President Barack Obama today outlined a $75 billion plan that will subsidize cuts in mortgage payments for millions, and attempt to stem home foreclosures.
Obama’s Home Owner Affordability and Stability Plan calls for loan modifications to existing mortgages so that fewer Americans will be forced to foreclose on their homes. It will also allow more Americans to stay in their homes by suspending foreclosures for millions of Americans. The total cost of the plan is expected to be $75 billion.
Few details regarding the plan are currently available. Much of the funding will come from the $700 billion federal bailout of the financial industry that occurred last year. As Michelle Malkin pointed out, the Obama Housing Plan has many more questions than answers at this point.
The only thing that is clear is that, given the nearly $800 billion stimulus package that was just passed last week, government intervention is now at an all-time high. It remains to be seen whether any of this will have any impact on the economy, but we should all keep in mind that the New Deal did not get America out of the Great Depression and the Great Society lead to stagflation.
Furthermore, according to Bloomberg, numerous banks including Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, and Bank of America have agreed to suspend foreclosures until the Obama plan is adopted.
Below is an excerpt from the Executive Summary of the Obama Housing Plan that was released today by the White House. Full text is available at The Swamp.
1. Affordability: Provide Access to Low-Cost Refinancing for Responsible Homeowners Suffering From Falling Home Prices
• Enabling Up to 4 to 5 Million Responsible Homeowners to Refinance: Mortgage rates are currently at historically low levels, providing homeowners with the opportunity to reduce their monthly payments by refinancing. But under current rules, most families who owe more than 80 percent of the value of their homes have a difficult time refinancing. Yet millions of responsible homeowners who put money down and made their mortgage payments on time have – through no fault of their own – seen the value of their homes drop low enough to make them unable to access these lower rates. As a result, the Obama Administration is announcing a new program that will help as many as 4 to 5 million responsible homeowners who took out conforming loans owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac to refinance through those two institutions.
• Reducing Monthly Payments: For many families, a low-cost refinancing could reduce mortgage payments by thousands of dollars per year:
o Consider a family that took out a 30-year fixed rate mortgage of $207,000 with an interest rate of 6.50% on a house worth $260,000 at the time. Today, that family has about $200,000 remaining on their mortgage, but the value of that home has fallen 15 percent to $221,000 – making them ineligible for today’s low interest rates that now generally require the borrower to have 20 percent home equity. Under this refinancing plan, that family could refinance to a rate near 5.16% – reducing their annual payments by over $2,300.
2. Stability: Create A $75 Billion Homeowner Stability Initiative to Reach Up to 3 to 4 Million At-Risk Homeowners
• Helping Hard-Pressed Homeowners Stay in their Homes: This initiative is intended to reach millions of responsible homeowners who are struggling to afford their mortgage payments because of the current recession, yet cannot sell their homes because prices have fallen so significantly. Millions of hard-working families have seen their mortgage payments rise to 40 or even 50 percent of their monthly income – particularly those who received subprime and exotic loans with exploding terms and hidden fees. The Homeowner Stability Initiative helps those who commit to make reasonable monthly mortgage payments to stay in their homes – providing families with security and neighborhoods with stability.
• No Aid for Speculators: This initiative will go solely to helping homeowners who commit to make payments to stay in their home – it will not aid speculators or house flippers.
• Protecting Neighborhoods: This plan will also help to stabilize home prices for all homeowners in a neighborhood. When a home goes into foreclosure, the entire neighborhood is hurt. The average homeowner could see his or her home value stabilized against declines in price by as much as $6,000 relative to what it would otherwise be absent the Homeowner Stability Initiative.
• Providing Support for Responsible Homeowners: Because loan modifications are more likely to succeed if they are made before a borrower misses a payment, the plan will include households at risk of imminent default despite being current on their mortgage payments.
• Providing Loan Modifications to Bring Monthly Payments to Sustainable Levels: The Homeowner Stability Initiative has a simple goal: reduce the amount homeowners owe per month to sustainable levels. Using money allocated under the Financial Stability Plan and the full strength of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, this program has several key components:
A Shared Effort to Reduce Monthly Payments: For a sample household with payments adding up to 43 percent of his monthly income, the lender would first be responsible for bringing down interest rates so that the borrower’s monthly mortgage payment is no more than 38 percent of his or her income. Next, the initiative would match further reductions in interest payments dollar-for-dollar with the lender to bring that ratio down to 31 percent. If that borrower had a $220,000 mortgage, that could mean a reduction in monthly payments by over $400. That lower interest rate must be kept in place for five years, after which it could gradually be stepped up to the conforming loan rate in place at the time of the modification. Lenders will also be able to bring down monthly payments by reducing the principal owed on the mortgage, with Treasury sharing in the costs.
“Pay for Success� Incentives to Servicers: Servicers will receive an up-front fee of $1,000 for each eligible modification meeting guidelines established under this initiative. They will also receive “pay for success� fees – awarded monthly as long as the borrower stays current on the loan – of up to $1,000 each year for three years.
Incentives to Help Borrowers Stay Current: To provide an extra incentive for borrowers to keep paying on time, the initiative will provide a monthly balance reduction payment that goes straight towards reducing the principal balance of the mortgage loan. As long as a borrower stays current on his or her loan, he or she can get up to $1,000 each year for five years.
Reaching Borrowers Early: To keep lenders focused on reaching borrowers who are trying their best to stay current on their mortgages, an incentive payment of $500 will be paid to servicers, and an incentive payment of $1,500 will be paid to mortgage holders, if they modify at-risk loans before the borrower falls behind.
