Realty Check
Current Housing Indicators |
| CURRENT | PREVIOUS | ||
| Existing Home Sales | 4.49m | ▼ | 4.74m |
| New Home Sales | 309,000 | ▼ | 344,000 |
| Housing Starts | 583,000 | ▲ | 477,000 |
| Building Permits | 547,000 | ▲ | 531,000 |
| HMI | 9 | UNCH | 9 |
| Existing Home Prices | $170,300 | ▼ (annually) | $199,800 |
| New Home Prices | $201,100 | ▼ (annually) | $232,400 |
#DIANAOLICK ON TWITTER
- Private Homebuilders: Dead Men Walking
- Robo-Deal Is All About Lowering Mortgage Principal
- As Mortgage Refinancings Surge, Banks Struggle
- Forty States Sign On to Foreclosure ‘Robo’ Settlement
- Running Robo-Settlement Numbers
- Own vs. Rent Riles Government Housing Policy
- Obama's Mortgage Refi Plan to Go Through FHA
- Housing Demand Defies Fundamentals
- US Treasury Forcing Mortgage Principal Forgiveness
- Robo-Reality: Final Foreclosures Fall as Pipeline Swells
MOST SHARED
- With Investors So Bullish, Pullback Must Be Coming
- How to Date a Wall Street Man
- LinkedIn CEO Calms Post-Lockup Concerns
- Why Greece Will Default, Leave the Euro Zone
- Stocks Hold Losses, Italian Banks Downgraded
- Blue Ivy Gets Trademarked By Beyonce And Jay-Z
- Get Ready for $5 Gas This Year: Ex-Shell CEO
- The World's Best Beers
- Housing Still Hurting Consumers, Economy: Bernanke
- Investing in the Fountain of Youth
- Private Homebuilders: Dead Men Walking
- LinkedIn’s Growth Is Already Priced In: Analyst
- The Real Reason Behind Bank of America’s Rally
- 5 Hedge Funds’ Top Stocks Soar After 2011 Rout
- This Valentine’s Day Love Is Served on a Silver Platter
- CEO to CEO: Our Roles Are Changing
- Clint Eastwood ‘Surprised’ by Reaction to Chrysler's ‘Halftime in America’ Ad
- Bulls Check In to Community Health
- Bank of America’s Worst-Case Scenario Gets More Real
- With Investors So Bullish, Stock Pullback Must Be Ahead
- Is Bill Gross, PIMCO's Bond King, Losing His Touch?
- Greece Austerity Deal Runs Into Trouble Once Again
- Why Greece Will Default, Leave Euro Zone
- Apple’s Record Run: $500 Is a Magic Number
- Private Homebuilders: Dead Men Walking
- Housing Still Hurting Consumers, Economy: Bernanke
- Get Ready for $5 Gas This Year: Ex-Shell CEO
- The World's Best Beers
RSS FEED
Loan Modification Anyone?
CNBC Real Estate Reporter
It seems like suddenly everyone is jumping on the bandwagon. First Countrywide[CFC
Loading...
()
] announced a deal with Neighborhood Assistance Corp. of America (NACA) to modify loans on a case-by-case basis. Then California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced a plan with Countrywide, GMAC and others to freeze ARM interest rates on certain loans temporarily, as long as the borrower is living in the home and up-to-date on current payments.
And then Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, who previously talked about more "communication" between troubled borrowers and lenders with his "Hope Now" initiative, is stepping up the rhetoric, telling the Wall Street Journal that he's "aggressively encouraging" the mortgage-service industry to come up with a plan to help large groups of borrowers in distress.
All this after FDIC Chair Sheila Bair proposed that interest rates on more than two million loans be frozen at the initial rates and turned, voila, into fixed-rate, long-term loans.
Everyone is asking: is it too little too late? But I'm asking: is it fair? I'm not advocating that we all sit around and watch thousands of people lose their homes and take the whole housing industry and the greater economy down in the process. But is it fair to come up with blanket plans, which essentially allow some borrowers to get away with, well, dare I say it, thievery?
Let's face it, the shoddy mortgage products introduced in this latest housing boom were faulty, nay defective, but borrowers ate them up, and not just borrowers who were duped. Many of the borrowers were gambling on the market, hoping that home prices would appreciate fast enough for them to refinance out of the dicey products quickly and thereby live in homes beyond their means.
Some hoped to flip their houses for a profit. Most just saw a whole lot of free money, and instead of asking questions they jumped in without looking back.
And what about the potential for fraud? It goes both ways you know. I'm sure there are plenty of homeowners out there now who would be happy to connive their way into a lower interest payment, even if they can afford the higher reset. And what about those who stuck to more conservative products? Should they (including me) be penalized -- that is, have to pay higher interest rates than many others simply because we took out long-term ARMs or fixed rate loans that we knew we could afford in the long run?
I know something has to be done. I don't want to see the housing and credit markets crash and burn any more than the rest of you, but I do think blanket solutions will leave many hard-working, bill-paying Americans out in the cold.
Questions? Comments?










