Wednesday, August 31, 2011

The Fed's Plan - Rumors of News

Go back a week to an article in the NY Times (Link). The guts of this story is that the Administration is working on a plan to Re-Fi residential mortgages on a massive scale.




When I first read this, I ignored it. The scope of the proposal was too large. There was also (IMHO) a fatal flaw. The thinking was that the jumbo ReFi would be made available to only those who had a mortgage that ended up with either Fannie or Freddie. I ask the question, "What about those poor odds and sods who have a mortgage with a community bank?” Do they get nothing while those who owe F/F big bucks get a break? Where is the fairness in that result?

But every day since the NYT story, I have heard the rumblings about some deal being done. It has already impacted MBS spreads. It's back in the news today with an article in the WSJ. (Link) I have to believe that where there is smoke, there is probably some fire.

I went back to the NYT piece. There are some clues. First is that Louise Story wrote the article. She is a fine reporter. Anything that she says has been supported by “real” sources. "Who were these sources?" is a question to ask. Some words from the piece:

Administration officials said on Wednesday that they were weighing a range of proposals.

Read this to mean that people in the Administration deliberately planted this story. This was a “trail balloon” approach. This is very typical for this administration. They leak their intentions in advance. More from the NYT:

But refinancing could have far greater breadth, saving homeowners, by one estimate, $85 billion a year.

The following chart was included in the NYTs article.



The information in the chart and the very precise estimate of “85 billion a year” can only have come from one source. It has to be the FHFA that is doing the talking to the NYT. It had to come from the most senior level. That HAS to mean that it came from the Acting Director, Edward DeMarco.

The NYT functionally confirmed the source of the article as DeMarco with this written quote from him:

“F.H.F.A. remains open to all ideas that provide needed assistance to borrowers” while minimizing the cost to taxpayers, Mr. DeMarco said in a written statement.

Now consider some of the wording in the WSJ article today. Note: This article was written, in part, by Jon Hilsenrath. Jon is well known to be a mouthpiece for the Fed. He gets his thinking directly from Bernanke. Some quotes:

There are several reasons why refinancing has been weak, say Fed officials.

Some Fed officials say that it would be in Fannie and Freddie's financial interest to allow borrowers who are current on their mortgages to refinance at lower rates because it would increase the likelihood that they won't default.

Officials at the Federal Reserve are frustrated that they've pushed interest rates to the lowest levels in decades and yet many borrowers haven't been able to take advantage.

You can take these quotes to the bank. They are from Bernanke. It is Bernanke that is frustrated that his low interest rate policy has not resulted in more ReFi’s. You can also take as a fact that Bernanke wants something done on mortgage relief.

One other fact in the picture. The new IMF head, Christine Lagarde, spoke on the phone to Obama before her speech at Jackson Hole. She must have told the Big O that a program to clear up America’s mortgage mess was her top priority. She made that very clear in her speech the following day.

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Okay. Put these pieces together. What do you have? Assume for the sake of discussion that the President does announce a major new initiative to ReFi F/F mortgages. Assume further that the cost of the millions of ReFi’s would come from existing sources (the $35b of already issued and funded Hope Now Bonds), or better yet, the costs would be crammed down the neck of the banks who are servicing the loans (necessary to get DeMarco to go along). Say, for the sake of discussion, that the targeted mortgages are those who have not yet defaulted, but are desperately in need of a break. That amount would come to about $1.4 Trillion. This is a very big amount. Assume finally that the new mortgage rate would be about 4%. This (if accomplished) would be a very big shot in the arm for the economy as a whole.

Now do a flow of funds for this mega transaction.

I) Homeowners get a new loan at 4% and payoff 100% of the old mortgage.

II) The servicing banks get the proceeds and pay off the old loan.

III) The money is paid to F/F. This money is used to redeem existing mortgage pools of Agency MBS.

