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I have been saying all year that the only solution to the
housing crisis is to lower mortgage rates. Finally, the
government has figured out how to enact a plan to do so.
Read the article that was published by the AP
yesterday….
Treasury Department Considers Plan to Lower Mortgage
Rates
Financial industry lobbyists are urging the Treasury
Department to take steps to lower rates on 30-year mortgages to
4.5 percent.
AP
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
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WASHINGTON — Financial industry lobbyists are urging the
Treasury Department to take steps to lower mortgage rates and
help stabilize the battered U.S. housing market.
Under one proposal, Treasury would seek to lower the rate on
a 30-year mortgage to 4.5 percent by purchasing mortgage-backed
securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Scott Talbott,
chief lobbyist at the Financial Services Roundtable, said
Wednesday.
If enacted, such a plan would be an unprecedented
opportunity for anyone with good credit and a solid income who
could qualify for a mortgage at the lowest rates on records
dating to the early 1960s, said Keith Gumbinger, senior vice
president at financial publisher HSH Associates.
“You would have the mother of all re-fi booms,” said
mortgage industry consultant Howard Glaser.
The goal of the industry’s proposal would be to take
advantage of the unusually large difference, or spread, between
mortgage rates and yields on government debt. On Wednesday, the
yield on the 10-year Treasury note yield sank as low as 2.65
percent, while the national average rate on a 30-year fixed
rate mortgages was 5.75 percent, according to HSH
Associates.
In recent years, there has been about a 1.8 percentage point
difference between the yield on a 10-year Treasury note and a
30-year mortgage rate, but that spread currently hovers around
3 percentage points.
Analysts said that the government could use its ability to
borrow money at low rates to in essence flood the market for
mortgage-backed securities. This increased demand would tend to
push down the yield on mortgage securities sold by Fannie and
Freddie, which now average about 5.5 percent because of
investor concerns about default risks. Once those yields fall,
the theory goes, lower mortgage rates should follow.
That would have two benefits for the economy: Immediately
adding money to the pocketbooks of homeowners who can refinance
their mortgages and reduce their monthly payments, and
eventually help arrest the slide in home prices since much
lower mortgage rates would allow more potential buyers to
qualify for loans.
“The goal is drive mortgage rates so low that home prices
not only stop falling but begin to rebound,” said Greg McBride,
senior financial analyst at Bankrate.com.
If the government does buy up mortgage securities, it would
be similar to the effort announced last week by the Federal
Reserve to purchase up to $500 billion of mortgage-backed
securities from Fannie and Freddie. The two mortgage giants,
which were seized by federal regulators in September, own or
guarantee about half of the $11.5 trillion in U.S. outstanding
home loan debt.
The Fed, however, did not announce a specific target for
mortgage rates, which plunged about a half percentage point
after the announcement.
That caused new mortgage applications to more than double
last week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s
weekly survey released Wednesday. Refinance volume more than
tripled, and made up for nearly 70 percent of all
applications.
Still, the industry plan is not likely to help borrowers
whose credit is so damaged that banks don’t want to lend to
them.
“It doesn’t do anything to help all the borrowers facing
foreclosures,” said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage
Finance, a trade publication. “It’s going to benefit the people
who have equity in their home, who have decent credit and can
refinance.”
Treasury is considering several options, and could announce
a decision as early as next week, industry sources said.
Treasury spokeswoman Brookly McLaughlin said she would not
comment on speculation about actions the department may take in
the future.
The proposal was reported Wednesday afternoon on The Wall
Street Journal’s Web site.
Treasury could make such a proposal as part of a request for
the second $350 billion of the $700 billion financial rescue
fund, industry sources said.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has been criticized by
members of Congress for using the bailout money to shore up
Wall Street banks, while not doing enough to help homeowners
facing foreclosure.
In recent weeks, a diverse set of industry groups from real
estate agents to carpet makers have called on lawmakers and the
incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama to
subsidize lower mortgage rates and beef up tax credits to help
stimulate housing demand.
The National Association of Realtors has been pushing a plan
under which the federal government would spend $50 billion to
lower mortgage rates. It says doing so would yield about
500,000 more home sales.
Meanwhile, the National Association of Home Builders is
leading a new “Fix Housing First” coalition to push for aid to
the ailing housing sector, including a tax credit of up to
$22,000 for anyone who buys a home before the end of 2009.
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