Home prices have fallen 18% since 2006 and could drop another 10% in 2009, which means the average mortgage could be "underwater" soon, according to a former Fannie Mae executive who served as the GSE's chief credit officer in the 1980s. Speaking before the American Enterprise Institute, former GSE executive Edward Pinto said the average loan-to-value ratio on most single-family loans was roughly 95% at year-end 2008. Mr. Pinto, now a consultant, said that figure could rise to 109% at the end of this year, a first. He noted that a 20%-plus drop in home prices has not occurred since the Great Depression when values fell 24% between 1929 and 1933. LTVs, though, were much lower in the Depression. The consultant relies on home price indexes issued by the Federal Housing Finance Agency and S&P Case Shiller in making his price estimates. Mr. Pinto said the government is on the hook for nearly 70% of all mortgages due to its backing of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Home Loan Banks, the Federal Housing Administration and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. If Congress passes bankruptcy reform legislation that allows for mortgage cramdowns, the government will be "cramming down the loans they are responsible for," Mr. Pinto said.
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Balance sheet reduction is a top priority of new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. Achieving that goal means avoiding the kinds of disruptions that roiled the Treasury bond market in 2019, the last time the central bank embarked on quantitative tightening.
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The government said it was responding to a jailbreaking risk that Anthropic says is minimal.
June 13 -
Lawmakers from both parties defended regional Federal Reserve banks against potential consolidation, arguing local economic perspectives are essential to ensure monetary policy remains sound.
June 12 -
Under the proposed rule, the definition of a manufactured home would allow upper floor sections to be transported and constructed without a permanent chassis.
June 12 -
Even though the SAFE Act does not require AI loan officers licensing, other laws, as well as regulators, still look for a person to be responsible.
June 12 -
The government-related market's push has intensified efforts to draw up classic FICO comparisons or set up interim rating policies pending more data.
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