http://www.minyanville.com/articles/index.php?a=12562
1. Real Estate Woes Contained to Congress
According to an article on Bloomberg this morning, it appears the housing woes are going to be successfully contained to Congress... which will then ensure the woes are magnified and ultimately spread out evenly to infect all areas of our lives.
2. But Congress Woes Spreading to All Areas of American Life
So, while Congress is busy "containing housing woes," we'we'll tell you what this rush to legislate really means.
1. Real Estate Woes Contained to Congress
According to an article on Bloomberg this morning, it appears the housing woes are going to be successfully contained to Congress... which will then ensure the woes are magnified and ultimately spread out evenly to infect all areas of our lives.
- Although it has yet to get much play in the media for what it really means, an important housing-related article was on Bloomberg this morning.
- U.S. lawmakers want to stem the rising number of mortgage delinquencies (good for votes) by targeting investors who finance mortgage lending through mortgage backed securities.
- Bloomberg says the top Republican and Democrat (God help us when bipartisanship rears its ugly head) want to write new laws making investors who buy mortgage bonds liable for deceptive or bad loans.
- That all sounds well and good on the surface; place the burden for bad loans on the investors who are responsible for facilitating the lending practices in the first place.
- And check out this vote-winning sound bite:
- "More money was being lent than should have been lent," said Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D- MA), who added that growth in the market for mortgage bonds "provided liquidity without responsibility." - Ho ho ho! "Liquidity without responsibility!"
- That's a real kick in the crotch coming from a congressman of either party.
2. But Congress Woes Spreading to All Areas of American Life
So, while Congress is busy "containing housing woes," we'we'll tell you what this rush to legislate really means.
- It means that ultimately Congress is going to "save" the current crop of "homeowners" from themselves by raising the cost of borrowing for everybody else.
- Mortgages are going to be far more difficult to obtain for everyone.
- And because the new laws are going to make it far more risky for investors to facilitate lenders through mortgage-backed securities, the existing pool of money available for mortgages will be reduced, which will also raise the costs to subsequent mortgage borrowers.
- The irony is that in the long run the greatest beneficiary of these new laws won't be either homeowners or mortgage borrowers, but the government-sponsored enterprises, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
- See, by the time Congress realizes that the net result of the legislation is a full blown mortgage availability crisis it will be time for lawmakers to step back in and expand the role of the GSE's.
- Honestly, you can't make this stuff up!
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