IV) Fannie/Freddie have the same asset mix at the end of the day. They still need to finance the new 4% mortgages they are writing.

V) Fannie and Freddie are taking on substantial new risk as they now have a book of 4% mortgages and are much more at risk to rising interest rates.

VI) It takes 90 days for a new mortgage to become a new Agency MBS. During this period F/F warehouse these loans. They finance the warehouse with short-term debt. They take action to reduce their risk by entering into new swap transactions or by buying derivatives to neutralize the market risk.

VII) As the process goes on huge chunks of EXISTING higher coupon MBS are prepaid. Investors in those MBS securities will be forced to re-invest the proceeds.

So who is going to be the biggest recipient of the cash pre-pays? That’s easy to answer. It’s the Federal Reserve. They currently own 1.0 Trillion of Agency MBS. A very substantial portion of the total prepayments of F/F MBS will be paid to the Fed. The Fed’s balance sheet will shrink very rapidly as a result.

The Fed has already established what will happen when principal is prepaid on their holdings of MBS. The have said they will reinvest any proceeds back into new purchases of US Treasury securities. As this chart of the Fed’s holdings show, this has already happened to the tune of $250 billion. The new proposal for the mega ReFi will dramatically reduce the MBS holdings. It will force the Fed back into the market to purchase big amounts of Treasury bonds. This process will take at least a year. But the total amounts could easily exceed $600 billion (QE2 size).



There is a flaw in this logic. On a macro basis, total mortgages loans remain the same. This is only a re-pricing. Not a reduction of total debt. The reality is that the Fed will be buying more treasury bonds, but F/F will have to be selling new bonds to protect themselves against interest rate risk. What will be happening is that the Fed is buying to reduce interest rates while at the same time F/F will be buying protection in the form of swaps, options and new term funding. So the real consequence to the credit markets will be a wash.

There is one solution to this dilemma that achieves the desired outcome. The Fed could easily enter into the swaps/options with F/F to eliminate their basis risk. Think of this as a different version of “Operation Twist”. The Fed wants to reduce long-term interest rates. It does not matter to them if they do it with direct purchase of bonds or if they absorb future interest rate risk by writing derivatives that would neutralize the market impact.

The Fed can’t write $1 trillion of interest rate swaps to the street in order to achieve this objective. There would be far too much counter-party risk for the Fed to do this. But they have no counter party risk with F/F. At the end of the day F/F is the government, so the Fed can say they have no counter-party concerns. The bulk of this would be financed by F/F in short-term markets. The swaps and options with the Fed would alleviate the market risk they would face from the ReFi’s.

Who would be AGAINST this plan? No one that I can think of. DeMarco would be able to say that the plan protects the taxpayers from future losses. Obama would say that he has created a new stimulus of $85 billion a year. Bernanke would love this plan. He would be “Forced” into buying a new big amount of Treasuries. He would have his excuse for QE3 handed to him. That the Fed would be forced to absorb new risk of loss to rising interest rates is of no concern to the Fed. They are in so deep today, another $1 trillion of notional risk would not change the picture. Keep in mind that the Fed is very anxious to pull the next trigger.

Who would be the sources of SUPPORT for a plan like this? Everyone but some Republicans is the answer. DeMarco (FHFA) would get what he wants. Obama would get what he wants (10,000,000 homeowners would love him). The economy WOULD benefit from this as consumers would have new cash in their pockets. Bernanke would get everything he wants (a new QE), and would have the political cover for his efforts.

The only voice of dissent will come from Republicans in the House. But it is very likely that this could all happen without a vote. From the NYT piece:

The idea is appealing because it would not necessarily require Congressional action.

There are too many pieces of this pie to ignore. This is a solution to problems that are both political and economic. I see no significant opposition. Republicans will scream “foul”, but who cares. This can happen over their objections.

I'm looking for something along these lines to be announced soon. It will come in the President’s upcoming speech. None other than Ben Bernanke will be the biggest supporter. That makes it a very feasible outcome.


