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For $700 billion, the little guy gets nothing

Posted Sep 29 2008, 06:40 AM by Douglas McIntyre
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Congress has built all kinds of protections into the $700 billion bailout to keep the average citizen from having to foot the bill. If assets sold to the Treasury by financial companies have not regained their value in five years, the firms must pay the government back. That only works if the banks are still in business.

There will be oversight of the program so that Treasury cannot draw down the entire $700 billion all at once and use the money for a vacation in Mexico.

The package of salvation has been named the "Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008." It may stabilize some big banks and a portion of the credit markets and may or may not cost taxpayers money over time. It almost certainly gives the troubled homeowner nothing.

"This isn't about a bailout of Wall Street, it's a buy-in so we can turn our economy around," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a statement. That would mean that housing prices and employment would be resurrected. While it may be lost on some politicians that home prices may fall another 20%, it is not lost on homeowners.

Buried deep in the bowels of the bill are vague clauses about helping mortgage-holders with their burdens. Since Treasury will own some mortgages which it buys from banks, it could, in theory, set up programs to improve mortgage payment terms or interest rates. In almost all cases, it is not that simple.

According to The Wall Street Journal, "If the government buys entire loans, it will have more control of terms for homeowners than if it buys pieces of mortgage-backed securities." The essence of mortgage-backed paper is that pools of home loan are cut into pieces and combined with pieces from other pools. That was supposed to spread risk across an asset base built by mathematical models to keep capital safe. It also pulled asunder mortgages normally held by a single bank and spread them around the system. Finding mortgages home-by-home will be remarkably difficult.

Mortgage-holders might have supposed that some part of the $700 billion would go for aid based on need. They have supposed wrong, and that means that the "Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008" has missed the bull's-eye of the trouble. Until the drop in the value of housing is addressed, complex paper based on its value cannot recover. That will tend to further undermine the delicate peace the Treasury is trying to broker between banks and their worst assets.

The housing market problem remains unaddressed.. The bailout is vexed at its beginning.

Top Stocks blogger Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

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Comments

 

I would suggest that there being a renaming of any warrants transferred to the government from this companies  - Bush Securities (BS) for short, its emblematic of Bush's entire presidency, easily remembered.

Actually if you followed politics and banking you would know that this is the failed policy of Bill Clinton. Starting in 1995, then in 1999 he made money available without proof, because he was afraid too many people were being denied loans. In 2003 President Bush asked for Congress to overhaul this because Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were showing signs of strain, and failure was imminent. Of course with such stalwarts as Barack Obama, acting as a mouthpiece for Fannie Mae and Joe Biden overlooking the SCC according to them everything was fine. Once again we get handed a bill without even getting lunch.

the goverment gives other countrys ,over a trillon dollars a year. and they hate us. let,s use that money in the usa. next year and see if they still hate us.  

KURT NEEDS TO GET BUSH  OFF THE END OF HIS NOSE , AND READ ......

I'm sorry I don't see why the 'little guy' should get something. The securities that wall street bought were made up of loans that the 'little guy' couldn't pay. There was no malice on the part of wall street to buy these loans, only an investment. We need to infuse money into the marketplace because these bad loans have soaked it all up.

    Blame Main Street, not Wall Street. Lets see if anyone has the guts to state the truth.

    Bush is the first President in history to start a military action, such as Iraq, without providing the means to pay for it. In excess of 1.5 Trillion dollars have already been spent on this fiasco and there really is no end in sight. Interbank lending, without the liquidity required, has slowed as a direct result. Bush, and main streets denizens, were aware of this fact.

    Countrywide, a mortgage middleman and provider, knowingly created ficticous finances and other credit means to improperly create a market. They became the countries largest provider until their pyramid scheme nearly bankrupted them. Bank of America now owns them. Bush, the SEC, the FED and main streets denizens, were aware of this fact.

    AIG Improperly, and Illegally to some, managed to loan themselves money. How? Simple, they actually created a Security and called it an insurance contract. They actually created an OPTION, unregulated, that insured people and institutions against loss. Bush, and his administration, knowingly let this occur. Bush,the SEC, the FED and main streets denizens, were aware of this fact.

    WaMu and Wachovia, both attempted to play in the big boys sand box. How? They traded, and took long positions, which no BANK ever has any place taking. Instead, they lost, and their shareholders are paying for this foolishness.

    Lehman identified and made every attempt to staunch their bleeding. Congress and the President have deemed them as "OK to FAIL" as a result.

    Wall Street recognizes that there is a problem. However, most of our illustrious Senate and Congress see fit to mis-identify the real issue(s). Lack of proper regulation and oversight being the primary issue that led to this collapse. Thus, we now have a credit crisis that our economy cannot live or survive with.

    Regulate Main Street again. Pour money, wisely, into the credit market(s) and watch the ship right itself.

America is a nation built on greed! And know it's getting what it deserves. We're in for the worst economic depression since the{ Great Depression}.

In my opinion they should regulate every bit of it,so that this should not happen  again.

NO BAILOUT FOR WALL STREET!

Yes we should blame Wall Street; the companies involved are not innocent and should not be given anything to help them out. It was their greed, not Main Streets's inability to pay for their mortgages, that caused this mess in the first place.

To think this great country would come to the aid of greedy corporations while letting families live in "tent cities" makes me sick to my stomach.

KTB - "righting the ship" your way doesn't fix the ship, it only gives the illusion that the ship is okay.

09-30-2008

The morgage company like American Home Morgage when bank wrop wich I had my morgage, no one whants the type of loand I was trich in to.

Now I'm not able to pay for it, now they are a collection agency in India trying to collect.

I'm not able to refinance, they don't whant to do a lien in due they refuse a short sale and my property taxes acoming up.

What's in it for those like my self that are going to be with noting due to bad brokers, real state agents and lending institution for giving bad loans knowing that they were bad to the buyersand did nothing to help us that is my question in all of this.

What is going to happen if the institution don't what to refinance you now because of your credit is gong bad.

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