Ladas wrote:
It encourages more bad behavior, either directly through this program, or as indirect consequence of being "bailed out" by the government. Higher interest rates are generally a consequence of poor financial decisions such that the risk of lending to this person is related to the interest asked as return for lending the money. Nothing you don't know there obviously.
No, it doesn't. Not in this case. First, this is only applicable for houses that have tanked in value. You're maintaining the value of the loan, so nobody's being bailed out. You're paying closing costs to cover the bank's cost of the paperwork, etc, so nobody's being harmed. You're refinancing at a lower interest rate, and paying off the previous loan, so again - nobody's being harmed. In this case, since we're talking about people that have made their payments, their high interest rate is not the result of bad decisions, it's a result of time, and the economy. For example, I'm currently paying 6.5%, because of when I purchased my home. Interest rates have dropped substantially since then. It has nothing to do with bad financial decisions.
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So now we have the government providing interest rates lower than can be obtained by those who did things right, managed their finances and bought within their limits.
No, that's not accurate at all. The interest rates are the interest rates. If you owed only 50% of the value of your house, you could easily go and get one of these in a refinance. A guy that's slightly underwater cannot currently.
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Whats more, I seriously suspect that there is no rule regarding the amount that can be borrowed, just up to the 115% (or whatever it is this time) of the value of the home. Sounds reasonable, but the rule should be up to the principal still on the loan, such that people can't "cash" an extra few thousand dollars on their home equity at this great low rate.
I don't know, but I agree with you here.
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What is the likelihood that should people be allowed to do this, they will use those funds to lower other, higher interest debts? Next to none, but instead incur new debts, financed by taxpayers (who are also likely not the ones that can qualify for these lower rates).
I strongly hope they don't allow this. Just take the current debt, already backed by Freddie and Fannie, and let them refi it - IF THEY'VE MADE THEIR PAYMENTS. If they haven't made their payments, they may not be able to under the new interest rate anyway, and shouldn't have the cash for closing on hand.