Will this work? I’m not convinced. I think this is the ultimate "kick the can down the road". But that is the only strategy that is in place today. Delay the inevitable; win the next election. That is the only thing that matters in D.C.
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Rumors, rumors and more rumors




44 comments:

  1. Unless I missed a major change in the law, it is not the case that F/F is the government, and there is no counter party risk. Treasury has committed to keeping F/F net positive value through the end of 2012. That is NOT a guarantee of all GSE bonds, and any further guarantee would take Congressional action which I view as very unlikely to happen with this or the likely next Congress. Anyone holding GSE bonds that mature past 2012 is at risk of taking losses, and anyone that buys new GSE bonds full of 4% 30 year mortgages is taking a huge risk.

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  2. good sleuthing
    very good

    i still don't quite see where the money comes from to do the refi's though

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  3. Hi Bruce: the only flaw I see with the white house plan is that a majority of the homeowner MBS F/F portfolio is under water. Refi will have to involve a write down to be effective for most of the mortgages. This is what doomed the previous help programs from the administration. The F/F portfolio is part of a TBTF strategy that needs to change, a la resolution trust corporation. I can't see a refi occurring without a change in the law, requiring congressional approval.

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  4. is this why there is pressure on schneiderman?

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  5. What about the banks and pensions that are holding Agency MBSs at premium valuations?

    I think this would blow them all up.

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  6. Hello Bruce,

    I just wanted to tell you that I'm very grateful for the articles you post. Truly amazing, smart stuff. Keep it up.

    derek

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  7. Matt J. You are correct. But think it through. After spending $200b to stabilize the situation do you think the government would tank F/F.

    Not a chance.

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  8. W.C. Varone. Most of this paper is held by the Fed. Not problem there. That which is held by bond funds, InsCos and small investors would be the losers. Who cares about them?? Savers have been "paying" for the credit losses for three years now. This is nothing new.

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  9. Anon at 10:27. There is no new money. There will be (ex) $1 trillion of old mortgages replaced with $1 trillion of new mortgages. Only the yield/cost will change.

    The cost of the ReFi (~$3000) will be born by the banks and Uncle Sam. The money for this ($35b) has already been funded. It is under the control of Obama. That is the Hope Now Bonds.

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  10. Great post Bruce. So this would obviously include underwater borrowers as well right? What about PMI? Still in place for the new loan?

    If this happens, I agree with you that it wouldn't fix the underlying problem, but it would buy some more time and breathing room. And it would also get Obama another 4 years easily.

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  11. Isn't there a problem if the fed reinvests JUST in treasuries -- not the new MBS issuance? I might be missing something but it seems that you're just reshuffling the fed balance sheet which is net zero for new stimulus. Arguably, it could be net negative because how is the market going to possibly absorb the new MBS that the Fed is not reinvesting.

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  12. Republicans will balk at this. Won't affect the rich enough to matter.

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  13. May buy IYR prior to Obama'sa speech

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  14. If Bernanke is puzzled regarding why people aren't refinancing at lower rates, he is not too bright. For many, it is PMI. If you are finally at the point (80% of value) where your PMI will drop off, you are not about to refi and start it all over again.

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  15. So the new idea is to take performing loans and make them higher risk for the investor.

    Yeah, that'll work.

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  16. So is it time to short the M-Reits?

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  17. Bruce do you see any reason that FHA loans wouldn't be covered as well?

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  18. Bruce,

    What about 2d mortgages & HELOC's? The servicers for these have often been intransigent obstacles to 1st mortgage refi's by refusing to resubordinate.

    Granted, we're almost entirely talking about the same people servicing the 1st's anyway. Is part of the plan to roll those balances into the new 1st mortgages?

    For general info, the VA already runs a "streamline" mortgage refinancing program for veterans with existing VA home mortgages.

