’re better off keeping owners in their homes and making payments — even if they take a 10-20% loss on the principal, on paper. The result will be lower profit than originally expected, but it’s still profit, and right now that looks a lot better than a potential 50-75% loss through foreclosure.
Now that Treasury will buy hundreds of billions in mortgage-backed securities, they in effect have become the lender. They will own the papers on these homes, and must act in the long-term best interest in managing them. That will mean negotiating with homeowners just as private lenders have already done, trying to keep people in their homes and preventing as many defaults as possible. Note that this comes as a result of the legislation Congress already passed, and not any new initiative. What McCain proposes is a specific strategy of managing the paper to prevent as many homes from foreclosure as possible. In the end, that strategy could result in considerable long-term profit rather than a taxpayer bath.
Renegotiating the principal on these loans will not directly impact home values, for two reasons. The action will keep these homes off the market, while home values depend on the sale prices of homes in the immediate vicinity. Second, home values are already dropping, thanks to the deflation of the housing bubble, excess inventory through overbuilding of new homes, and the anticipated addition of tens of thousands of foreclosures. Lenders are also not writing too many mortgages these days, making it impossible to buy or sell. If these foreclosures hit the market, it will not only drastically lower the prices in neighborhoods across America, it will eat into the ability of lenders to grant mortgages in the future — and they won’t have Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac backstopping them any longer.
This proposal doesn’t go any farther than Congress has already gone in injecting the government into private lending markets in order to undo their disastrous interventions over the past decade. It does offer a management strategy for the portfolios that Treasury will buy with that now-existing authority. The plan follows a fairly straightforward private-sector strategy in an attempt to keep as many people in their homes as possible. Without some sort of renegotiation on these loans, we’ll start seeing massive foreclosures and the rapid deflation of home values everywhere — which is what McCain said he wanted to prevent.
Update: Michelle strongly disagrees.
Update II: I’ve consulted an economist on this point, and he points out that the trouble with MBSs is that they consist of pieces of several loans. That’s what will make renegotiating terms through the private sector almost impossible — it will require hundreds of people to agree on each one. He thinks that McCain’s proposal will create a shortcut that will allow for quick renegotiation, which could keep many of these mortgages from going into default.
The McCain campaign confirmed with me that the $300 billion McCain referenced was part of the existing bailout, not an additional outlay. He wants it redirected into this effort. I’ve asked for a link, and I’ll add it when I get it.
Update III: Marc Ambinder has this report from a Team McCain conference call this morning:
On a conference call with reporters, McCain policy chief Douglas Holtz-Eakin spelled out how McCain would pay for his plan for the government to buy troubled mortgages and replace when with more favorable fixed-rate mortgages at minimal direct cost to the homeowners. The government could use some of the $700 billion authorized for the bailout and tap other accounts, although the campaign estimates that, owing to negative equity — the government can’t magically turn bad mortgages into good ones without taking a hit — would be $300 billion. The McCain team hopes that by buying mortgages directly, the government wouldn’t have to buy as many distressed assets from big banks, thus reducing the net cost. McCain claims this idea as his own, although the bailout/rescue bill already gives the government the authority to deal directly with homeowners, and Obama has suggested that the government do the same — although McCain’s certainly being more aggressive here.
As I said, the authority to do this was in the plan all along. It’s not an additional $300 billion — it’s using $300 billion of the $700 billion already authorized to hit more directly on mortgages rather than rescuing investors from their derivatives. It transfers at least some of the pain back to the people who speculated on mortgages, but in effect gives the derivatives more value through the support of the mortgages on which they’re based.
Update IV: The Hope for Homeowners program, within the plan passed by Congress a week ago, already has this mechanism within it:
HOPE for Homeowners (H4H) is a program designed to assist borrowers at risk of default or foreclosure in refinancing to an affordable 30-year fixed rate FHA loan. The program is effective October 1, 2008 and will conclude on September 30, 2011. …
The loan amount may not exceed a nationwide maximum of $550,440.
The new mortgage will be no more than 90% of the new appraised value including any financed UFMIP with the lender essentially writing down the current mortgage to that amount.
Upfront MIP is 3% and the monthly MIP is 1.5%
The holders of existing mortgage liens must waive all prepayment penalties and late payment fees.
The existing first mortgage must accept the proceeds of the H4H loan as full settlement of all outstanding indebtedness.
