Monday, February 04, 2008

The Stimulus Plan Raises Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae's lending limits

This should rank up there with 'Soylent Green is People' or 'How to Serve Man! It's a Cookbook!'
via Housing Bubble Blog:

It's been highly touted as an economic stimulus bill that will help millions of Americans - and has the backing of both President Bush and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.... As part of the bill, Congress is set to rush through an increase in the mortgage loan limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (and Federal Housing Administration insurance, too) - from $417,000 to $729,750 - the first step toward a massive financial disaster in which taxpayers will end up paying through the nose.

Here's how we got to this point. Domestic and international investors hold hundreds of billions of dollars in bad debt, because U.S. investment houses sold them junk securities based on often fraudulent mortgages. Many of these mortgages were sold to unqualified buyers under terms that made widespread foreclosures a certainty once the housing market began to fall.

Investment banks and bond rating agencies sat down and tried to figure out how to describe Americans with insufficient incomes and little for a down payment as great credit risks on loans too big for their incomes. The new rules focused on credit scores, because it was a good excuse to avoid looking at income and down payment, factors that would have restricted this moneymaking fiasco.

You have to stop this. Yes, you! Write your Representative and your Senators. As opposed to stealing money from home owners, investment banks are now seeking to steal money in a new way from taxpayers, one of whom it is harder to avoid being.

This is what I wrote:
Dear [Representative/Senator][name here],
I read a very alarming column in the San Francisco Chronicle today pointing out that part of the economic stimulus package was an expansion of the size of the loans Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could buy by 75 %. Congress should be acting to make homes more affordable by limiting mortgage terms to 30 or fewer years, not attempting to prolong their anhistoric divergence from income distributions.

If this stimulus package can not be stopped, please support an amendment to remove this provision.

Thank you! I remain

Yours,
Rionn Fears Malechem
Update: I mean 75%, of course. Never do math with calculators. The letters I actually sent said "17.5%."

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks, as always, for keeping us informed. Are there any good reasons not to expect inevitable sky-rocketing inflation? This all seems like so much printing money.

Rionn Fears Malechem said...

No. I expect hyperinflation to kick in in my lifetime. But, like sea level rising three hundred feet, the Earth being swallowed up in the Sun, and the Celtics winning whatever basketball teams win, I don't know if it's imminent or 100 years away. Which, yeah, means I've just committed to living to 140. Say, 80 years away.

Anonymous said...

Huh, I'm banking on global hyperinflation by 2030 or 2050 - but I forget which. But it seems that economic hyper-inflation and sea-level inflation are linked. It doesn't seem like a good thing for economic stability if greenland systematically covers vital port infrastructure in seawater.

Rionn Fears Malechem said...

And I want to clarify that I don't expect the Sun to swallow the Earth within 80 years. I'm not guaranteeing it won't happen, but I think that's really more of a billion year timescale thing.