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How Cali Plans to Spend Its Fed Largess

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  • How Cali Plans to Spend Its Fed Largess

    California to Implement Four Programs With Hardest Hit Funding

    By: Brittany Dunn 04/30/2010


    In a proposal submitted to the Treasury Department, the California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA) detailed how it plans to use $699.1 million in federal aid made available through the administration’s Hardest Hit Fund.

    According to the proposal, CalHFA will use the funds to implement four distinct programs, three designed to help California homeowners remain in their homes and one intended to help underwater homeowners transition out of their homes into more affordable housing. Qualified households will be eligible to receive a maximum benefit of $50,000, which may be used on one individual program or in conjunction with others.

    Through its Unemployment Mortgage Assistance Program, CalHFA will provide temporary financial assistance in the form of a mortgage payment subsidy of varying size and term to unemployed homeowners at risk of foreclosure. These funds will provide up to six months of benefits, with a monthly benefit of up to $1,500 or 50 percent of the existing total monthly mortgage payment, whichever is less. The program benefit cap will be $9,000

    per household. According to The Wall Street Journal, CalHFA will use around $427 million – the bulk of its hardest hit funding – for this program.

    The Mortgage Reinstatement Program was designed to provide financial assistance to reinstate delinquent mortgage loans that are in arrears to prevent foreclosures. Funds available through this program will provide benefits of up to $15,000 per household or 50 percent of the past mortgage due arrearage amount, with a required dollar-for-dollar contribution match from the lender, servicer, insurer, and/or borrower.

    A third program, the Principal Reduction Program, will provide capital on a matching basis with participating financial institutions to reduce outstanding principal balances of qualifying borrowers with negative equity to market levels needed to prevent avoidable foreclosures and promote sustainable homeownership. Funds will be available up to the benefit cap of $50,000 per household, and all dollars associated with the program must be matched dollar-for-dollar by the participating lender.

    The final program will provide eligible homeowner with transition assistance when it is determined that they can no longer afford their home. The Transition Assistance Program will be used in conjunction with short sale and deed-in-lieu of foreclosure programs to help borrowers transition to affordable housing. TAP funds will be available on a one-time only basis of up to $5,000 per household.

    In addition to these four programs, CalHFA proposed allocating $20 million to a local innovation fund. The agency said this separate fund will encourage a variety of “alternative and innovative” solutions for mitigating the foreclosure crisis.

    http://www.dsnews.com/articles/calif...ing-2010-04-30

    Remember- it wasn't that long ago- when the idea that the Feds would subsidize housing, food, medical, you name it, anything but wage/salary increases, seemed far fetched.

  • #2
    Re: How Cali Plans to Spend Its Fed Largess

    So this is how they plan on pushing up personal consumption.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: How Cali Plans to Spend Its Fed Largess

      Originally posted by chr5648 View Post
      So this is how they plan on pushing up personal consumption.
      That's how they plan to continue to push up consumption ;)

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: How Cali Plans to Spend Its Fed Largess

        Originally posted by don
        Through its Unemployment Mortgage Assistance Program, CalHFA will provide temporary financial assistance in the form of a mortgage payment subsidy of varying size and term to unemployed homeowners at risk of foreclosure. These funds will provide up to six months of benefits, with a monthly benefit of up to $1,500 or 50 percent of the existing total monthly mortgage payment, whichever is less. The program benefit cap will be $9,000

        per household. According to The Wall Street Journal, CalHFA will use around $427 million – the bulk of its hardest hit funding – for this program.
        Dr. Michael Hudson calls it again. This program feeds directly from the government to the banks.

        Originally posted by don
        The Mortgage Reinstatement Program was designed to provide financial assistance to reinstate delinquent mortgage loans that are in arrears to prevent foreclosures. Funds available through this program will provide benefits of up to $15,000 per household or 50 percent of the past mortgage due arrearage amount, with a required dollar-for-dollar contribution match from the lender, servicer, insurer, and/or borrower.


        An even more naked transfer to lenders.

        Originally posted by don
        A third program, the Principal Reduction Program, will provide capital on a matching basis with participating financial institutions to reduce outstanding principal balances of qualifying borrowers with negative equity to market levels needed to prevent avoidable foreclosures and promote sustainable homeownership. Funds will be available up to the benefit cap of $50,000 per household, and all dollars associated with the program must be matched dollar-for-dollar by the participating lender.


        A little pain(?) for the lender: halve their losses associated with negative equity. How nice.

        Originally posted by don
        The final program will provide eligible homeowner with transition assistance when it is determined that they can no longer afford their home. The Transition Assistance Program will be used in conjunction with short sale and deed-in-lieu of foreclosure programs to help borrowers transition to affordable housing.
        Originally posted by don
        TAP funds will be available on a one-time only basis of up to $5,000 per household.
        To sum: $74,000 to make the bank good, then $5000 for the former homeowner to move.

        Although the 'one time' clause to the transition program makes me wonder if there is anything dissimilar with the previous 3.

        And what do the responsible people get? Devalued dollars.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: How Cali Plans to Spend Its Fed Largess

          Not to mention the much bigger virtuous circle of feds covering toxic mortgage portfolios with an identical bank buy of Treasuries. That is a crucial component of waiving foreclosure evictions and allowing no-payment occupancy. It's another significant, due to its scale, federal consumption stimulus. Will this now end?

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: How Cali Plans to Spend Its Fed Largess

            Originally posted by don
            Not to mention the much bigger virtuous circle of feds covering toxic mortgage portfolios with an identical bank buy of Treasuries. That is a crucial component of waiving foreclosure evictions and allowing no-payment occupancy. It's another significant, due to its scale, federal consumption stimulus. Will this now end?
            It will end when the Mark to Fantasy ends...maybe in 10 years. Or when the whole system topples in 2014?

            Comment

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