Monday, May 4, 2009

Banks are the moral champions of the marketplace!?

Foreclosures are good for nobody. They put families out of their homes, reduce property values, and leave the bank with an albatross of a property in a poor market. One would think that the bank would take every measure to restructure and prevent foreclosure. Not so, observes Steve Meacham on last week's Bill Moyers Journal:
One of the unheralded things about this crisis right now is that there's an awful lot of owners who come to us who cannot afford their home at the inflated value, at the adjustable rate mortgage price. But they have plenty of income to afford their home at the real value at a 30-year fixed. And so why not just give them the property back at that amount? If they're foreclosed on, the best the bank that can do is sell the property at the real value. By definition, that is the absolute best.

If Deutsche Bank forecloses on Joe Schmoe the best they can do is to sell that property at real value. So if Joe Schmoe can afford the property at real value, why not sell it back to him? But the only reason the banks aren't doing that is because of what they call moral hazard. They say basically that homeowners should be punished because they signed these loan documents.

These are the same guys who have run our entire economy into the ground and who have been rewarded with billions in taxpayer bailouts and have used billions of that money to give bonuses to the very executives that drove their companies and the whole economy into the ground. And they are citing moral hazard as the reason why they can't resell that property to the existing homeowners at the real value. That is disgusting and hypocritical and in the extreme.

2 comments:

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  2. Lidiya,

    Thanks for the plug. I suspect the actual motivation behind not renegotiating these mortgages is to forestall the inevitable hit on their balance sheets. At-risk mortgages are on the books for an inflated value, propping up the banks' books. Of course they must take this hit when the property is foreclosed on, but I suppose the current leadership is keen on sitting on the artificially inflated numbers as long as they can.

    gk

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