I don't know if this is allowed or required. I previously posted this at the taill end of a different thread http://itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=14077, and it seems to have been too late, so I have re-posted here on its own thread, and removed it from the former.
The problem with current housing market is that 80% of the population (most of whom were prudent) need the home prices to stay the same, or rise.
However, the foolishness of the other 20% are the ones that will cause the price volatility in the marketplace, and it is this volatility (excess supply) that will cause prices to drop like a rock, especially because the second bulge of the excesses of the 1990's is coming home to roost.
The only possibility is to do a 2-tier pricing system. This would be similar to where the unions protect the wages of veteran union members who retain their benefits and high wages by selling out all new hirees who start at minimum wage instead of $30/hr + fringe. How would you feel if the majority in the union (the old guys who have the most to lose) vote for this contract, and then you work side by side others who do the exact same job as you, the new hiree, but they make more than 3 times what you do, and you have no benefits. Some go so far as to lay you off for 1 day every 89 days, so that you never get out of probation, and never get to be a union member that gets a vote of the contract you are forced to live with. This is the closest thing to slavery today in N. America.
The government will have to set minimum price tables based on square footage, bedrooms, bathrooms, region, similar to current property assessments. It will become illegal to sell a house below this assessed minimum price, except if sold (or gifted, of Strategically Defaulted "SD") to Federal Government.
If you are an owner who needs to get out before you run out of cash, you can walk now by doing a SD, or hope to sell before you burn your cash holding on to the house against all hope of winning lottery, or finding a buyer, or government changing the rules again.
If you're a mortgagee stuck with a SD's rejected house, you can try selling it at the highest price you can get, or the legal minimum price, or let it sit vacant, or sell it to the government to recoup a fraction of its mortgage value (better than walking away with nothing, or it getting destroyed by squatters).
The government eventually buys or receives (through surrender by those making strategic defaults "SD") all the excess housing units. Government controlled land registry offices will ensure that all sales meet the minimum prices, or the transfer is not registered.
The new guys coming into the housing market (those who are currently under water and previously did a SD, as well as the new home buyers) have the advantage because their home purchase will be dirt cheap to buy one of these recycled houses.
The government (through Fannie & Freddie ?), resells the SD house at bargain basement prices to all those who need affordable houses. You are ineligible to buy a deep discount government house unless you don't already own a house, and do not own any real estate indirectly (ie. neither held by spouse, corporate share, etc.)
Of course, all the loses are held by those who took excessive credit risk, or the holder in due course of the MBS', CDO, & CDS associated with these bad mortgages. FDIC &/or bankruptcy court will eventuall sort it all out.
I would suggest this will be the Gold Standard for bank stress testing. All banks who survive this really were secure, unlike previous mirage stress tests of the banks.
Taxpayers are spared picking up the tab, or only have to pick up a small percentage through FDIC.
What does everybody think? Does it have hope? Take your best shot to blow up the idea.
The problem with current housing market is that 80% of the population (most of whom were prudent) need the home prices to stay the same, or rise.
However, the foolishness of the other 20% are the ones that will cause the price volatility in the marketplace, and it is this volatility (excess supply) that will cause prices to drop like a rock, especially because the second bulge of the excesses of the 1990's is coming home to roost.
The only possibility is to do a 2-tier pricing system. This would be similar to where the unions protect the wages of veteran union members who retain their benefits and high wages by selling out all new hirees who start at minimum wage instead of $30/hr + fringe. How would you feel if the majority in the union (the old guys who have the most to lose) vote for this contract, and then you work side by side others who do the exact same job as you, the new hiree, but they make more than 3 times what you do, and you have no benefits. Some go so far as to lay you off for 1 day every 89 days, so that you never get out of probation, and never get to be a union member that gets a vote of the contract you are forced to live with. This is the closest thing to slavery today in N. America.
The government will have to set minimum price tables based on square footage, bedrooms, bathrooms, region, similar to current property assessments. It will become illegal to sell a house below this assessed minimum price, except if sold (or gifted, of Strategically Defaulted "SD") to Federal Government.
If you are an owner who needs to get out before you run out of cash, you can walk now by doing a SD, or hope to sell before you burn your cash holding on to the house against all hope of winning lottery, or finding a buyer, or government changing the rules again.
If you're a mortgagee stuck with a SD's rejected house, you can try selling it at the highest price you can get, or the legal minimum price, or let it sit vacant, or sell it to the government to recoup a fraction of its mortgage value (better than walking away with nothing, or it getting destroyed by squatters).
The government eventually buys or receives (through surrender by those making strategic defaults "SD") all the excess housing units. Government controlled land registry offices will ensure that all sales meet the minimum prices, or the transfer is not registered.
The new guys coming into the housing market (those who are currently under water and previously did a SD, as well as the new home buyers) have the advantage because their home purchase will be dirt cheap to buy one of these recycled houses.
The government (through Fannie & Freddie ?), resells the SD house at bargain basement prices to all those who need affordable houses. You are ineligible to buy a deep discount government house unless you don't already own a house, and do not own any real estate indirectly (ie. neither held by spouse, corporate share, etc.)
Of course, all the loses are held by those who took excessive credit risk, or the holder in due course of the MBS', CDO, & CDS associated with these bad mortgages. FDIC &/or bankruptcy court will eventuall sort it all out.
I would suggest this will be the Gold Standard for bank stress testing. All banks who survive this really were secure, unlike previous mirage stress tests of the banks.
Taxpayers are spared picking up the tab, or only have to pick up a small percentage through FDIC.
What does everybody think? Does it have hope? Take your best shot to blow up the idea.
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