2008.10.29 (경제닷컴)
US regulators are working on a new
federal program that could provide government guarantees for
up to $600 billion of home mortgages to help prevent
foreclosures, a source familiar with the discussions told
Reuters on Wednesday.
The plan, being hammered out by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp and the U.S. Treasury, could
provide guarantees for up to 3 million at-risk mortgages,
said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity because
the program is still being discussed.
The Treasury Department said on Wednesday
that it is working with the FDIC and other policymakers on
foreclosure-prevention measures but that no detailed plan
has been reached.
'We are working with the White House and
through the policy process on a range of
foreclosure-prevention options,' said Treasury spokeswoman
Jennifer Zuccarelli, adding that the Treasury has not
decided on a particular approach.
The plan would provide federal guarantees
to entice lenders to ease the terms of troubled
mortgages—something that lenders have been reluctant to do
on a large scale so far.
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The expected cost to the government would
be a fraction of the value of the guarantees, as the intent
of the program is to prevent defaults on home loans.
FDIC spokesman Andrew Gray said the
agency has had productive conversations with Treasury about
the proposal, but it would be premature to speculate on the
parameters or details of a program.
The source said the government is aiming
to announce the program in coming days.
The program would be managed by the FDIC
and would be available to banks, savings and loans,
investment funds, hedge funds and other mortgage holders,
the source said. It would encourage the lenders to rewrite
the distressed mortgages, converting them into affordable
plans.
FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair told lawmakers
last week that the existing $700 billion financial rescue
plan gives the Treasury Department the power to use loan
guarantees and credit enhancements to facilitate loan
modifications and prevent avoidable foreclosures.
She told an international banking
conference on Wednesday that the FDIC is "actively engaged"
in talks with the Bush administration about the new program,
which could provide economic incentives for lenders to
modify distressed home loans into sustainable long-term
loans.
"Such a framework is needed to modify
loans on a scale large enough to have a major impact" and to
get ahead of the curve on foreclosures, Bair said.
The source said that under the program,
the government guarantees would include second loans on
homes, such as home equity lines of credit, so that lenders
would not lose any money in a mortgage modification.
The program would induce lenders to lower
monthly mortgage payments through lower principal, term or
interest rate, for a period that would likely be five years,
the source said.
source: 로이터스