US Gets Ready To Sing Sayonara To Fannie and Freddie

White House Plans to Revamp Mortgage Market: Administration Proposal to Recommend Eliminating Fannie and Freddie, Curbing Government Role in Housing Finance

Nick Timiroas, Wall Street Journal

More than two years after the government seized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Obama administration will recommend phasing out the housing-finance giants and gradually reducing the government’s footprint in the mortgage market, according to people familiar with the matter.

The administration is expected to include three options for a post-Fannie and Freddie world when it releases a long-awaited proposal for the future of the nation’s $10.6 trillion mortgage market, which could come as soon as Friday. Together with federal agencies, Fannie and Freddie have accounted for nine of 10 new loan originations in the past year.

The White House’s “white paper” will begin what promises to be a prolonged and fiery debate about the future of how homes are financed across the U.S. Any wind-down of Fannie and Freddie would happen gradually to avoid roiling markets, and the central, unanswered question is what kind of federal function, if any, the administration and Congress will invent to take their place.

Steps to reduce the government role in the mortgage market likely would raise borrowing costs for home buyers, adding pressure on the still-fragile U.S. housing markets. Consequently, analysts believe any transition could take years and would be driven by the pace of the housing market’s recovery.

The fight over how to restructure the housing-finance system has roiled Washington, and yet both parties have been hesitant to propose detailed legislation.

For conservatives, Fannie and Freddie played a starring role in the financial crisis, and any solution that is viewed as replicating their function could face fierce opposition from some Republicans. But more moderate Republicans may resist such an approach and could join Democrats who have said a federal role is necessary to ensure broad access to home ownership.

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White House Developing New Program to Help Homeowners

Expecting millions of foreclosures, the Obama administration is developing an alternative program to help troubled homeowners avoid losing their home, beyond a mortgage modification program the White House launched in March, according to a key Treasury official on Thursday.

“We are developing a foreclosure alternatives program for HAMP [Home Affordable Modification Program], which will provide incentives for short sales and deeds-in lieu of foreclosure where borrowers are unable or unwilling to complete the HAMP,” said Herbert Allison, assistant Treasury secretary for Financial Stability at a hearing held by Congressional Oversight Panel chief Elizabeth Warren. Read more about the new homeowner program

Rather than create a new program, the Obama Administration should do a nationwide cramdown, converting all adjustable rate mortgages into long-term fixed-rate mortgages with  low monthly payments. Stop giving the banks wiggle room. The free lunch for banks is over.

Do you own a law firm? Would you like to utilize our mortgage auditing services for foreclosure defense cases? Contact MFI-Miami now!

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