Senators push bill to replace Fannie, Freddie with national mortgage insurance

"The two firms, which back nearly half of all new U.S. home loans, were chartered by Congress to expand mortgage finance but operated as private, profit-making companies. Given the central role they played in the financial system, the government felt compelled to bail them out when they ran into trouble. The bill would require private entities to buy mortgages from lenders and issue them to investors as securities. Private equity would be required to absorb a 10 percent loss of the principal underlying those new mortgage-backed securities if the loans went bad. A new guarantor, called the Federal Mortgage Insurance Corp., would replace Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac." Continue reading

Continue ReadingSenators push bill to replace Fannie, Freddie with national mortgage insurance

1,700,000 Foreclosures Are in the Pipeline.

"A government report says that 1.7 million homeowners are 90 days or more late in their mortgage payments. Fannie Mae and HUD will wind up with these homes on their books, unless they decide to let the homeowners live rent-free. This is shadow inventory. It hangs like the sword of Damocles over the housing market. If the government does nothing, these homeowners will receive a huge subsidy: a tax-free grant equal to their mortgage payment, month after month, year after year. But if it forecloses, what will it do with these empty houses. Then the subsidy goes to operators of the squatters. Will the government kick the can? Probably." Continue reading

Continue Reading1,700,000 Foreclosures Are in the Pipeline.

Private paramilitaries guard Wisconsin mining site from protesters

The company brought in the paramilitary forces after being confronted by a group of about 15 protesters in June. At least one of the demonstrators, a young woman, was hit with misdemeanor charges for trying to take a camera away from one of the company’s geologists. Gogebic claims they’ve since caught several people illegally camping on their property and did not want to take any chances. The company hired by Gogebic is Arizona-based Bulletproof Securities, which boasts that many of their employees are ex-military. A spokesperson for Gogebic told The Cap Times on Tuesday that they’re considering restricting their drilling sites from public access." Continue reading

Continue ReadingPrivate paramilitaries guard Wisconsin mining site from protesters

Foreclosures are the Solution, Not the Problem

"The majority of those foreclosed on and who sold short would have become clean potential buyers in 3 to 7 years ensuring a housing recovery was not only on deck but would be 'durable'. Millions of legacy HELOCs and HELOANs preventing folks from rebuying real estate indefinitely would have been exterminated making millions more potential buyers within 2 to 5 years. Bottom line, history will not be kind to loan mods and workouts. It will show that modifications, anti-foreclosure laws, banks protecting their HELOC assets — in general, unabated can-kicking — was responsible for housing to remain in a depression for years longer than it would have." Continue reading

Continue ReadingForeclosures are the Solution, Not the Problem

Three key lessons from recent travels around the world

"One member is a sharp, contrarian hedge fund manager. He gave a brief presentation on why Greek stocks are a tremendous bargain right now, despite almost every other world market being overpriced near their all-time highs. Another friend of mine who is a real estate mogul said that much of the price rise we’re seeing in US housing is due to a wave of hedge funds that are buying vacant properties. He said he expects most of these hedge funds will liquidate within 18-24 months, flooding the market with homes and driving prices back down. When it came my turn to make some remarks, I told the group three things I’ve learned in my recent travels." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThree key lessons from recent travels around the world

Families occupy unfinished homes in Spain

"On the edge of a green field where horses graze, Juana and her neighbours found this mini estate of more than 70 elegantly painted three-bedroom houses, empty and partly plundered. She says about 70 families have moved into the estate in the past three weeks, into houses that are all but finished but lack water and electricity. Like countless projects across Spain, the site was abandoned by property developers when the bank loans dried up in the 2008 financial crisis. Local authorities have remained silent on the status of the site. Unlike many of Spain’s so-called 'ghost towns', life has returned to this one, in the form of local families ruined by the crisis." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFamilies occupy unfinished homes in Spain