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Mortgage broker, lender plan too little too late

Fri Mar 14, 2008 6:38am EDT
 
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By Lynn Adler - Analysis

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The latest federal plan to restore confidence in mortgage bond and housing markets, promising strict home lender and mortgage broker standards, might thwart the next crisis but does little to quell this one.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson unveiled the President's Working Group plan on Thursday, recommending "strong nationwide licensing standards" for brokers and tougher oversight of all mortgage originators.

Slack lending practices that fostered record U.S. home price appreciation earlier in the decade are faulted for the housing bubble and its subsequent bursting.

Thursday's federal proposal, however, provides no relief to banks and investors currently overloaded with bad mortgages and loans backed by those loans.

With home mortgage foreclosures escalating, there is a dearth of investor demand for bonds backed by many mortgages. In addition, lenders are rejecting many more borrowers and house prices are falling in what is seen as the worst housing market since the Great Depression.

"The horse is out of the barn on this cycle and recession," said Phil Immel, broker at Prudential California Realty in Dana Point, California, and founder of RealEstateGuru.com.

Paulson's proposals "may be good for the next down-cycle in real estate, which happens every seven to 10 years, but it shouldn't have much impact of calming any markets, real estate or Wall Street, for years to come," said Immel.

Even mortgage bonds issued by government-chartered Fannie Mae (FNM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and Freddie Mac (FRE.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), considered among the safest mortgage securities, are paying some of the highest yield premiums above U.S. Treasury bonds in more than two decades.  Continued...

 
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