Special offer

What's in that big bailout bill? A first look

By
Services for Real Estate Pros with SendOutCards

Excerpt:

1) There's a mortgage insurance program, as pushed by House Republicans, but it's completely at the discretion of the Treasury Secretary. Institutions can ask for insurance, Treasury "may" grant it. Verdict: Not gonna happen, at least not much.

2) There's an oversight board, which consists of the Fed chairman, the Treasury Secretary, the SEC chairman, the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (it's listed in the bill as the "Federal Home Finance Agency"; here's hoping they fix that), and the HUD secretary. Update: Yay, they did fix the "Federal Home Finance Agency" error before actually introducing the bill today!

3) Treasury has to turn in a report by next April 30 recommending how financial regulation oughtta be revamped. I'd say whoever gets elected in November ought to get a task force working on that pronto.

4) 20% of any profits realized on the sale of assets go into the Housing Trust Fund and the Capital Magnet Fund

5) Treasury is encouraged to encourage servicers of the loans it buys to do workouts (that is, to change the terms of the loans to avert foreclosures).

6) If the Treasury Secretary buys securities directly from an institution and takes a "meaningful equity position," he must follow certain standards for executive compensation and corporate governance. Limit pay, ban golden parachutes, include clawback provisions in new contracts.

7) If the Secretary buys more than $300 million from any institution (that is, even if it was in an auction, and even if he hasn't taken a meaningful equity stake), he has to prohibit golden parachutes for any top executive hired after the purchase.

8) The Secretary must receive warrants or senior debt in return for purchases of troubled securities--unless the assets of the financial institution are $500 million or less, transactions with the institution add up to $100 million or less, or the institution is legally prohibited from issuing securities and debt instruments.

9) The authority starts at $250 billion. A written certification from the president gets it up to $350 billion. The president can then ask to jack it up to $700 billion, and if Congress doesn't like the idea it has 10 business days to pass a resolution stopping it. Also, it appears that Congress could at any time pass a joint resolution increasing the limit past $700 billion.

11) The SEC is given permission to suspend mark-to-market accounting if it wants to. (I'm pretty sure the SEC doesn't need Congressional permission to do that.)

12) Banks stuck with loads of now-almost-worthless Fannie and Freddie preferred shares can sell them and deduct the losses from ordinary income.

13) An earlier decision to exempt mortgage-debt forgiveness from income taxes is extended from 2010 to 2013.

Click here to read more

Winter Baserva
Seasons Realty Group of Atlanta Communities - Atlanta, GA
Realtor -Homes For Sale, Atlanta, GA

It's gonna be a wild ride. Hang on.

Sep 30, 2008 08:15 AM
Ron Tarvin
Residential, Investment properties, rehab projects, property management, luxury homes, new construction! - Katy, TX
Broker, Katy, Houston, Cypress 77450,77494,77095

Oh, if it's over $300M then no golden parachutes.


BS!  No parachutes for running your company into the ground!  NO WAY, NO HOW!

Sep 30, 2008 08:15 AM
David Bennett
Tarbell, Realtors - Yorba Linda, CA
Yorba Linda Real Estate

Yikes...thanks for the info!!

Sep 30, 2008 08:23 AM
Phil Hanner
Keller Williams - Daytona Beach, FL
Phil at http://www.findahomeinportorange.com/

GSE's (FANNIE AND FREDDIE) and their leadership are more to blame than the usual suspects (evil Wall Street). They undercut the competition, used the law to force high risk loans upon lenders, gave loans to people who could never afford them, inflated their books to score millions in bonuses, and refused to cooperate with regulators.

Now they say we need more regulation. It was regulations that got us here. Most of this bad paper came thru Fannie and Freddie. Now they are throwing student loans, car loans and credit card debt. This has become a joke.

We were all warned about this a few years ago. The few that tried to straighten it out could not rally support. Now its time to pay.

I'm not so concerned about golden parachutes that were negotiated privately. I am more concerned about the tens of millions of dollars that the heads of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac got as performance bonuses created via outright FRAUD.

Sep 30, 2008 08:34 AM