    Features of this include no credit check and no property appraisal. Underwater ok. The main requirement is to be current on the existing VA mortgage.

    The idea of expanding this program to most mortgages in the USA is not as radical as it looks at first glance.

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  19. To me this was a common sense answer that I told my husband in 2008. Refi any loan from a 30 year to a 50year and lower interest rates. People would continue to happily pay..feeling they won..(when we really know the banks win win)Thus, the housing market which drives our economy does not completely go down the tubes. Unfortunately, this will make Obamanomics look like a political hero.

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  20. This is from the WSJ today, 8-31 re Mr. DiMarco. Dones not seem to match the theory presented.

    Mr. DeMarco says his mission is to conserve Fannie and Freddie's assets and that sometimes means putting his foot down on well-meaning but expensive new initiatives. "It is a very slippery slope to say, 'Well, this would help,'" he says.

    The debate is pitting those who believe Fannie and Freddie's mandate is to limit taxpayer losses against those who say that using the firms to help the housing market will ultimately benefit taxpayers. Mr. DeMarco's focus "is on the short-term profits for Fannie and Freddie, not on the health of the housing market, and that is short-sighted," says Peter P. Swire, who served as a top White House housing adviser until last year and now teaches law at Ohio State University.

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  21. If you don't reduce the principal homeowners will continue to default.

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  22. The fed is going to buy Government Bonds to boost the Price of the Bonds. It is only by Boosting the price of the bonds, that it can manipulate the result of lower yields... Since the overnight fed rate is practically zeltch, the only other alternative is to pay banks to borrow overnight fed funds. I doubt they will stoop this low.

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  23. My Last Post included my URL which was incorrect... Sorry


    http://myviralads.com/cloakb.php?id=9273

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  24. Well written article but I think there are some glaring land mines to this. First and foremost if there are savings generated, there are also going to be loses generated, massive losses. These will be taken by anyone who owns anything related to RMBS. Using your $85B annual number these losses very well may be enough to send markets into a tailspin completely negating any of the benefits done by helping borrowers. Originators, REITs, housing companies, banks, GSEs, the Fed - you name it. They will all have to take massive hits to BV in order to adjust for the refis. This alone will likely prevent such a drastic program from happening. Before moving on to any of the other multitude of issues - how do you not even so much as mention this?

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  25. Who is going to buy all the newly issued MBS? Investors who just had the rules change on them are going to need a higher rate of interest to take on the risk again? While this plan would help current home owners, it would raise future mortgage rates for everyone.

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  26. Good Work Bruce...

    Scary implications in moral hazard surface regarding the rest of the underwater owners without f&f mortgages..

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  27. Could it be that, at long last, we see a household-targeted initiative to ease the load on the people? That would be fantastic.

    Has anyone estimated the potential increase in domestic spending from easing the mortgage repayment load?

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  28. Great piece of work Bruce
    no offense intended
    we all need ......... (a reason to smile)
    once in awhile......






    Dear Mr. President,



    Please find below my suggestion for fixing America 's economy. Instead of giving billions of dollars to companies that will squander the money on lavish parties and unearned bonuses, use the following plan.


    You can call it the "Patriotic Retirement Plan":



    There are about 40 million people over 50 in the work force. Pay them $1 million apiece severance for early retirement with the following stipulations:



    1) They MUST retire. Forty million job openings - Unemployment fixed.



    2) They MUST buy a new AMERICAN Car. Forty million cars ordered - Auto Industry fixed.



    3) They MUST either buy a house or pay off their mortgage - Housing Crisis fixed.



    It can't get any easier than that!!



    P.S. If more money is needed, have all members in Congress pay their taxes..



    Mr. President, while you're at it, make Congress retire on Social Security and Medicare. I'll bet both programs would be fixed pronto!

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  29. honestcreditwoman said

    I like this post,
    What happen to the rest of the underwater homeowners without f&f mortgages? Do they have to sue the bank to get principal reduction and refinance?