Existing subordinate lenders must release their outstanding mortgage liens.
Update V: King Banaian looks at the McCain proposal:
There’s a glut of homes on the market. A glut is reduced either by decreasing supply or increasing demand. Lee Ohanian tries to sell an increased in skilled immigrants as a way to increase demand. The McCain Resurgence Plan, at its base, tries to reduce supply by not forcing the sale of homes through foreclosures. It might be, might be, cheaper to throw a few dollars into homes directly than to support the banks through the purchase of MBSs. …
The relief of negative equity means that the banks would receive from the government the difference between the principal on the original mortgage and the mortgage “at terms manageable for the homeowner.” I still need some flesh on that. I would want to know if the 31% payment-to-income ratio is the definition of manageable. I’d want to know if the government can be certain the initial purchase price on the home was not set in order to qualify someone for a shady mortgage. Those details aren’t there, and don’t look in Marty Feldstein’s pitch from last Friday (which is not exactly the same proposal anyway, but a close cousin.)
Be sure to read all of King’s post.
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Quite possibly, what McCain proposed last night was simply taking credit for something already in the bailout plan, and saying that he would implement it as President.
McCain was in Washington when the bailout plan was negotiated, and knew what was in it. Obama was out campaigning at the time, and didn’t know. The political benefits of doing the job one has been elected to do (in this case, as a Senator).
Steve Z on October 8, 2008 at 4:35 PM
The larger point is that he wants us to make a “personal sacrifices”. Even shopping is sinful (as we discovered last night when he complained about Bush’s response to 9/11) – although I’m sure he’d make an exception if you buy his books (with extra credit if you buy the tall tales inside).
We can’t say we weren’t forewarned of his intentions by his Socialist wife:
Barack Obama will require you to work. He is going to demand that you shed your cynicism. That you put down your divisions. That you come out of your isolation, that you move out of your comfort zones. That you push yourselves to be better. And that you engage. Barack will never allow you to go back to your lives as usual, uninvolved, uninformed.
And from The One himself:
We can’t drive our SUVs and eat as much as we want and keep our homes on 72 degrees at all times… and then just expect that other countries are going to say OK.
Just keep those tires inflated, folks, and you will be travelling down the road to Utopia.
Buy Danish on October 8, 2008 at 4:39 PM
Via Rich Lowry at THE CORNER, on Martin Feldstein – along with Larry Lindsay (another “socialist” I guess) one of the original designers of McCain’s proposal:
Agree or disagree, but this isn’t the time for ready, fire, aim at any substantive proposal.
http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=OGY1MTNhMGJjYTIxODQwNGYwZDI4ZDA5ZDUzMWFmYWU=
CK MacLeod on October 8, 2008 at 4:50 PM
No, I think McCain wants to go farther than the HOPE initiative takes it. The FHA HOPE program is only applicable to a relatively small number of mortgage holders. It will only finance 90% of the cost of your mortgage after the principal is adjusted. That will disqualify most of the people who are in real trouble because they will not have the means to come up with the 10% downpayment.
The ability to refinance to a fixed rate needs to be given to all homeowners that have a negative equity value. It is bad enough that so many people are taking a bath on their homes, but you need to make it so they can afford to keep their house. Forcing a family into foreclosure over some vaguely perceived notion of responsibility is not in any of our best interests at this point.
If the family loses their home it is likely that the government will end up making up for the 50% or so loss in capital that the bank will suffer. There is not winner in that. It is much better to refinance the mortgage at the new value even if you are financing 100% of the home value. If the homeowner pays off their mortgage over time they will pay at least double the mortgage amount. There is not really a loss of capital, only a reduction in profit.
I do not see why telling the mortgage lenders they need to accept a smaller profit in order to get out of the problem is unacceptable. After all they are complicit in the entire mess to begin with.
Hawthorne on October 8, 2008 at 5:11 PM
“This [Obama's] is the most liberal big-spending record in the United States Senate. I have fought against excessive spending…” McCain said.
Trouble is, with the economy in tatters and a “big-spending” government bailout touted as the only hope for the country’s stability, well-being and future survival, it may be far too late for “liberal big-spending” attack lines to have any effect at all.
- Terence Samuel
MB4 on October 8, 2008 at 5:16 PM
LOL…
One definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over, expecting a different result.
