Monday, December 15, 2008

"providing just about everybody with access to a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage with a 4.5 percent interest rate."

I wonder if this is a trial balloon. Kevin Hassett on Bloomberg:

"Dec. 15 (Bloomberg) -- Pollster Frank Luntz asked a large audience at a conference in Washington last week to raise their hands if they had received a government bailout. While they chuckled and rested their hands on their laps, Luntz made an important observation. Bailout money is snowing down in an unprecedented blizzard, and if the moves fail to stimulate the economy, there will be a lot of angry voters."

This is a very serious concern. The bailout cannot be limited to the Financial Sector for this reason.

"Perhaps the same realization moved President-elect Barack Obama’s economic advisers to begin considering a bailout for the masses.

If Luntz asks the same question a few months from now, everyone may well lift their hand.

Bloomberg News last week reported that the chairman- designate of the National Economic Council, Lawrence Summers, had been conferring with conservative icon and Columbia Business School Dean Glenn Hubbard about a housing plan Hubbard designed with Columbia colleague Christopher Mayer. Obama’s economic advisers appear to have embraced the proposal, which is already “on a fast track at the Treasury,” according to the story.

The Hubbard-Mayer plan calls for the government to revive the moribund housing market by providing just about everybody with access to a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage with a 4.5 percent interest rate. That’s almost a full percentage point lower than the average national rate of 5.47 percent currently.

Buyers could borrow as much as 95 percent of the value of the home they purchase. The plan might extend to those with existing mortgages, allowing them to refinance and get the same terms. When either type of deal is complete, the lender will place the loan with Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac."

I'm finding this hard to believe.

"Splitting the Loss

Anyone refinancing with positive equity in their home would be relatively easy to accommodate. For those with negative equity -- meaning the dollar amount of their mortgage exceeds the value of their house -- Hubbard and Mayer recommend that homeowners and lenders split the loss evenly and start over with a clean mortgage reset to reflect the property’s current market value.

With some forecasts for fourth-quarter gross domestic product growth inching toward negative 8 percent at an annualized rate, drastic policy measures are becoming increasingly palatable.

This mortgage plan is radical, and might just be powerful enough to help turn this troubled economy around.

The bottom line: if you have a mortgage, this plan would put extra money in your pocket.

Imagine, for example, that you have a $500,000 mortgage with a 30-year fixed-rate loan carrying an interest rate of 6.1 percent, the average rate for a fixed 30-year mortgage issued this year. Lowering the interest rate to 4.5 percent would reduce monthly payments by about $500 monthly. Someone with a mortgage of $150,000 would save about $150 a month."

It's so radical that it's hardly believable.

"Better Than Rebates

These monthly payments changes are different from tax rebates because they would last for many years. For that reason, consumers would be fairly likely to increase their spending. After all, if your monthly housing expenses just dropped by $400, then adding a new car payment of $300 a month might seem a lot less frightening, even in these difficult times.

These subsidized mortgages should increase the number of home buyers and help push property values back up. There are a lot of problems in the economy, but they all began in the housing sector and it seems likely that staunching the bleeding there is a prerequisite for achieving financial stability."

It's not clear how far we have to go on this housing correction.

"Make no mistake, this remedy will be costly.

$3 Trillion

Last week’s report suggests that the Obama team may be wary of allowing everyone access to this plan, since it costs so much -- $3 trillion by one recent estimate. One constraint being discussed is to disallow refinancing, limiting the program to home buyers.

The restriction will be impossible to impose, however. All that you would need to do to qualify for the 4.5 percent rate would be to find a “bailout buddy” and agree to purchase each others’ homes with the new low-rate loan. You could then either swap the homes back, or agree to rent the homes to each other for the same fee.

Also, the program will have the largest possible effect on home prices, a key target of the policy, only if borrowers expect it to last a long time. After all, if the person you sell your house to in the future has to borrow at a high interest rate to finance the purchase, then he will offer a lower price. That realization should affect the price you are willing to pay today."

That was Dean Baker's problem with the 4.5 % Target Plan.

"Thus, the cost will be steep for two reasons. It will be tough to limit the new mortgage to home buyers, and the program will have to be sustained for a long time.

In the past, steep costs would have killed such a bill. But in today’s environment, it has almost become a political necessity to give voters their bailout too.

Ladies and gentlemen, grab your bailout buddy, help is on the way."

Is this real?

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