ARM rates will be freezed instead of reset
Posted by Frugal on December 3rd, 2007
The Hope Now Alliance is going to freeze the rates on ARM loans instead of letting them reset. That is absolutely unfair to anyone who doesn’t benefit from such deals. Why don’t I get some free points to buy down the interest rate, paid by the alliance too? Of course, if they can get all the investors in different trenches to agree, then I have nothing to say.
In any case, the banks are desperately trying to keep the mortgage losses under cover by whatever means. This freeze of ARM rates will definitely postpone the reckoning day. I originally expect a heavy down year in 2008/2009 for real estate prices. Now I am less sure of such. However, home prices definitely won’t be going up in 2008/2009. Lending standards for new loans are still tight.
One thing that I’m most curious of on the details of the freezing plan is that on all these ARMs, there are both payment and interest rates. When the payment rate is less than the interest rate, the loan is negatively amortized. I really wonder whether they plan to freeze both payment and interest rates, or just the payment rate. My initial guess would be that it would simply the payment rate that will be frozen. In that case, no one involved will take an actual accounting loss. The interest money will continue to pile up, despite the fact that those interest money may never get paid by the subprime homeowners. Obviously, if given long enough time (and a good amount of inflation), eventually home value will exceed and allow the paid off of these interest money. However, for these mortgage investors, they are still at the losing end of the stick. The inflation will eat away any of their recovery of the interest money.
If anyone knows somebody who get into such plan, please ask him and let me know that whether both interest and payment rates are frozen. Thanks in advance.
I assume that such modified loans will still be un-transactionable, or illiquid. No one in their right mind will buy such products. But keeping these loans away from foreclosure will prevent the banks to liquidate the homes and assigned the final value to the loan at loss. And so the fairy tales will go on, and the losses can be slowly written off. Banks can then “properly” meet the capital requirement ratio from FDIC.
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February 13th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
I think the freeze is the right thing to do. Some of the people duped into bad mortgages were stupid, others were fraudulent.