Wednesday, February 20, 2008

The Government’s 30 Day Mortgage Bail-out Band-Aid

Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson announced yesterday that 6 of the major banks have come to an agreement to freeze the foreclosure process for 30 days. This is for borrowers who are more than 90 days late. The program is called Project Lifeline.

Now how is that for a plan of action? Are things that bad that the Government has to recommend halting the foreclosure process for a measly 30 days just to figure out what to do next? For most homeowners that are in trouble, an additional 30 days does nothing more than postpone the inevitable.

Well, the foreclosure problem is that bad and looks to get much worse. The Government has a real problem on their hands that could have been prevented if they would have done their job.

Let’s look at this for what it is at face value. We could face an alarming number of foreclosures in 2008 and 2009. Of the homeowners that are in trouble or will be in trouble, a percentage were victims of predatory lending. I would suggest that the vast majority understood they were taking out a loan based on a low payment and buying more home than they could afford.

The system is way too complicated for a government intervention and bail-out. The consequences would be enormous. Someone should tell the Democrats about the consequences. Senator Clinton, with all of her “I told you so”s, chimed in again today saying that she is the only one that has been warning about this and has been for a year. Of course, her solution is to freeze interest rates for years and save the day. Oh Hillary, if it were that easy. Incidentally, this has been a news story for well over a year now. Just like Al Gore didn’t invent the internet, she didn’t warn the world of the impending foreclosure problem.

Then there is my favorite. Now Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd is a real piece of work. He thinks that the Government should buy these loans and re-work them. Seems to me that if his committee was overseeing the banking industry effectively, these irresponsible loans and loose lending standards would have never happened. Just like every other good politician, his solution is to just let the government flip the bill for the problem.

How about pointing to the banking community who created this problem? How about forcing them to rewrite these loans at today’s rates on 30-year fixed notes, regardless of credit? If the homeowner cannot still afford the payment, then nature must take its course. Is Congress protecting the banks or doing its best to protect the consumer? It really is tough to tell.

A program should also be set up to help those who can prove that they were a victim of predatory lending. That group would include everyone who was allowed to buy a home without proof of income. That is a clear example of predatory lending. This problem and solution should be on the shoulders of the banking community.

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