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Senate committee passes pro-business housing bill amidst foreclosure
crisis
By Joe Kay
21 May 2008
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A key US Senate committee passed bipartisan-supported legislation
Tuesday that will provide meager relief to homeowners while allowing
banks and mortgage companies to receive government backing for
some failing loans.
The bill, passed by the Senate Banking Committee, follows on
the heels of a similar measure passed by the House of Representatives
earlier this month. It modifies an earlier Senate version that
did not include the loan provision, but did contain tens of billions
in tax breaks for corporations.
The committee passed the proposed bill by a vote of 19 to 2,
with the support of committee chairman Christopher Dodd (Dem.-Connecticut)
and ranking minority member Richard Shelby (Rep.-Alabama). President
George W. Bush on Monday called the discussions in the Senate
progress, indicating he might sign the bill. Bush
had pledged to veto the House version.
The bill has the broad support of the financial industry, which
is facing tens of billions of dollars in losses from the housing
market decline and the broader credit crisis.
Coming in an election year, the legislation is a gesture at
aiding distressed homeowners, but it will do nothing for most
of those affected by the collapse of housing prices and the rise
in foreclosures. Its principal aim is to stem the losses suffered
by banks and other financial institutions as a result of the chaos
in the mortgage-backed securities market.
The main provision in both the House and Senate versions is
the creation of a fund under the Federal Housing Administration
(FHA) that would allow homeowners with good credit who have fallen
behind on their payments to negotiate with their lenders a reduction
in the outstanding principal. The FHA would then guarantee the
loan under a new, fixed-rate, 30-year mortgage. The bill provides
for a fund to cover up to $300 billion in loans.
Since the plan is entirely voluntary, it would allow the banks
to modify a given loan only when it considered that option more
profitable than risking default under the old terms. At the same
time, any losses from defaults on the new mortgages would be covered
by the government.
Only a small minority of distressed borrowers are expected
to benefit from the new fund. The Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) has estimated that a maximum of 500,000 homeowners would
qualify. In contrast, some 1.5 million families are already in
foreclosure, and another 2.8 million are expected to file over
the next four years.
There are about 8,000 new foreclosures every day throughout
the country. US foreclosure filings in April were 65 percent higher
than a year before.
In a sign of its wholly inadequate character, the Banking Committee
estimates that the fund would cost about $500 million over three
years, while the House estimated that its slightly different version
would cost $1.7 billion over five years.
In comparison, the Iraq war costs about $341 million every
day. In March, the Federal Reserve put up $29 billion of its own
funds to underwrite the takeover of investment bank Bear Stearns
by JPMorgan Chase.
Bush threatened to veto the House bill primarily because of
the $1.7 billion cost. To avert this threat, the Senate agreed
to fund it by diverting money from a new affordable housing trust
fund to be set up under mortgage enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac.
Shelby said after the vote on Tuesday, I dont believe
the president will veto thisI hope nottheres
no taxpayer money involved here.
Democratic Congressman Barney Frank of Massachusetts, the chairman
of the House Finance Committee, however, has trumpeted precisely
that very limited affordable housing provision as one of the most
important aspects of the House bill. On Tuesday, Frank declared,
A fight is brewing on the affordable housing trust fund,
but he indicated that a deal was likely in the end.
The paltry funds involved mean that the housing bill, provided
that it eventually passes, will do next to nothing to affect the
decline in home prices. Financial Times columnist John
Dizard remarked in a column published on Tuesday, As far
as I can tell the intent [of the legislation] is to do nothing
to commit the federal government to any dramatic increase in spending
on support to the housing market.
Another major provision in the Senate bill would tighten regulation
over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are known as government-sponsored
enterprises (GSEs) because they have the financial backing of
the US Treasury.
Earlier this year, the government loosened some restrictions
on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to facilitate their growing role
in the mortgage market. In the first quarter of this year, the
two enterprises handled more than 80 percent of mortgages, more
than double their share in 2006. This is because many banks and
financial institutions have been scaling back their mortgage businesses
in response to the housing crisis.
Over the past several months, the two GSEs have reported billions
of dollars in losses. Their assets of $83 billion cover a massive
$5 trillion in debts and other obligations.
Shelby told the Hill in an interview last week, If
they failed, why, Bear Stearns and all the others, theyd
be like little grocery stores compared to the risk that they would
have to the system.
While the details have yet to be released, the Senate legislation
would create a GSE regulator that would have the power to mandate
increases in their capital reserves.
Credit crisis
The housing bill takes place within the context of a financial
and economic crisis for which the American ruling elite has no
solution. Over the past several years, a small layer of the population
has made billions through various means of financial speculation,
including in the housing market. As the housing market soared,
millions of Americans were able to afford homes only through the
accumulation of unsustainable levels of debt.
There were several signs early this week that the credit crisis
extending throughout the economy is far from over.
Analysts at Oppenheimer investment funds released a report
on Tuesday that declared, We believe the real harrowing
days of the credit crisis are still in front of us and will prove
more widespread in effect than anything yet seen.
Our view is that the credit crisis will extend well into
2009 and perhaps beyond, and although the complexion will change,
the net effect will be the same: three years of multibillion-dollar
revenue reversals, the analysts wrote. Multitrillion
dollars of loans were underwritten with the false assumption that
home prices would go up in perpetuity on a national basis.
The credit crunch has seized up derivative credit markets,
including the credit default swaps (CDS) market. A CDS is a contract
between two parties in which one party provides payments to another
in return for insurance against the default of a third party (e.g.,
a bank or corporation). The unregulated CDS market currently protects
an estimated $62 trillion in debt. More than half of all CDSs
are tied to asset-backed securities, including those backed by
mortgages.
An article on the Bloomberg new service Tuesday quoted billionaire
investor George Soros as noting that the CDS market is a
Damocles sword waiting to fall and could trigger the next
global financial crisis.
Banks and other institutions have been scrambling to increase
their cash reserves to cover credit defaults. On Tuesday, American
International Group, an insurance giant, said it was seeking to
raise $20 billion in new capital, 60 percent more than announced
earlier. Last week AIG reported first-quarter losses of $7.8 billion,
following over $15 billion in write-downs for CDS and mortgage
securities.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell nearly 200 points on
Tuesday on investor concerns about inflation, consumer spending
and the credit crisis. The financial markets have been buoyed
in recent weeks by the assumption that Washington would move to
bail out any serious problem to hit Wall Street.
As this process unwinds, the main aim of the government has
been to engineer a more orderly deflation of the market and deleveraging
of the financial system, allowing banks and corporations to place
the burden of the crisis on working people through wage and job
cuts.
See Also:
US workers paying the price for Wall
Streets debacle
[16 May 2008]
House of Representatives passes Democratic
home mortgage bill backed by the Fed and banking industry
[9 May 2008]
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