Einstein…
Trying to borrow your way out of debt… only a politican would think it would work…
Romeo13
Romeo13 on October 8, 2008 at 6:05 PM
maverick muse on October 8, 2008 at 6:34 PM
Then in some significant way, probably via pressure to keep it in the bill and vamp pressure to insure that it not get swept under the rug and ignored, it probably IS McCain’s own idea. McCain’s been on this for years–check into what all he pressed for in previous unsuccessful legislation re: FM/FM.
maverick muse on October 8, 2008 at 6:34 PM
McCain was not in DC when the compromise legislation was negotiated and passed by the Congress and Senate. If you’ve already forgotten, first McCain announced a plan to suspend his campaign and forego the debate. Once he appeared in DC, his role was to champion an alternative bailout proposal put forward by some House Republicans that Paulson and Bernanke quickly dismissed. Within 48 hours McCain had completely reversed his position and resumed his campaign, in addition to a reversal on his economic position- a week prior McCain had said that the economy was ‘fundamentally sound’.
There’s no reason for McCain to try and buy votes with the type of socialist proposal that he floated last night to try and boost home prices.
The McCain camp needs to remember than a large number of white votes will never vote for Obama because of his race. A majority of the undecided voters in this election will vote for McCain on election day. McCain’s team shouldn’t be entering panic mode. Their concerns are overblown.
bayam on October 8, 2008 at 6:42 PM
I’m reading headlines on Drudge that some European is saying this problem is too big for one country to solve.
Really? Sounds a little like a set up for a, “We need to all just come together and eliminate our borders one world government ” kind of thing.
Can you imagine how the economy would shoot through the roof, if say,, the US just eliminated, say, all corporate taxes? Brought capital gains down to zero. Eliminated all the different fuel grade mandates, cut the fuel tax, drill baby drill, repeal the bailout or at least, have it expire in 9 months, and then privatized social security. Then,, offer financial rewards of , say 20-30 million dollars or more, as well as other incentives, to individuals or companies that developed certain new technologies. Then, the icing on the cake,, pass tort reform and laws to protect businesses, pharmacies, hospitals, doctors and nurses from frivolous lawsuits, while freezing all government spending except defense. This nation would become a Super Power beyond imagination.
That is all it would take,, accept for a few hundred traitors and thieves in our government, the United States would be easily scured for another hundred years.
JellyToast on October 8, 2008 at 6:42 PM
Ed… I think you’re starting to believe your own bullsh*t.
bigbeas on October 8, 2008 at 6:58 PM
Rush has it right. Conservatives need to save the nation from Obama by dragging McCain and all his big government nonsense across the finish line. Then conservatives need to regroup and save the GOP and the nation from McCain and the fools that support him when he comes up with these ideas.
highhopes on October 8, 2008 at 7:54 PM
Rush isn’t saying that anymore.
Buy Danish on October 8, 2008 at 7:56 PM
Are you saying Rush has changed his position since 3pm today?
rockhauler on October 8, 2008 at 8:25 PM
The Flip Side of Foreclosures: Affordable Homes in Lee County Florida
No govt interference; just free enterprise at work.
Mr_Magoo on October 8, 2008 at 9:18 PM
It would have worked if the government stayed out of it but now with the bailout the ones who take the loss on the home aren’t the builder, the former owner, or the bank. The one who takes the loss is US!! You, me and every other tax payer.
I thought about moving up- selling my home in Lee County and getting a “bigger, better” house but this credit crunch isn’t anywhere near finished and I’d hate to see what the electric bill will end up being on a 4000 sq ft home with a pool at the end of this mess.
Conservative has a meaning.
Bicyea on October 9, 2008 at 11:08 AM
Well I hope all you “McCain has a good plan and we have to stabilize the markets” folks are happy this morning.
Feds are considering using part of the bailout $ to buy bank shares. Probably a little late for oversight since the socialist govt reps gave the Treasurt Sec the authority to do whatever the hell he wanted with our $.
This is just great. Just great. Crappy bank stocks are up. Stocks for sound banks like Wells Fargo who did the right thing all along are down. Between this news and the govt intervening in WFB’s purchase of Wachovia… Yeah, this is working out just fine. This is much better than the depression you’ve all been telling me about must be avoided at all costs. Well, folks. The bill is here. It’s time to pay the piper!
Feel the earth moving a little under your feet. It’s called a landslide.
Mr_Magoo on October 9, 2008 at 11:35 AM
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