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The "American Dream" has successfully been killed by

our dear leaders. Homeownership will be for "The Rich" only...the rest of us can rent a place FROM "The Rich". Heckuva job.

"The Obama administration, in conjunction with federal regulators and led by the overseer of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are very close to announcing a pilot program to sell government-owned foreclosures in bulk to investors as rentals, according to administration officials.

There are currently about a quarter of a million foreclosed properties on the books of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and millions more are coming.

The foreclosure processing delays of last year created a mammoth backlog of properties yet to be processed, which are just now being re-started. One of the initiatives of this program is for the federal government to be in the position to mitigate and manage any new wave of foreclosures, sources say. Late stage delinquencies still in the pipeline number close to two million, according to a new report from Lender Processing Services. Foreclosure starts outnumber foreclosure sales by two to one, and, "the trend toward fewer loans becoming delinquent, which dominated 2010 and the first quarter of 2011, appears to have halted," according to LPS.

Knowing this all too well, the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve, HUD, FDIC, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, with their conservator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) at the helm, are engaged in a collaborative effort to face this new wave of foreclosures head on and figure out a way to keep these properties from sitting heavily on the books of the government and sitting empty in the nation's neighborhoods.

As the Federal Reserve alluded to in its white paper on housing last week, "a government-facilitated REO-to-rental program has the potential to help the housing market and improve loss recoveries on reo portfolios." REO's (Real Estate Owned) are bank-owned properties, or, in this case, properties owned by the GSE's and the FHA. Three Fed governors pushed for similar plans in speeches last week as well.

A pilot sales program will be starting in the very near future, according to administration officials. They are working on what the market potential is, what pricing would be, how government can partner with private investors, and who has the operational experience to manage so many properties.

"I think there is a fair amount of money in the wings waiting to buy, investors doing cash raises to buy properties on a large scale," says Laurie Goodman of Amherst Securities. "But that means they have to build out a rental organization; it means they build out a management company because if you're accumulating a hundred homes in Dallas that's very different than running a multi-family building."

A number of institutional investors have shown appetite and interest in bulk REO deals, according to officials, but the plan has to incorporate ways to help facilitate financing. That has been one of the biggest roadblocks to deals already in the works between hedge funds and the major banks. Sources close to these private bank negotiations say there is plenty of cash to buy properties, but building out a management structure for the rentals is pricey, and some investors are finding the math doesn't add up to make it worth their while.

Larger investors want to be able to get real scale in any government program, in the range of 50, 100, 500 properties per deal, or one billion plus in assets, say officials close to the plan. That's why the government is looking to test a combination of different approaches. Fannie Mae did a fifty million dollar sale last June, but that was on the small side. Officials are evaluating at what larger asset sales beyond that would look like.

“We expect several pilots that will involve both local investors and institutional investors. The goal here is to reduce supply by converting foreclosed homes into rental units,” says Jaret Seiberg of Guggenheim Securities. “Less supply – even less fear about a flood of foreclosed homes hitting the market – could stabilize [home] prices.”

While much of this program will focus on local areas of distress, largely in the sand states, officials say they are looking at where the assets are today but are really more focused on where all the foreclosures will be in the future. It's not about the stock of foreclosures currently, it's about the flow of them over time and alternative ways to manage that flow.

Officials say they want to bring back private capital and help support rental opportunities for households, particularly when rent rates are up at the same time home prices are down."

http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/09/10077300-white-house-wants-to-convert-foreclosed-houses-to-rentals
It hasn't been killed, it's just been abused...

It looks like the purpose of this program is to flood the market with rental properties in order to provide places for people live (who can't afford to buy) and, by increasing the number of rental properties available, keep the cost of renting down. (Seriously, if you can't afford to pay a mortgage, you can't afford most rent at the moment either.)

I don't see a problem with this.
 

imreallyperplexed

Council Member
HA,

You are very correct about rents. They are very high and it very much that there is insufficient supply of rental properties. The big problem is figuring out the long term demand for rental units.

It hasn't been killed, it's just been abused...

It looks like the purpose of this program is to flood the market with rental properties in order to provide places for people live (who can't afford to buy) and, by increasing the number of rental properties available, keep the cost of renting down. (Seriously, if you can't afford to pay a mortgage, you can't afford most rent at the moment either.)

I don't see a problem with this.
 

fairsheet

Senator
It hasn't been killed, it's just been abused...

