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GOP filibuster blocks Senate bill to change mortgage loan limits

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  • GOP filibuster blocks Senate bill to change mortgage loan limits

    By MICHAEL POLLICK

    Lobbyists for mortgage lenders and builders got nowhere trying to beef up the loan limit provisions contained within the economic stimulus legislation that the U.S. Senate considered on Wednesday.

    The overall $158 billion economic stimulus plan drafted by Senate Democrats was blocked by a Republican filibuster Wednesday night when the Senate fell a single vote short of the 60 needed to consider the measure.

    The Mortgage Bankers Association was pushing for a nationwide, across-the-board increase in the conforming loan limit to $625,000 from the current $417,000, and the National Association of Home Builders was trying for a two-year extension of any higher loan limits that Congress adopts, instead of letting the new limits fade away at the end of 2008. Neither succeeded.

    Though the legislation is still percolating, the Senate thus far has left untouched the House loan limit provisions, according to David Crowe, senior vice president of the National Association of Home Builders in Washington, D.C.

    The House bill would set up a new system for determining the local ceiling on a Fannie Mae conventional loan based on the median home prices that prevail in a given metro area.

    For most communities in the nation, including Sarasota-Bradenton, where the median home prices are less than $336,100, the current $417,000 conventional loan limit would remain in place.

    Regarding the Fannie Mae limits, it turns out that “Naples is actually the only city in Florida that we calculate would get a boost,” Crowe said.

    On the positive side for home buyers and sellers, limits for Federal Housing Administration loans on owner-occupied dwellings would rise substantially in Sarasota-Bradenton under the current legislation — to $296,875 versus the present $225,625 — under the proposed legislation.

    Last modified: February 07. 2008 10:13AM
    H.R. 5140 on Thomas
    Last edited by Slimprofits; February 10, 2008, 06:25 AM.

  • #2
    Re: GOP filibuster blocks Senate bill to change mortgage loan limits

    Babbitd -

    If I could make a respectful suggestion? You've started 28 new threads in the last 2 pages of the iTulip news forums? This is equivalent to turning the news forums into a generalized "Babbitd news feed".

    I'm absolutely not against it, but maybe they could be consolidated into one single "general news" thread per week to keep the lookup process a little more manageable? (Geez, I think I'm having a "Jim Nickerson Webpage Governess Moment" here!).

    My apologies. I don't mean to be in your face about it at all!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: GOP filibuster blocks Senate bill to change mortgage loan limits

      Originally posted by Lukester View Post
      Babbitd -

      If I could make a respectful suggestion? You've started 28 new threads in the last 2 pages of the iTulip news forums? This is equivalent to turning the news forums into a generalized "Babbitd news feed".

      I'm absolutely not against it, but maybe they could be consolidated into one single "general news" thread per week to keep the lookup process a little more manageable? (Geez, I think I'm having a "Jim Nickerson Webpage Governess Moment" here!).

      My apologies. I don't mean to be in your face about it at all!
      No, that's a good point and suggestion...I tend to get carried away sometimes.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: GOP filibuster blocks Senate bill to change mortgage loan limits

        I think we are all getting in deep with this subject, i tried today to discuss with a bloke whom works in the Unit next to mine. Steve is a bright guy, good engineer but sadly follows the Goverment lead.

        Believes 100% that:-
        Sadam attacked New York
        WMD tales
        Low inflation

        I sense the penny is starting to drop, but its only here that i can find like minded guys with thought provoking idea's.

        "May you live in intersting times"
        Mike

        Comment


        • #5
          "Stimulus Bill" sent to the President

          Shelby says Paulson broke word on mortgage limits


          At a hearing on the two mortgage giants on Thursday, Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) recounted an exchange he had with Paulson just prior to the Treasury secretary’s talks with House leaders last month when Paulson was helping hash out the stimulus legislation.

          “I asked him, ‘Are you going to negotiate the limits?’ ” Shelby recalled. “He said, ‘Absolutely not.’ Two hours later, he did.”

          Shelby warned that he would confront Paulson on the alleged bait-and-switch at their next encounter: “I haven’t met him lately. But I’m sure I’ll see him again.”

          Then, in an exchange with top Treasury official David G. Nason, Shelby voiced doubt about Paulson’s resolve to give Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac a stronger regulator, a cause championed by Shelby and other Republicans. “I’m not sure Paulson is [committed]. He says one thing and does the other.”
          NAR Hails Passage of Economic Stimulus Package to Help Jumpstart Housing Market

          "We believe the economic stimulus bill that Congress sent to the president today is strong legislation that will quickly impact the nation's families and economy," said NAR President Richard Gaylord, a broker with RE/MAX Real Estate Specialists in Long Beach, Calif. "We are pleased that both the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (GSE) loan limits have been increased, even if only temporarily. This will be a major stimulus for the housing industry and for people who want to own a home."

          Increasing FHA loan limits will help an additional 138,000 Americans achieve the dream of homeownership and will allow nearly 200,000 homeowners to refinance and potentially keep their home, according to NAR research. In addition, NAR believes that increasing the loan limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will bolster the severely stressed housing finance market by immediately infusing much needed liquidity into the nation's mortgage market. "While such an increase will not solve the full range of housing challenges, it will play a vitally important role in improving the nation's economy and making the dream of homeownership more attainable for thousands," said Gaylord.

          An economic impact study conducted by NAR earlier this month estimated that increasing the GSEs' conforming loan limits would result in as many as 500,000 refinanced loans and could help reduce foreclosures by as much as 210,000. In addition, over 300,000 additional home sales could be generated, housing inventory would be reduced and home prices would be strengthened by two to three percentage points. "These are real results and will have an immediate and sustainable impact for families across our country," said Gaylord.

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