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obama

Another Day, Another Housing Program

October 25, 2011

The Obama Administration is taking another crack at addressing a core problem hindering the economic recovery: underwater homeowners (that is, borrowers who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth) and the ripple-effects of that financial hardship. The Federal Housing Finance Agency announced plans Monday to revamp the three-year-old Home Affordable Refinance Program [HARP] to allow more underwater borrowers to refinance. Ideally, qualified homeowners who have been consistently paying their mortgages would be able to refinance their loans at lower rates thereby staving off the threat of default and freeing up spending money for other purposes. Both outcomes would ostensibly help the economy, if the program works exactly as designed. But given HARP’s lackluster results in its first three years of existence, the new initiative has its share of skeptics. Anthony Sanders, a finance professor at George Mason University, said a “fundamental disconnect” exists between HARP’s goal of lowering monthly mortgage payments and the larger economic issues facing many Americans. “There’s no evidence that lowering a mortgage payment a few hundred dollars a month prevents defaults,” he said. “Giving $200 a month to people who already have a job doesn’t really make any sense.” Homeowners aren’t defaulting on their mortgages over a few hundred dollars, he said. They’re defaulting because they’ve lost their job and can’t find another one, or have suffered some other financial catastrophe. To open HARP up to more financially strapped homeowners, the FHFA has removed an earlier cap that disqualified borrowers whose mortgages were valued at 125% or more than the value of their homes. The program is open only to those borrowers whose loans are backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac , the troubled quasi-government entities that provide financing for an estimated 80% of all U.S. mortgages. (The government seized control of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in 2008 as they teetered on the verge of collapse.) “This is an appropriate balancing of risk that’s being borne by Fannie and Freddie, and hence the American taxpayer,” FHFA’s acting director, Edward DeMarco, said Monday during a conference call with reporters. “This will make HARP more available.” The Obama Administration claimed the original HARP program would help 5 million borrowers. But the actual number has been less than 900,000. The FHFA predicted Monday that by easing the restrictions on the old program and reducing some refinancing fees and streamlining the process as many as one million underwater homeowners could get help by 2013. Critics say it still barely makes a dent. In August, Corelogic, a housing research firm, said 11 million mortgages, or nearly 25% of all residential home loans, are underwater. The FHFA also hopes the revamped HARP gives banks with substantial mortgage portfolios additional incentives to participate. To that end, FHFA altered the program so that lenders won’t be forced to buy back HARP loans if underwriting problems are later discovered. Under the previous, tougher restrictions, banks had little incentive to refinance mortgages, said Leif Thomsen, CEO of Mortgage Master, a large Massachusetts home lender. Default rates haven’t reached critical mass for the big commercial banks, Thomsen explained, consequently they saw no reason to renegotiate a loan made at 6% interest down to 4%. Banks are, after all, in the business of making money by lending money, he noted. Besides, given the federal guidelines that capped underwater loans at 125% of the value of the property, many struggling homeowners couldn’t refinance anyway.  But lifting the cap should create strong competition for refinancing underwater loans, Thomsen predicted, a factor that could spark the big banks to renegotiate and refinance on their own or see all that refinancing business move to independent firms like Thomsen’s. “It’s about time that this program came out,” Thomsen said. “I’ve been calling for something like this for three years.” JPMorganChase (NYSE:JPM) is already on board, issuing a statement Monday in praise of the new HARP and saying it could save consumers as much as $2,500 a year. But Sanders said the program – and its creators – are still missing the point. “I think they’re making the assumption that everyone who saves money on a refinanced mortgage will spend it on consumer durables. But they might put it away in their savings account or put it aside for their kid’s college education, like they should have in the first place,” he said. Sanders said the government is essentially wasting its time on housing programs that he described as chronically “too small in scope” and off the mark in terms of targeting what’s really ailing the  U.S. economy. “The government needs to step out of the way and let the housing market heal itself,” he said. “Lack of jobs is what causing the problem right now.” See the original post here: Another Day, Another Housing Program

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Gov’t faults 3 lenders over mortgage-aid efforts

June 10, 2011

The Obama administration is blaming the three largest U.S. mortgage lenders for the failures of its foreclosure-prevention program. It says they’ve done little to help people at risk of losing their homes. View post: Gov’t faults 3 lenders over mortgage-aid efforts

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Obama Turns to Economy in Ohio to Highlight Administration’s Stimulus Jobs

