Ben Bernanke
Article From the WSJ and Yahoo!
December 10, 2009 by Wesley Ledford · Leave a Comment
This article is a great read about the general population’s belief of the Finance Industry.
It goes into details about bailouts, profiteering, and much more. This excerpt, however, goes to my post yesterday about refinancing (and even purchasing):
For a decade or more, many people resented, or envied, the money winners on Wall Street and in the City of London made. But they weren’t fixated on it. They had complaints, but they had jobs. They had bills, but their houses were worth more every year.
Then came the bursting of the bubble, lower house prices and foreclosures, furloughs and unemployment, and new impediments to borrowing. And the public was told that spending hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer money to bail out the banks was the only way to prevent catastrophe. Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, tried to explain: I didn’t set out to save Wall Street. I set out to save Main Street. But to save Main Street, I had to save Wall Street.
Read my post from yesterday about refinancing. Of course, it is only an opinion, but I am in a position to know what’s going on, slightly. Also click the link below for the entire article from the Wall Street Journal and Yahoo!
the-publics-new-fear-of-finance: Personal Finance News from Yahoo! Finance.
Ben Bernanke
Mortgage Loan Compliance | Obama, Bernanke, and Dodd Unchanged
August 26, 2009 by sueyourlender · Leave a Comment
President Barrack Obama wants Ben Bernanke to remain at his post at the Federal Reserve Board and has re-nominated the Fed chairman to serve for four more years.
The President said he wants Mr. Bernanke to “continue the work he’s doing” to fix the financial system and engineer an economic recovery. And he stressed the need of financial regulatory reform to “ensure we never face another crisis like this again.”
“Ben approached a financial system on the verge of collapse with calm and wisdom; with bold action and out-of-the-box thinking that has helped put the brakes on our economic freefall,” the President said during a break from his vacation on Martha’s Vineyard.
Senate Banking Committee chairman Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., said re-appointing chairman Bernanke is “probably the right choice.” However, Sen. Dodd said he has serious concerns about the Fed’s failure to use its regulatory powers to protect consumers from abusive subprime lending practices.
“Chairman Bernanke was too slow to act during the early stages of the foreclosure crisis, but he ultimately demonstrated effective leadership and his reappointment sends the right signal to the markets,” Sen. Dodd said.
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Ben Bernanke
Bernanke Keeps This Quote On His Desk
May 20, 2009 by lmcrates4u · Leave a Comment
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Newsletter-Chrisman, Rob (excerpt)
My son was flipping through the channels last night and asked me, “Did you hear about the new giveaway on Oprah this week? Oprah gave everyone in her audience a free Chrysler dealership.” I told him to keep his day job.
During the Civil War President Lincoln was being heavily criticized for military blunders. In 1862 he wrote, “If I were to try to read, much less answer, all the attacks made on me, this shop might as well be closed for any other business. I do the very best I know how – the very best I can; and I mean to keep doing so until the end. If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me won’t amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right will make no difference.” Ben Bernanke keeps that statement on his desk – interesting.
NO Video today rates went back down 30 yr fixed is at 4.50% at no cost
JPMorgan Chase & Co. is pulling back on its mortgage operations in Massachusetts, closing offices and reducing its headcount throughout the region. Chase, apparently, will remain active in the area but also continue to focus on their “depository footprint” where it has a banking retail presence. Six of seven state offices are expected to be closed, as was a Rhode Island office in December. http://www.bostonherald.com/business/general/view/2009_05_19_JPMorgan_Chase_to_cut_Massachusetts_mortgage_offices/
Other news:
Mortgage applications, according to the MBAA, rose 2.3% for the week ended May 15. The refinancing gauge was +4.5%, but purchases were -4.4%.
Regions Financial, which has received $3.5 billion of TARP money but was told by stress tests that it needs to raise more capital, said it plans to raise $1.25 billion through stock offerings, half of the sum that federal regulators told it to raise to withstand a potentially deep recession. The public offerings include $1 billion of common stock and $250 million of preferred shares automatically convertible into common stock.
Toll Brothers, currently the largest U.S. builder of luxury homes, saw its second-quarter revenue fall 51%. Based in Pennsylvania, they are the second-worst performing U.S. homebuilding stock this year having lost more than a third of its value since 2006.
On Monday night the House voted in favor of legislation that will give federal authorities more tools to combat mortgage fraud and create a commission to examine the financial crisis. It would authorize $490 million over two years to hire fraud prosecutors, increase enforcement actions and add funds to the Secret Service and Housing and Urban Development Inspector General. It also allocates funds to the Postal Inspection Service and sets up a commission of outside experts with subpoena power to examine the financial crisis and make recommendations. It also creates a bipartisan commission of experts with authority to review the causes of the economic situation and recommend changes.
In other Washington DC related news, Fannie Mae announced plans to securitize its holdings of mortgages that are not already packaged, into bonds. Per one trader, this helped fuel the issuance of $55 billion this month of debt backed by “seasoned” loans. Fannie’s plan is to take $256 billion of its single-family whole loan portfolio and $108 billion of multi-family loan portfolio and securitize that as well. Let’s hope that there are buyers out there! Speaking of buyers, this market is very, very quiet. “Dead in the water” as we used to say on the trading desk. The 10-yr seems happy around 3.23%, and mortgage security prices are about unchanged from Tuesday afternoon.
I am pretty good about giving people advice on careers. I tried selling real estate but I found my career listing. So I then tried mortgages but that just did not rate. Finally I tried doing appraisals but that was incomparably boring.