Home Price Decline Reserve Payments: To encourage lenders to modify more mortgages and enable more families to keep their homes, the Administration — together with the FDIC — has developed an innovative partial guarantee initiative. The insurance fund – to be created by the Treasury Department at a size of up to $10 billion – will be designed to discourage lenders from opting to foreclose on mortgages that could be viable now out of fear that home prices will fall even further later on. Holders of mortgages modified under the program would be provided with an additional insurance payment on each modified loan, linked to declines in the home price index.
• Institute Clear and Consistent Guidelines for Loan Modifications: Treasury will develop uniform guidance for loan modifications across the mortgage industry, working closely with the bank agencies and building on the FDIC’s pioneering work. The Guidelines will be used for the Administration’s new foreclosure prevention plan. Moreover, all financial institutions receiving Financial Stability Plan financial assistance going forward will be required to implement loan modification plans consistent with Treasury Guidance. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will use these guidelines for loans that they own or guarantee, and the Administration will work with regulators and other federal and state agencies to implement these guidelines across the entire mortgage market. The agencies will seek to apply these guidelines when permissible and appropriate to all loans owned or guaranteed by the federal government, including those owned or guaranteed by Ginnie Mae, the Federal Housing Administration, Treasury, the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, Veterans’ Affairs and the Department of Agriculture.
See Video on Obama’s Housing Plan below:
Obama Housing Plan









February 18th, 2009 at 12:59 pm
[...] Obama Housing Plan: Home Owner Affordability and Stability Plan …Protecting Neighborhoods: This plan will also help to stabilize home prices for all homeowners in a neighborhood. When a home goes into foreclosure, the entire neighborhood is hurt. The average homeowner could see his or her home value … The insurance fund – to be created by the Treasury Department at a size of up to $10 billion – will be designed to discourage lenders from opting to foreclose on mortgages that could be viable now out of fear that home prices will fall … read more… [...]
February 18th, 2009 at 2:08 pm
We just had a very large stimulus and now this crap. I mean granted it’s not as bad as the stimulus, but there are many problems. Number 1 it puts us in a place where people will say hey I can just get my say I’m going into foreclosure and get money. Number 2 it’s leading us even farther down the path to socialism where the we have to rely on the government for everything. Number 3 there still is a huge number of people who are going to foreclose anyway so it wont help much. Number 4 such an increase in spending will lead us with higher taxes and a bigger deficit. Number 5 why should my money go to other people I pay my taxes I have my own bills why should I pay for other peoples bills to its crap.
Now what I would like to propose is this. All of the banks extend the loans 10% to 20% longer so you pay less and keep more people in there homes and it wont cost a dime. Also by the rest of the homes which will not help the banks, but help everyone. We buy the remaining homes and sell or rent them to people who could afford them. Now heres the catch to that plan make it so the banks get no interest when we buy them so we will make a profit.
Oh I also just got a gift from a friend of mine who’s in the marines. A bumper sticker that says impeach obama.
February 18th, 2009 at 6:43 pm
[...] Obama Housing Plan: Home Owner Affordability and Stability Plan … (rightpundits.com) - February 18, 2009Obama’s Home Owner Affordability and Stability Plan calls for loan modifications to existing mortgages so that fewer Americans will be forced to foreclose on their homes. It will also allow more Ameri… [...]
February 18th, 2009 at 7:49 pm
Obama and the dems are going to wear you out. And as the repubs continue to march in lock step against anything Obama tries to do, they risk angering the electorate even more than Bush managed to, until republicans in Congress move from endangered status, to extinction.
That would be real nice. Right wing conservatism has had its day, and run the country into the ground. Now it is time to try a new way.
February 19th, 2009 at 1:11 am
[...] be forced to foreclose on their homes. It will also allow more Americans to stay in their homes by Read More|||The White House has this morning posted a full explanation of what the upcoming homeowner bailout [...]
February 19th, 2009 at 6:22 am
Aroth:
“Obama and the dems are going to wear you out.”
Obviously you dont care to actually deal with the problem at hand but instead choose to make this all about submission to your leader.
“And as the repubs continue to march in lock step against anything Obama tries to do, they risk angering the electorate even more than Bush managed to, until republicans in Congress move from endangered status, to extinction.”
I got some news for you buddy.
Even your own party is very very disatisfied with your congress, whos ratings are even lower than Bushs were.
“That would be real nice. Right wing conservatism has had its day, and run the country into the ground.”
You need a lesson detailing the actual events that have taken place in the last 8 years, focusing primarily on the last 2.
If you would care to be cleared of your ignorance on the matter, let me know.
“Obviously you dont care to actually deal with the problem at hand but instead choose to make this all about submission to your leader.
” Now it is time to try a new way.”
What is being done has been tried in many countries before, even this one, and failed.
Are you that ignorant to history that you cant see a repeated mistake in action ?
Theres nothing new at all about this concept of government at all.
Absolutely nothing whatsoever.
If anything, its a proven failure.
Obama went a put fresh coat of paint on an incredibly old method and you guys are all foolish enough to believe its something new.
You got hustled, you were bought off, you were lied to, and now you’re being stolen from.
I suspect that when all this starts sinking in you will all be acting like the mother of felon, you will see the crime but your affections and love will keep you from actually accepting the fact that your boy is just no good and you will continue to defend his miserable failures only to conceil your own failures in his upbringing.
“Hes a nice boy who meant well”
Yea well, so did Charles Manson.
May 1st, 2009 at 1:06 pm
[...] and workflow management in the back office. President Obama recently announced this $75 billion homeowner stability initiative which is going to provide incentives to mortgage lenders in an effort to move them to help four [...]