February 26, 2011

By Kate Andersen Brower and Roger Runningen June 18 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama pivoted from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill back to the economy today with an emphasis on the jobs created by his administration’s $862 billion economic stimulus package. At a groundbreaking in Columbus, Ohio, for the 10,000th road project funded by the stimulus, Obama said improving the nation’s infrastructure is one of the keys to long-term prosperity. “If we’re going to rebuild America’s economy, then we’ve got to rebuild America, period, from the ports and the airways that ship our goods, to the roads and transit systems that move our workers and connect cities and businesses,” Obama said at the project site near the Nationwide Children’s Hospital . The president is seeking to remind voters of his efforts to revive the economy five months ahead November’s midterm elections. Republicans have criticized the stimulus legislation as a wasteful spending program that hasn’t fulfilled the administration’s promises on job creation. Unemployment in Ohio is 10.7 percent, one percentage point higher than the national average. While the Federal Reserve’s regional business survey showed last week that the economy expanded in all the central bank’s districts in April and May for the first time in more than two years, job growth has lagged. Initial jobless claims increased by 12,000 to 472,000 in the week ended June 12, Labor Department figures showed yesterday. ‘Summer of Recovery’ “The economy is still lousy,” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood told reporters before today’s trip. “We want to put the message out: This is going to be the summer of recovery.” LaHood, who traveled with the president to Ohio, said the project being highlighted today is expected to create more than 300 new jobs and is one of 462 transportation projects in Ohio funded by $1.1 billion in stimulus money. The work being done under the stimulus will “pay dividends to our communities for generations to come,” Obama said. “While the recovery may start with projects like this it can’t end here.” In a report to the president released yesterday, Vice President Joe Biden said the government has spent $620 billion from the stimulus and created or saved between 2.2 million and 2.8 million jobs. He predicted jobs created or retained by the end of 2010 will number “at least” 3.5 million. Republican Critics “We have created over 17,000 jobs in the last month” in Ohio, Republican state auditor Mary Taylor , a candidate for lieutenant governor, told reporters on a conference call today before Obama arrived. “But it’s an important fact to note that 16,800 of those jobs created were government jobs.” The White House is kicking off a six-week focus on scores of public works projects under way across the nation and into the election season. “This summer a lot more people are going to be working on highways, building clean water projects, weatherizing homes, and — and they’ll be drawing paychecks that they wouldn’t have otherwise drawn,” Biden said at a briefing yesterday that was part of the administration’s focus on the stimulus. The economy will be a top issue in the November elections that will determine which party controls the House and Senate. The Columbus area is represented in the House by freshman Democrat Mary Jo Kilroy . She was elected in 2008, the first Democrat to represent the district since 1982, according to the Almanac of American Politics. The non-partisan Cook Political Report rates her race against Republican former state Senator Steve Stivers as a toss-up. “There’s a feeling of disenchantment, disillusionment, discouragement — a feeling that no politician is going to be able to do much to turn the situation around,” Paul Beck , a political science professor at Ohio State University in Columbus, said of voter sentiment in the state. “Until the private sector really turns around you’re not going to have a big surge of jobs,” said Beck. Still, Beck said, “the stimulus money has been very important to Ohio, it’s prevented wrenching cutbacks in Ohio.” To contact the reporters on this story: Kate Andersen Brower in Columbus, Ohio at kandersen7@bloomberg.net ; Roger Runningen in Washington at rrunningen@bloomberg.net

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Texas Congressman’s Apology to BP is Denounced by His Fellow Republicans

