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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Friday, July 6, 2012

FREE MONEY: California to seize home loans



Socialist Insanity  -  Some California cities are considering seizing home mortgages and selling them.
  • Private contracts between lender and borrower would be voided by a Socialist Big Government.
  • The government seized private property would then be sold at what the government considers "fair value" and the borrower's (voter's) payments would be lowered.
  • Mortgage investors would be fucked such as the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, mutual funds and others.
  • Private mortgage lending to home buyers could vanish.  



The Socialist People's Republic of California is a gift that just keeps giving.
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Now some cities in the People's Republic is looking to void private real estate contracts and seize the loans made by the lenders.
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A California county’s top executive addressed bondholders and mortgage loan investors amid mounting concern it will use eminent domain to seize mortgages to buy the votes of homeowners who owe more than the properties’ values.

After all, in a Utopian Socialist world you cannot ever lose money on an investment.  The slot machines of life must always be rigged to pay off to every player no matter how stupid the mistakes are he makes.

Eminent Domain Abuse 

San Bernardino is exploring the strategy along with the cities of Fontana and Ontario there. An agreement approved last week granted them the authority to study and create a program reports Businessweek.

Robert Shiller, the economics professor at Yale University and co-creator of the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price indexes, supported the idea in a June 23 op-ed in the New York Times. By using eminent-domain powers, municipalities can force the sale of private property at prices deemed to be fair value if doing so serves a public purpose.


Eighteen trade groups including the American Bankers Association, National Association of Home Builders and Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association sent letters yesterday to California officials expressing their“strong objection.” They warned it would “actually further depress housing values in the county by restricting the flow of credit to home buyers.” The county is the largest by area in the U.S., excluding Hawaii and Alaska, according to its website.

Damaged bondholders may include pension funds such as California Public Employees’ Retirement System that oversee money for retirees living in the areas, mutual funds and real estate investment trusts owned by retail investors, and government-tied holders such as American International Group Inc. (AIG), and Fannie Mae.

Scott Simon, the mortgage head at Pacific Investment Management Co., which runs the world’s largest bond fund (PTTRX), said the initiative could undermine investor desire to lend to homeowners. Government-backed programs have accounted for more than 90 percent of new mortgages since 2008 amid tumbling home values and soaring defaults.
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‘Monster Payments’

Scott Simon, the mortgage head at Pacific Investment Management Co., which runs the world’s largest bond fund, said the initiative could undermine investor desire to lend to homeowners. Government-backed programs have accounted for more than 90 percent of new mortgages since 2008 amid tumbling home values and soaring defaults.

“It would put another nail in the coffin of the private mortgage market,” Simon said. “It just means you’re going to need to have monster credit scores and monster down payments if you’re ever going to have a private market.”     (Businessweek)


2 comments:

agriculture investments said...

The private mortgage market is DONE. Stick a fork in it. Who would lend to home buyers now, at least in California?

Gary said...

The issue is worldwide in one form or another.