1 Articles match "America","Foreclose","Secondary Market"
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Big Ben Is Finally Talking Foreclosures
Speaking at the Independent Community Bankers of America Convention in Orlando, Bernanke noted that 1.5 Bringing the lending limits of FHA originated loans to higher amounts — a measure enacted recently as part of the economic stimulus package passed by Congress and signed by President Bush — and allowing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to purchase those loans and sell them on the secondary market would be highly beneficial to the economy, he noted. For now the inventory Big Ben Bernanke, that guy at the top of the nation’s financial food chain, finally admitted Tuesday in an address to a group of the nation’s community bankers that foreclosures are not going to go away anytime soon. The Fed Chief gave two reasons for the bleak forecast (both of which have been espoused in previous posts in this blog): 1) further declines in housing prices are expected; and 2) significant resets of adjustable interest rates to unaffordable levels for many borrowers who were convinced to take out the more risky loan products of the past few years.
www.foreclosurepulse.com
- Tuesday, December 16, 2008
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The Best from RealtyTrac
|
MORE
|
-
Big Ben Is Finally Talking Foreclosures
Speaking at the Independent Community Bankers of America Convention in Orlando, Bernanke noted that 1.5 Bringing the lending limits of FHA originated loans to higher amounts — a measure enacted recently as part of the economic stimulus package passed by Congress and signed by President Bush — and allowing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to purchase those loans and sell them on the secondary market would be highly beneficial to the economy, he noted. For now the inventory Big Ben Bernanke, that guy at the top of the nation’s financial food chain, finally admitted Tuesday in an address to a group of the nation’s community bankers that foreclosures are not going to go away anytime soon. The Fed Chief gave two reasons for the bleak forecast (both of which have been espoused in previous posts in this blog): 1) further declines in housing prices are expected; and 2) significant resets of adjustable interest rates to unaffordable levels for many borrowers who were convinced to take out the more risky loan products of the past few years.
www.foreclosurepulse.com
- Tuesday, December 16, 2008