Create your world with sifymail
Login | Register
Comments Share Print  Rate 
REUTERS

'US working on affordable mortgage plan'

2008-12-04 13:49:24
 

US Treasury
US Treasury

Washington: The U.S. Treasury Department is developing a plan to try to reduce mortgage rates on home loans to 4.5 per cent on typical mortgages by expanding its purchases of mortgage backed securities, sources familiar with the plan said on Wednesday.

The plan would see mortgage finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac expand their purchase of mortgage securities to help drive down borrowing costs, the sources said.

The 4.5 per cent target interest rate is roughly one percentage point lower than the average rate currently on a 30-year, fixed rate mortgage.

Both the mortgage giants, which finance or guarantee about half of all U.S. mortgages were effectively nationalized by regulators in September after losses on mortgages eroded their capital.

Bank of America to cut jobs

Since they were taken over, the two largest sources of U.S. mortgage finance have become tools for policymakers wishing to lower the cost of home loans and break a wave of foreclosures.

The move would supplement a program announced last week by the Federal Reserve under which it plans to buy up to $600 billion in assets and debt from government-sponsored enterprises like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, one source said.

The announcement by the Fed last week helped to lower home mortgage rates by about a half-percentage point and sparked a jump in refinancings among homeowners.

U.S. mortgage applications surged by a record amount last week on news of the Fed's investments in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac securities, according to data from the U.S. Mortgage Bankers Association on Wednesday.

No comparison between current crisis and 1930s: Bernanke

Rescue funds

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has doled out hundreds of billions of dollars of a $700 billion financial rescue fund to banks since mid-October in an effort to stabilize financial markets.

But lawmakers have criticized Paulson for making big investments in banks while not giving direct aid to struggling homeowners.

More India business stories | Get the latest Sensex update

Paulson has said he is duty-bound to help troubled borrowers under the terms of the rescue package and that he has been developing a new workable plan, after earlier abandoning a plan to buy bad loans from banks.

Paulson has been weighing whether to ask Congress for the second half of the $700 billion fund and is certain to face tough questions from lawmakers about how the first $350 was allocated.

Comments Share Print  Rate 
 
 
Special Rate on Stock Products:
Intraday | Exclusive | Live stock chat | StreetCall | MultiBagger | NiftyTraders | MarketBuzz | SmarTrade
© Copyright Sify Technologies Ltd, 1998-2009. All rights reserved. India News Portal, Sify.com hosted at SifyHosting India's first Level 3 Internet Data Centre.
Site optimized for Internet Explorer 5.5 and above.
See Disclaimer | Privacy Policy & Parental Guidance on pornography | careers@sify | About Us | Feedback | Advertise