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Rates eyed as Fed Cut, Stimuls Package unveiled. Inman News; Check Out this!!

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Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams Realty
Inman News
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Higher loan limits a 'mistake'

Re: 'House leaders back $625,000 conforming loan limit' (Jan. 24)

Dear Editor:

They are just asking for more trouble with this one. Why do they feel that they need to "bailout" those who knowingly were buying more than they could afford. This action will just complicate the current situation further. Let the market correct itself; it will take time but it will be the most effective way to fix the mistakes of the past 5-6 years.

This whole situation was a crisis waiting to happen from the very beginning. Anyone who has been in the business for a length of time knew that the programs and mortgages that were made available would come back to haunt us all. So here we go with the politicians trying to "fix" it. What a mistake that is.

David Barnes
Denver, Colo.

Re: 'Senator envisions program to buy risky mortgages' (Jan. 24)

Dear Editor:

This is the best suggestion that anyone has come up with. I had e-mailed the same thought to Bernanke's office but did not get a response.

I think this will really stimulate growth in our economy and avoid foreclosures and help all the families that would otherwise lose the "American Dream" of home ownership. After all, it is the government's moral obligation to help all its citizens.

Bravo to Senator Dodd.

Hussein Jiwani
RE/MAX Around Atlanta
Atlanta, Ga.


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Trailing market's wild ride this week

Commentary: Rates eyed as Fed cut, stimulus package unveiled

Friday, January 25, 2008

By Lou Barnes
Inman News

Wow. The basics: mortgages were at 5.75 percent last week, Monday a holiday, Tuesday markets stunned by the Fed's 0.75 percent cut; mortgages early Wednesday morning fell to 5.375 percent(!), wholesale rate-locking Web sites crashed in an hour, mortgages back up to 6 percent(!!) by Thursday noon. Citibank wholesale raised its rates nine separate times in 24 hours.

Summary: The economy -- including housing -- is probably better than feared, and we'll all be OK. However, this was the worst week for economic public policy in my memory. We'll survive it, too.

The details center on the Fed chairman and are not pretty.

First, a crucial concept: Bond buyers love recessions and hate rescues. As the economy faints, bond players join a frightened scramble into bonds for safety, and make a great deal of money if they can sell the bonds before the Fed rescue. If the Fed looks too easy too quickly, bonds reverse in self-protection.

A properly conducted Fed rescue must be delicate because rescue depends on lower long-term rates, not just the short-term ones that the Fed controls. Precedent is more important to the Fed than to the Supreme Court. If the Fed moves in stately, predictable and dignified fashion, long-term rates will follow, even though reversal one day is inevitable. This economy needs lower long-term rates than any in modern times.

Last Thursday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke went to Congress to ask for a stimulus package "quickly." A chairman without confidence in his own resources immediately destabilized markets all over the world (Dow down 400 that day). The Fed chairman never, ever goes to Congress to ask for stimulus: that's the administration's job. The chairman must stay in his tower, appearing confident, in charge, able to respond to any emergency, any and all doubts a state secret.

The destabilization worsened worldwide on our Monday holiday, futures indicating a down-500 Dow open on Tuesday. When the Fed cut 0.75 (to 3.5 percent), the first assumption was that it knew of some new credit disaster. Like a man after a car accident patting himself, looking for injury or blood, markets took inventory. Nothing. The only reason for the timing of the ease was to support the stock market -- as Bernanke had done in August on purpose, and by accident in December. His extreme action, unprecedented in the entire history of the Fed, was notably not joined by any other central bank.

After that injury inventory, I thought maybe Bernanke had panicked -- soiled his skivvies as no chairman before. Now ... I think he was oblivious, or maybe a combination of the two. He has shown political ineptitude from the first months in office (blabbing intentions to a pretty reporter at a party), and does not appear to have learned a thing.

The consequence of random, academic-in-a-china-shop behavior: An already fragile and illiquid bond market raised rates and slowed trading.

The stimulus package has had similarly destabilizing results. At best it will be harmless. More likely, late, adding stimulus after the need has passed. The new mortgage limits, $625,000 for Fannie and $750,000 for FHA, will be intercepted by a 125 percent-of-median-prices lid in each Metropolitan Statistical Area. Out of 156 MSAs in NAR's database, only 20 will benefit. In my home MSA, Boulder, Colo., the city has a home-price median near $550,000, but the whole MSA is $367,000, hence a new Fannie/FHA limit (maybe -- not final) of $460,000 is an undetectably minor help.

Good news: Short-term rates are so low that ARMs are adjusting down, into the 5s. Prime-based HELOCS are adjusting down from the mid-8s to low 6s. The whole of Wall Street thinks that home prices will fall to a clearing price, and they won't -- foreclosures will rise for years, but Bubble Zone prices may well bottom this year.

Pending news: The Fed meets next week (Saints preserve us ...), and mortgage-defining jobs data is out next Friday. Ultimately the economy drives rates, loopy Fed or no.

Lou Barnes is a mortgage broker and nationally syndicated columnist based in Boulder, Colo. He can be reached at lbarnes@boulderwest.com.

***

What's your opinion? Send your Letter to the Editor to opinion@inman.com.

Copyright 2008 Lou Barnes

All rights reserved. No part of this article may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without prior written permission of Inman News.

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Ray Wilburn
Keller Williams Realty - Everett, WA
CPA, MBA
something's whacky with your html Ken
Jan 26, 2008 03:57 PM
Lanre-"THE REAL ESTATE FARMER" Folayan
Samson Properties - Bowie, MD
I don't make promises.I deliver results.SOLD HOMES

All I am praying for is that my prospects and networkers read about this and they will want to leave the bench and become home buyers this year. Its time people stop listening to analysts and jump into the real estate market while interest rates are like 5.48 as of 1/24/07. Great post.

Jan 26, 2008 03:58 PM