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Daily Real
Estate News | December 5, 2007
Foreclosure Plan Will Be Greeted With Questions
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson will unveil a plan on Thursday to forestall
foreclosures and ease the housing recession.
The
release of plan's details will coincide with the release of data from the
Mortgage Bankers Association that show that homes in foreclosure hit record
levels in April through June, and that nearly 17 percent of sub-prime
borrowers missed at least one payment in the first quarter of the year. An
additional 2 million home owners will face their first interest-rate reset
by the end of 2008. "This is the most serious housing recession since the
Great Depression," says Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com.
Zandi predicts that home prices, on average, will fall 7 percent more
through next year.
Paulson says he wants state and local governments to be allowed to issue
tax-exempt bonds to "temporarily" raise money to help some struggling
sub-prime borrowers refinance. Questions remain about how many investors,
who bought bonds backed by these mortgages and are spread out around the
globe, will agree to change the terms of the loans.
Source: USA Today, Noelle Knox (12/4/2007)
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