It looks like the purpose of this program is to flood the market with rental properties in order to provide places for people live (who can't afford to buy) and, by increasing the number of rental properties available, keep the cost of renting down. (Seriously, if you can't afford to pay a mortgage, you can't afford most rent at the moment either.)

I don't see a problem with this.
The Obamans deserve at least some credit - especially from those to his right - for resisting entreaties from his left, to artificially prop up mortgages and home ownership for those who really couldn't afford them. For the most part - as painful as it's been for many - they've allowed the real estate bubble to burst and seek it's natural floor. At some point though - and we may be almost there - most of the false value will be wrung out of the system and it doesn't make sense for us to extend it out any further, in order to extract every last dollar.

This proposal ACTUALLY looks to be pretty worthwile. It SHOULD lower the cost of renting for those who can't afford to buy. And, it should help to reverse the downward home values vector.
 

Barbella

Senator
LOL....I'll call out "my own" when they're back "in charge". :)

And I completely agree with you on term limits. Absolutely, 100% agree....and I'll go a step further: When these thieving morons are done with their two terms, their "pension" (if any) should be paid for no more than the number of years they "served". 8 years is more than enough time to steal as much as you can carry....and you can bet their nests will be feathered nicely by the time they leave.

Citizen's United? To be honest, I haven't really studied up on them at all. I don't even know what they're about....I'm just posting my own thoughts here. :)
 
February 6, 2006 Chavez announced a 15% increase in the minimum wage and a new model for Venezuela’s national health-care system, with US$449 million allocated to upgrade 43 hospitals.
Implementing a measure of the constitution that recognises housework as an economic activity, the government will also provide wages to 200,000 poor homemakers.
January 30, 2006 Chavez launched 12 new state-run Social Production Enterprises (EPS) in key industries, with the aim of substituting for the many products Venezuela currently imports.
This is a key part of overcoming Venezuela’s underdevelopment and achieving genuine sovereignty.
The EPS follow a new economic model oriented towards human need rather than private profits.
February 7, 2006 Chavez announced his government would provide $1 billion in funding to community planning councils.
These elected councils aim to greatly deepen participatory democracy by allowing people to directly control public policy.
 

Lobato1

Mayor
Nice essay

However as a history buff & having read about the war of 1812, Madison as an artillery militia commander going out to meet the Brits, Dolley Madison staying in the White House to save our Country's patrimony such as Washington's painting, etc., etc., etc. before leaving.

My understanding was that the Brits did burn the White House & what that rain storm saved was the rest of Washington DC.

Best Regards
Lobato1
 

Mytzlplk

Governor
indeed, that's why the repubs you always vote for and support here with your "pals", and who are entirely in the pockets of the monied interests as opposed to the dems who are all the time trying to do things big and small for we the people that you and your pals whine about, are identical to the dems.

and 1+1 no doubt equals 3 in your world too, no?
 

Figjam

Mayor
...aside from your interpretation of the article, which is wrong, I think this stinks because it is just another bank bailout program. You see, if banks actually released all the properties they now hold into the market for sale, the housing market would REALLY collapse. Meaning the banks would lose a fortune - so now we have another not explicitly named bailout. Now isn't that special.
 

Lobato1

Mayor
IF U read lapcat's title on this subthread Dems "LED" 223 GOP Reps & GOP 55 Sen

& the Prez, the AWOL/Deserter into the Fanie Mae, AIG, et Al., debacles.

ROTFLMAO

Best Regards
Lobato1
 

Brad Hanks

Council Member
There is one thing, I think we forget about America, we have the ability to bonce back like no other nation in the world. In WWII, we were not prepared for war when Pearl Harbor was bombed on December 7, 1941. Yet, we converted out economy over night and won that war. Let's not forget women entered the work place big time, an event that changed the very fiber of the American family.

awww.evvbestklean.com_images_roll_20up.jpg

In the War of 1812, the British were burning Washington D. C. and the White House. What you do not hear about is how we saved our capitol. It was plain old fashioned luck, a tremendous rain storm hit Washington D. C., put out the fire, and saved the White House. Call it, luck, fate, or God, the storm was unexplainable.

agraphics8.nytimes.com_images_2004_09_11_arts_1812.1.583.jpg

American democracy is still something special on this planet of ours, and something keeps us going. Forces of nature working for our best interest, perhaps. But, we must alsoI credit the efforts of the American people to roll up there sleeves and make the impossible happen.

Are America's best days behind us? It sure looks that way at the moment, but as John Paul Jones said, "We have not yet begun to fight."

 
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