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  30. Excellent detective work.

    This is ratcheting step of the bankster plan, where it kills off the community banks and gets all the securities into bankster control:

    http://www.silverbearcafe.com/private/01.10/thinklikeabanker.html

    This will provide the stagflation hell I am expecting in 2012.

    Yeah people will get more money, but prices will go up, so the people lose, the govt's share of the economy continues to increase, and the negative marginal-utility-of-debt will continue to increase (the more stimulost, the faster the "REAL" GDP is shrinking, i.e. nominal GDP minus the true inflation rate, not the liar CPI stats).

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  31. Deep Stuff Bruce and good postings by all. Education and speculation in its highest form here.

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  32. Karl Denninger commented on Bruce Krastings article, and afaics Karl is correct in his analysis of possible side-effects, but Karl doesn't get the point that the banksters want to destroy the pensions to push the dependence on the NWO.

    http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=193323

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  33. Please...someone...demand that the Fed have all government backed mortgage contracts examined. If they have any violations of Federal Law. Make them null and void...period! I venture to say well over 50%, more like 75% of all mortgages written in the past 10 -15 years are violating Federal laws and they continue to back these bogus contracts until they get into Federal courts, usually with a bankruptcy. Why...because all their friends are the ones profiteering and stealing peoples homes and reselling them of to foreign companies because they know how devious this all has been. The Fed will only back their own laws...why aren't they doing the right thing and making the bandits pay instead of the taxpayers and homeowners ie..Americans???

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  34. The next step in the "Think Like a Bankster" plan is now underway, "Transfer asset ownership, but retain prior owners as renters where possible":

    http://www.thestreet.com/story/11224917/1/a-huge-housing-bargain--but-not-for-you.html

    http://www.silverbearcafe.com/private/01.10/thinklikeabanker.html

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  35. This is an attempt by the banksters to rewrite all the notes and get borrowers to sign fresh.
    Dont forget the robocop and MERS fiasco.
    This would turn any non recourse loan into a recourse loan in the states allow such.
    Major CYA
    The banks love it because it creates the documents that may needed in the future to foreclose on borrowers.
    Ben gets TARP II
    The FED slims down
    Fannie & Freddie takes on more shit loans.
    Once upon a time on Christmas Eve past, there was a treasury secretary named Tiny Tim, who in the stillness of the night, raised the limit of toxic coal that F/F could swallow.
    Unlimited.
    Well Tiny Tim says it is time to make F/F swallow.

    In Bernanke we bust & In Geithner we doubt

    No doubt Hank is on speed dial for both.
    What a freakin cartoon!
    And they're gonna get away with it.
    Unfucxing real

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  36. Anon @3:49

    Most seconds will be written down. They have to be to get the refi.

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  37. Anon 7:55

    This will happen over a year. say 80b a month. That will not wreck the credit market.

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  38. Honest credit woman:

    What will happen to those who do not have F/F mortgage??

    I don't know. As I said, this may be the fatal flaw.

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  39. Would the IRS be on board?

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  40. Wow, what a great idea. (I'm) going to jump from one low interest loan to another (not). If I happen to be underwater, paying more than renting the house across the street why should I not drop the keys off at the local F/F office and let them take it back, removing all my responsibility to repay, because they were stupid enough to give anyone with a pulse a loan? Why wouldn't BHO want to pass bad debts to the local banks, who will be more than HAPPY to lose more money?

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  41. Bruce,

    Excellent work on this post in general.

    >>Most seconds will be written down. They have to be to get the refi.<<

    Why do they "have to be"? I'm not saying this isn't desirable. But the Veterans Administration streamline program for refinancing VA 1st mortgages already works around 2d mortgages. It just requires the 2d servicer to cooperate by agreeing to resubordinate to the new VA 1st mortgage.

    I assume that Bernanke, Geithner and their aides can explain to these 2d servicers in understandable language why it will be in their best interests to cooperate with gusto.

