Fannie, Freddie and the never-ending housing (homing?) crisis

Are Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac subsidizing predatory lending practices?

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Charlie Neibergall / AP / File
In this Sept. 21 photo, new home construction continues in West Des Moines, Iowa, despite the lack of buyers for completed homes.

A zombie alert. Bloomberg has the report:

Chris Whalen is famous lately for predicting a return of the subprime crisis in 2011. His thoughts on the greater mortgage system are also interesting, as discussed in an interview with King World News.

Whalen says GSEs [Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac] don’t help homeowners. Rather they promote a system that locks marginal borrowers into costly interest payments, helping their own bottom line.

The zombies at Fannie and Freddie prey on house buyers.

We interrupt the normally crisp flow of ideas in these daily reckonings with a parenthetical remark. Looking through the newspapers and magazines this weekend we were offered thousands of “homes” for sale. We thought a home was something you lived in. But the ads offer “new homes” – empty houses that no one has ever lived in. It doesn’t make any sense to us. But we conclude that the word “house” has been withdrawn from the dictionary.

Yes, dear reader, the homing crisis in America only seems to get worse and worse. We remind readers too that this was a crisis created largely by the government – which subsidized mortgage rates (sponsoring Fannie and Freddie), provided a tax break for mortgage interest, and told banks that they had to lend to poor credit risks in bad neighborhoods.

And now, true to form…the government is making it worse. How? By bailing out failed lenders – Fannie and Freddie. The last estimate we saw put the cost of keeping these incompetents alive at more than a quarter of a trillion dollars. That is bad money after bad money, in our opinion. The Feds are also threatening to slow down the foreclosure process…which would further delay the correction in the homing market.

Now…Chris Whalen continues:

“If you’re a wealthy American you can [refinance], but if you’ve got a seven-something FICO score and you’re in a so-so neighborhood so the collateral doesn’t have a big score in the equation, you’re screwed,” Whalen says. “These are the people Fannie and Freddie doesn’t want to see prepay, so they can keep the income on their portfolio. It’s horrible! People don’t realize how predatory these government agencies are.

“Everything Orwell ever wrote was true and it’s proven by the way people like Barney Frank and Chris Dodd have personally benefited from this housing mess, while they’re actually hurting the poor people most.”

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