The long-awaited report on the future of housing finance has been released by the Obama Administration.
Below is the presser....
I highlighted some talking points. The first thing to take away from this paper is the Administration's intention to wind down Fannie and Freddie on a responsible timeline. That tells you this reform/winding down process will take many years and much debate. 5 to 7 years according to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. There's nothing wrong with that though. Slow and steady works as long as lenders have funding liquidity in the process. The main goal is to get housing finance reform done right....the first time, this market can only take so much more stress, rewriting regs repeatedly would be detrimental to the overall housing recovery process.
Next on the list of observations is a tightrope transition from government supported loan funding to private investor supported loan funding. It appears the Administration is taking an "if we don't do it, someone else will" approach. They will attempt to accomplish their objective of reducing the government's "footprint" in the secondary mortgage market by tightening underwriting guidelines and raising fees. They believe this will effectively "level the playing" field and lower the barriers to entry for private investors. We hope risk retention (skin in the game) regs don't "unlevel" that playing field. READ MORE: Proposed Risk Retention Reform Affects Banker and Broker Loan Pricing
There is a ton of discussion still to be had. For now, read on...
...(read more)Source: http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/02112011_future_of_housing_finance.asp
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