Bill OKs Mortgage Asset Sales by All Financials

Under legislation now being debated on Capitol Hill, any financial institution headquartered in the United States can be a seller of mortgage-related assets to the Treasury, which will be the "market maker" and sole determiner of price. On Monday, Treasury and Bush administration officials continued their talks on an estimated $700 billion bailout of the capital and mortgage markets. Meanwhile, financial service executives were trying to figure out the most important part (for them) of the historic bailout plan: at what price will Treasury buy their troubled assets? "The biggest outstanding question is how the price of purchased assets will be determined," said Merrill Lynch analyst Akiva J. Dickstein in a new research report. "While the government will not purchase assets at par, the scope of the program plus the fact that the government is unlikely to demand the same yields as private sector purchases means that spreads are likely to tighten." As negotiations on the bill continue, there is talk that the Treasury might liberalize its guidelines and eventually become a purchaser of assets backed by credit cards, automobiles, and commercial real estate. Meanwhile, over the weekend, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley -- the last two of the remaining independent investment banking giants -- said they would transform themselves into bank holding companies, a move that will allow them to accept more bank deposits but will subject them to greater regulatory scrutiny. Goldman owns Litton Loan Servicing, one of the largest "scratch-and-dent" servicers in the United States. Morgan owns Saxon Mortgage, which services $50 billion in subprime loans.

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Servicing Compliance Law and regulation
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