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LAWMAKERS QUESTION THE 30 YEAR FIXED RATE MORTGAGES

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Mortgage and Lending with Mortgage Consultant, Right Trac Financial Group, Inc. NMLS # 2709 NMLS # 6869

“Lawmakers Question the 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgages”

 

You read the heading correctly. The article below is actually taking on this topic. Again the Government is looking into ways to mess up a mortgage product that is absolutely needed.

 

I read the title of the article a couple of times, to makes sure I wasn’t misreading anything. Unfortunately, we may need another call to action.

 

Lawmaker Questions the 30-Year Fixed-Rate Mortgage

By: Ryan Schuette

Lawmakers called into doubt the role of the historic 30-year fixed-rate mortgage Thursday, with Senate committee witnesses alternately arguing for and against it.

 

www.themreport.com-annual report image

At issue: whether the benchmark loan, available since the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt, stabilizes the housing finance system or weakens it.

Ranking committee member Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Alabama) helped open the hearing with questions about whether the mortgage product creates a “public good” for U.S. homeowners.

“Is a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage the best option to consume?” he asked. “Is the pre-payment option included these 30-year fixed-rate mortgages truly free? And what has the subsidy of this product already cost the American taxpayer?”

He credited the mortgage with helping make homeownership more possible for Americans, adding that the “bailouts demonstrate that subsidization comes with a cost.”

“A new system that eliminates the most popular and available mortgage product in the country would be a step backwards… for the housing market,” Sen. Tim Johnson (D-Colorado), committee chairman, countered early in his introductory remarks.

Witnesses alternately upheld and criticized the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage.

Janis Bowdler, director of the wealth-building policy project with the National Council of La Raza, framed

the loan as one that has allowed two out of three Americans to secure their own homes today.

“Building wealth through home equity can fuel retirements, business ownership, and the advancement of one’s children,” she told lawmakers.

Paul Willen, senior economist and policy advisor with the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, portrayed the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage as one that advocates falsely said helped prevent fallout for homeowners during the financial crisis.

He said that proponents argue that 30-year loans “eliminate the possibility of ‘payment shocks’ and thus would have prevented many of the foreclosures we have seen in the last five years,” adding that these “played little role in the crisis and, in fact, most borrowers who lost their homes in the last five years had long-term fixed-rate mortgages.”

Bowdler cast any decision to fundamentally restructure the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage as one that would undermine household wealth for black and Hispanic families, for whom home equity accounts for 65 percent and 59 percent of their household wealth, respectively.

“Without this flexible financing tool, homeownership will become a luxury reserved for the affluent, and the majority of families will be left without the appreciable asset that has long been the cornerstone of middle class wealth,” she said.

Speaking with MReport, Mark Calabria, director of financial regulation studies with the conservative-leaning Cato Institute and a former Senate Banking Committee staffer under Shelby, responds to Bowdler’s testimony by saying that “somebody has to take an interest-rate risk.”

He says subsidizing the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage “means the homeowner is asking someone else to take the risk. You can get the 30-year mortgage elsewhere without a government guarantee behind it.

“We’re essentially limiting consumer choice in the world” by requiring the 30-year loan as a product offering from government entities, he adds. “It should ultimately be consumer choice that determines these products.”

Should lenders jettison the benchmark loan altogether?

“I wouldn’t get rid of it,” he tells MReport.

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Joe Petrowsky, NMLS #6869

Right Trac Financial Group, Inc. NMLS #2709

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Chuck Carstensen
RE/MAX Results - Elk River, MN
Minnesota/Wisconsin Real Estate Expert

I think the 30 year loan is a great product. Its great if you can get the 15 year loan and make it work, but its the drop in values and loss of jobs that created the mess.

Oct 26, 2011 02:43 AM
Daniel H. Fisher
www.FisherHermanRealty.com (704) 617-3544 - Charlotte, NC
MCRP - Charlotte Real Estate, NC or SC

People can only afford to allocate a certain total dollar amount towards a mortgage payment every month.  

Interest only loans, stated income no doc, stepped ARM's, no money down and mortgages with long terms allow the monthly payment to cover a higher mortgage and push home prices higher.

So, perhaps the outcome of eliminating the 30 year fixed would be a downward pressure on home prices or resurgence of low payment option loan products to cover the additional mortgage.

Oct 26, 2011 06:52 AM
George Souto
George Souto NMLS #65149 FHA, CHFA, VA Mortgages - Middletown, CT
Your Connecticut Mortgage Expert

Joe, I also mentioned this in my blog yesterday.  I don't know what they are thinking in Washington these days, OH wait they are not.

If people can't make their mortgage payments on 30 year fixed loans, how in the world are they going to make them on a 15 year fixed loan when the principal and interest payment is almost twice as much?

Oct 26, 2011 03:08 PM