February 26, 2011

By Lisa Lerer and Patrick O’Connor June 18 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Representative Joe Barton may be the only person who had a worse day on Capitol Hill yesterday than BP Plc Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward . The Texas Republican sparked a political backlash from both parties when he apologized to Hayward — at a hearing where other lawmakers lined up to berate BP — and accused the White House of a “shakedown” by pressuring BP to set aside $20 billion for damage claims from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Barton retracted his comments hours later after a meeting with House Minority Leader John Boehner , an Ohio Republican, and House Minority Whip Eric Cantor , a Virginia Republican. The party leaders told Barton to apologize immediately or lose his position as ranking Republican on the Energy and Commerce Committee , said a party leadership aide who spoke on condition of anonymity. The outcry illustrates Republicans’ difficulty in gaining political ground, even during a low period for President Barack Obama , as the party struggles to conquer internal divisions, said Julian Zelizer , a political science professor at Princeton University in New Jersey. Message Discord “The Republican Party is not totally united on what its message should be,” Zelizer said in an interview yesterday. “It’s the Tea Party-versus-leadership tension that we’ve seen on other issues.” The flap began at a hearing by the Energy and Commerce panel on the Gulf of Mexico spill. Lawmakers denounced Hayward for hours, accusing him of stonewalling and failing to provide answers about the causes of the explosion. Barton, though, at the hearing’s beginning apologized to Hayward. The congressman described the claims fund BP agreed to establish after its top officials met with Obama on June 16 as “a $20 billion shakedown.” “I’m ashamed of what happened in the White House,” Barton, 60, told Hayward at the hearing, and later said, “I apologize” for it. Less than six hours later, Boehner’s office released a statement by Barton in which he retracted his apology to BP and apologized “for using the term ‘shakedown.’” ‘Wrong’ Boehner’s office also issued a separate statement from the Republican leader, Cantor and Representative Mike Pence , an Indiana Republican, calling Barton’s statements at the hearing “wrong.” Barton’s statement said he regretted “the impact that my statement this morning implied that BP should not pay for the consequences of their decisions and actions in this incident.” The comments by Barton, who was first elected to his Dallas-area House seat in 1984, inflamed Gulf Coast Republicans, who are outraged at BP for failing to plug the leaking well. “I don’t think we need to be apologizing to British Petroleum,” said Florida Republican Senator George LeMieux . Representative Jeff Miller , a Florida Republican, said in a statement that Barton’s comments “call into question his judgment and ability to serve” in a leadership position on the Energy and Commerce Committee. Other fiscally conservative Republicans have criticized the BP agreement with the Obama administration. And Kentucky Republican Senate candidate Rand Paul today expressed sympathies for Barton in an interview with a radio station. “I have never liked the tone of the president when he said things or his administration says things like he is going to put the boot on the throat of BP,” he said on Lexington, Kentucky- based WVLK-AM. ‘Shakedown Politics’ Georgia Republican Representative Tom Price , in a statement yesterday, said Obama’s insistence on creating an escrow fund was an example of his administration “exerting its brand of Chicago-style shakedown politics.” Representative Michele Bachmann , a Minnesota Republican, criticized the idea of an escrow fund as a “redistribution-of- wealth” fund at a Heritage Foundation forum this week. Former Representative Dick Armey of Texas, a Republican and a leading funder of the Tea Party movement, said at a meeting this week with reporters that Obama lacked the constitutional authority to set up such a fund. ‘Risky’ “They’re trying to make an anti-Obama, anti-Democratic point out of this recent announcement, but I think it’s risky to Republicans,” said Zelizer. Employees of the oil and gas industry have been Barton’s largest source of campaign cash since 1989, giving him $1.4 million, according to the Center for Responsive Politics , a Washington-based research group. That’s more than any other House member has gotten from the industry. He has raised $100,470 from oil and gas industry employees for his 2010 re- election campaign. Democrats immediately seized on Barton’s statements, seeing an opportunity to score political points months before the November elections. “When people in the Gulf are suffering from actions taken by BP, Republicans in Congress are apologizing to BP,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters, referring to the statements by Barton and Price. Jon Vogel, executive director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee , used the comments in an e-mail fundraising appeal, telling supporters that their donations would “send an overwhelming message” that Republicans “shamelessly shill for their Big Oil backers.” Vice President Joe Biden called Barton’s remarks “incredibly insensitive, incredibly out-of-touch.” “There’s no shakedown,” the vice president said at a White House briefing. “It’s insisting on responsible conduct and a responsible response to something they caused.” To contact the reporters responsible for this story: Lisa Lerer at llerer@bloomberg.net ; Patrick O’Connor in Washington at Poconnor14@bloomberg.net

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L.A.-San Francisco Bullet-Train Bidding Process May Begin Late Next Year

February 16, 2011

By Alan Ohnsman and Chris Cooper June 18 (Bloomberg) — California, the top recipient of funds from President Barack Obama ’s high-speed rail program, expects to issue a tender for a bullet-train line linking Los Angeles and San Francisco by late 2011. The state expects bids from about 10 trainmakers and construction may start as early as the first half of 2012, Quentin Kopp , a California High Speed Rail Authority board member, said in an interview in Los Angeles yesterday. The train will whisk passengers between the two cities, 432 miles apart, in less than 2 hours 40 minutes, according to the state-backed group’s website

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China’s Hu Buys Time on Yuan Valuation by Announcement Before G-20 Summit

February 16, 2011

By Bloomberg News June 21 (Bloomberg) — Chinese President Hu Jintao may have succeeded in removing the yuan’s valuation from debate at this week’s Group of 20 leaders’ summit, economists and political analysts say. How much time he’s bought depends on how flexible the currency will become.

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