Turning the Tide: Preventing More Foreclosures and Holding Wrong-Doers Accountable
Testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Congressional Progressive Caucus
Good afternoon Co-Chairman Grijalva, Co-Chairman Ellison, and members of the caucus. I am John Griffith, an Economic Policy Analyst at the Center for American Progress Action Fund, where my work focuses on housing policy.
It is an honor to be here today to discuss ways to soften the blow of the ongoing foreclosure crisis. It’s clear that lenders, investors, and policymakers—particularly the government-controlled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—must do all they can to avoid another wave of costly and economy-crushing foreclosures. Today I will discuss why principal reduction—lowering the amount the borrower actually owes on a loan in exchange for a higher likelihood of repayment—is a critical tool in that effort.
Specifically, I will discuss the following:
- First, the high cost of foreclosure. Foreclosure is typically the worst outcome for every party involved, since it results in extraordinarily high costs to borrowers, lenders, and investors, not to mention the carry-on effects for the surrounding community.
- Second, the economic case for principal reduction. Research shows that equity is an important predictor of default. Since principal reduction is the only way to permanently improve a struggling borrower’s equity position, it is often the most effective way to help a deeply underwater borrower avoid foreclosure.
- Third, the business case for Fannie and Freddie to embrace principal reduction. By refusing to offer write-downs on the loans they own or guarantee, Fannie, Freddie, and their regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, or FHFA, are significantly lagging behind the private sector. And FHFA’s own analysis shows that it can be a money-saver: Principal reductions would save the enterprises about $10 billion compared to doing nothing, and $1.7 billion compared to alternative foreclosure mitigation tools, according to data released earlier this month.
- Fourth, a possible path forward. In a recent report my former colleague Jordan Eizenga and I propose a principal-reduction pilot at Fannie and Freddie that focuses on deeply underwater borrowers facing long-term economic hardships. The pilot would include special rules to maximize returns to Fannie, Freddie, and the taxpayers supporting them without creating skewed incentives for borrowers.
- Fifth, a bit of perspective. To adequately meet the challenge before us, any principal-reduction initiative must be part of a multipronged solution that includes support for refinancing, alternative loan modifications, housing counseling, pre-foreclosure mediation, reforms to the bankruptcy code, and several other foreclosure prevention tools.
But before I go further into the possible solutions, I’d like to take a moment to lay out the negative equity crisis facing millions of American families today, many of whom have loans backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
Full testimony below…
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4closureFraud.org
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Turning the Tide: Preventing More Foreclosures and Holding Wrong-Doers Accountable
One more thing.I got butt pimples older then John Griffith.You are way too polite and way too white.
Great comments if you are sitting around drinking Chardonay, but in the real world, it is just another stupid opinion.
Look into history. I dare any of you to send me your e mail address, so I can send you the truth, in the form of Affidavits and court pleadings, where I am challenging everyone up to the assholes in Wash. DC.
All wrong!
Execute the law, and charge all bank CEO’s with Criminal Fraud, by way of Money Laundering Racketeering,
Conspiracy to commit same, and put them in prison, where they belong.
Put all the white guys in cells with the biggest niggers in the joint, and of course any black guy that actually
got into the good ol’ boys club, introduce them to the local prisons Aryan Nation.
Catch my drift? Without punishment nothing changes.
Pinheads like John Griffith, pul-leeez, get real dude! You assholes think you can intellectualize crime?
Greed is a human sin, been around for a long time. Kill em. Today, is another version of 1776, when the sovereigns took up arms against the British pig fuckers. All lawyers are British agents, handling the “debt paper” that poses as money. All this shit comes from the Bank of England who stores the gold held by the Vatican and the Federal Reserve. All Social Security payments are paid tribute to the Queen of England.All American citizens are slaves, by way of their Birth Certificates. 7 billion people, who is going to miss a few million bankers, lawyers, judges and politicians? Not me. File suits against everybody. Grow a set of balls.
I totally agree with you Patrick, Tell them how it is!!!!
This is how it really is in the real world today.
Where’s our American dreams, our homes, what about our MONEY????
Your title is misleading: “…and Holding Wrong-Doers Accountable.) He did not say a damn thing about holding the thieves accountable. He simply repeated the same ol’ crap about asking (pretty please!) Demarco and the TBTF to please follow the rules, and how doing so will benefit everyone. Shame on him for not advocating for those who have already lost their homes to FRAUDCLOSURE and are now being re-victimized by Obama’s sham “Settlement” and the OCC’s Sham NOT-SO-INDEPENDENT Foreclosure Review.
One thing for sure: he’s no Matt Weidner, Bill Black, Yves Smith, Abegail Fields, Adam Levittin and other true Heroes for the wronged homeowner.
Accountable, could be the magic word for Washington State
I stopped reading at the number 5…where he starts talking about modifications and refinancing the underwater borrowers. Well, there’s already a program for the refi of an underwater borrower. It’s called HARP. Just one catch….you can’t be delinquent or behind in the mortgage…so just how many borrowers is THAT program going to help, huh? Modifications? Most of the time the mortgages are fraudulent so you modifty something that is null and void? For what purpose? Ah, to keep the banksters out of court and then back on track on a new venture? Modify a note that isn’t valid? Really??!!! Well, stupid is as stupid does!!! Anyone with half a brain should be able to see the writing on the wall. Well….guess we don’t have too many!