Archive for the ‘Geithner’ Category
The Obama administration just announced two new programs, that it’s hoped will help homebuyers who are experiencing problems paying their mortgages.
The first program, which should be up and running within a month is intended to help borrowers that have second mortgages stay out of foreclosure, and it will make cash amounts up to $12,000 available to servicers, investors and borrowers who modify loan terms, and a government spokesperson said that as many as a two million participants in the mortgage-modification program may be eligible for the second-lien assistance.
An example of how the plan would work, would be borrower who had a $250,000 interest only, first mortgage and was paying 6% interest. If the housing expenses were equal to 40% of the borrowers income, then the government would pay $2,625 per year, for five years in order to reduce the payments. Moreover, if that same borrower also had a $43,942 second mortgage and was paying 8.6% interest, then the government might, and I say “might”, pay one half of the $2,336 annual cost for five years.
The government’s second plan, is intended to renew interest in the Hope for Homeowners program, which until now has attracted very little enthusiasm from either borrowers or lenders. The program is primarily aimed at borrowers who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth, and to make the plan more attractive, the government will now provide a $2,500 incentive fee to loan servicers, and also require them to consider the plan when reworking a mortgage.
Overall reaction to the plans seems favorable, with Laurie Goodman who is an analyst at the Amherst Securities Group LP saying, “The new measures may ease mortgage investors’ concerns that the biggest banks and servicers would be tempted to rework too many loans under the program, in order to bolster their home- equity portfolios. Certainly, it appears that the Treasury has listened to first-lien investors and the announcement goes a very long way toward addressing their objections”.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a statement, “Ensuring that responsible homeowners can afford to stay in their homes is critical to stabilizing the housing market, which is in turn critical to stabilizing our financial system”.
Finance officials from some of the world’s top economic powers, which included, the United States, Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Canada, have pledged to get their countries banks lending again, believing it to be the best way to end the world’s worst recession since the 1930s.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and his counterparts from the world’s top seven industrialized democracies, acknowledged on Friday April 25, in a joint statement that their economies will need to be jump started in order for the global economy to rebound.
A joint statement read, “We are committed to act together to restore jobs and growth and to prevent a crisis of this magnitude from occurring again, and we will take whatever actions are necessary to bring that about. Recent data suggest that the pace of decline in our economies has slowed, and some signs of stabilization are emerging. Economic activity should begin to recover later this year amid a continued weak outlook and downside risks persist”.
A goal of raising $500 billion for an emergency lending facility was set by G-20 leaders at their London summit on April 2 and Obama has asked Congress to put up $100 billion, and Europe and Japan have pledged equivalent amounts.
Other major countries, which include China, Russia and Saudi Arabia, have not come yet honored their commitments however, because China and several other big developing countries like India want to link the support to having a bigger voice in the IMF which predicts that the global economy will shrink this year, something that’s never happened in the post World War II period.
Earlier this week the IMF called on world governments to boost stimulus spending, especially on infrastructure projects such as roads and bridges, in order to create jobs, but European nations are loathe to run up huge budget deficits and have so far resisted U.S. pleas to increase their spending.
France’s Lagarde noted, “We are in a bind, if you will. On the one hand we have to inject public money into the economy because we believe this is the strongest and best multiplier. At the same time, in the medium and long term, we need to restore the sustainability of public finance”.