    It seems to me there are three options:

    1. Robo resubordination under dire threats from Uncle Bailout.

    2. Roll 2d & HELOC principle balances into the new low rate 1st mortgages. Why not if we're going to refi underwater 1st mortgages anyway?

    3. Write down 2ds. But doesn't this imply writing down that part of 1sts also under water? One of the VA's efficiencies comes from not requiring reappraisals.

    Anon3:49

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  42. Great analysis and feedback. Just a thought from a realtor and former mortgage banker, though. Refinancing an underwater loan won't make anyone want to keep the home if it's upside down substantially and still declining. I hear it all the time.

    Go ahead and create a 40, 50, heck, why not a multi-generational 100 year loan! Japan ring a bell? How's that working for their housing market and economy? I knew they were doomed when they purchased Pebble Beach and Heavenly Valley Ski.

    I'm not a WS'er, but has anyone from WS asked the workers in virtually any real estate market in the US what's really going on out there? Buyers are so worried about their JOBS they are not moving or buying anything no matter how historically low the rates will go. Where are we now, 50 year lows? If this administration isn't creating JOBS who gives a rip whether the mortgage rate is 4, 3, 2, or 1%. People need income. They want jobs so they have a level of self worth. People want something more than Wal-Mart or MCD Employee of the Month.

    By the way, how many F/F loans do you think could be utilized in the more expensive markets like California? When I was there, not a whole heck of a lot unless you wanted to buy in Fresno or Bakersfield.

    Obama is a one-termer and will go down in history as one of the worst and most divisive presidents ever no matter what smoke and mirror is utilized in the previous posts. EU is about to implode and that is one mushroom cloud that requires more than a pair of sunglasses and great oratory skills to finesse though.

    Obama didn't start this mess, but he sure didn't let a crisis go to waste without putting his own "Community Organizer" expertise to work "fixing" it. Like his buddy Col. Powell once said, "You break it, you own it."

    This is one piece of history Obama cannot erase no matter how much the media continues to lie to America about his "successes"...or there lack of. America is more divided, broke, depressed, and disenfranchised about all things WS and WH than anything I've witnessed in my lifetime. Probably more than since the Civil War. How ironic is that.

    Look out below folks! Get ready for the big short...

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  43. Bruce, while the switch from +5% to 4% is nice it is this clause that is by far the most important.

    “Under this plan, the United States should mimic the Danish mortgage system and give mortgage borrowers the right to purchase their mortgages out of these pools at market prices. Under such a plan, performing borrowers, through their servicer, broker, banker, or other financial intermediary, could purchase bonds at market prices. The bonds would be presented to the trustee which would accept its’ liability and thus allow borrowers to pay off their mortgages. Because these bonds would trade at a discount to par value when rates rise, borrowers would earn a “profit” by paying off their mortgage below par. In fact, if rates rose, borrowers might be able to use such profits to help offset the impact of lower house prices, effectively stabilizing the mortgage market and the economy.” Pg 10

    Let say that the USA attempts to print its way out of this fiscal mess, show hands on how likely that path is. This would significantly reduce the present value of these fixed security instruments, (ie what good is fixed 4% 30 year MBS with inflation running at +15%).

    Anyway under this plan, if someone held an asset that increased in value as the US dollar lost value they could own their house for a fraction of what it would cost now if they placed excess cash into said asset before the take off in the inflation rate.

    Now all we need to do is to figure out what asset has historically increased in relative value as someone prints more paper? Oh what could that be?

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  44. People cannot make payments. This is the primary issue that cannot be solved by refinancing. As was noted, refinancing from a 30-year to a 50-year mortgage has no attraction to someone who does not have a job and needs to walk away from his obligation. Unless the unemployment figures change and until our jobs return home from being shipped off overseas, this problem cannot be solved by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac accounting schemes. Fundamentally the refinancing idea is flawed.

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