Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Refinancing Change

The Treasury Department just announced that, as part of its home rescue package, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are expanding their efforts to refinance people who are upside down (have negative equity) on their mortgages. Specifically, Fannie and Freddie will now allow refinancing on homes with up to 125% loan to value ratio. Until this announcement, the cap was a 105% loan to value ratio. (Source: CNBC)

Whether this is good or bad news is dependent largely on your priorities (moral hazard, compassion for upside down homeowners, investment opportunity, etc.). However, at least in the short term, this should slow the pace of foreclosures and short sales. This in turn should help to stabilize house prices. The elephant in the room is whether this is merely a stop gap. Will these additional refinances lead to higher losses on bad loans and future increases in foreclosures, or will it buy these borrowers the time to allow house values to return to such a level so as to make it cost-effective to eventually sell these homes? We shall see...

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