| New Bubble May Be Building in 30-Year Mortgages: Edward Pinto |
|
|
|
|
Edward Pinto writes at Bloomberg.com December 22: The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, the most common way U.S. buyers finance a home purchase, isn’t the ideal instrument its supporters claim it to be. First, its dominance requires permanent government subsidies. Second, it amortizes slowly, exposing homebuyers to years of unnecessary default risk. Third, it was responsible for two taxpayer bailouts in the last 20 years. Most important, these mortgages may be behind a new bubble. The combination of a federal funds rate of almost 0 percent since late 2008 and injections of money into the economy through quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve has kept borrowing rates artificially low. Federally insured banks, thrifts and credit unions hold $1.7 trillion in Fannie Mae-, Freddie Mac- and Ginnie Mae-guaranteed securities, while an additional $2.2 trillion are held by local, state and federal governments and agencies. Both categories have increased by about 30 percent since 2007. As a result the government, banks and other financial institutions backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. now hold 52 percent of outstanding agency securities. Most are backed by 30-year fixed-rate mortgages. |
Latest News
- Europe admits Greece exit preparation
- Magnetar Probed Over NIR-Linked CDO
- Enabling Disability Fraud
- Lawrence Lindsey: Why Washington Hates Jamie Dimon
- Foreclosures down, short sales up. Are banks getting smart?
- Exclusive: Over 55 and Jobless, Americans Face Tough Hunt
- 'Naked Short Selling'
- From 'Caveman' to 'Whale'
- U.S. Sen. Bob Corker calls for hearing on JPMorgan's $2B trading loss
- Greek Depositors Withdrew $898 Million From Banks Monday
- Groping towards Grexit
- Ally to wind down mortgage business after ResCap sale
- Judge strikes down union election rules
- Missing: Stats on Crisis Convictions
- KRUGMAN: Here's How The Whole Eurozone Could Unravel In Just A Matter Of Months
Web Site Development by Dark Twin Marketing Web Site Design and Graphics by Cassie Designs


