As many free market economists have predicted, preventing bank failures has prevented a badly needed market correction, which in turn has caused an anemic "recovery." Allow banks to fail, so investors will scoop up their assets (including mortgage-backed securities) at firesale prices and will renegotiate with the homeowners to make these loans "performing" again.
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How to Fix the Housing Crisis
Mises Daily: Friday, November 04, 2011 by Doug French
The real help for underwater homeowners will only arrive when Fannie, Freddie, and the rest are allowed to fail. The equivalent of a chapter 7 bankruptcy filing (liquidation) would put these underwater loans out for bid in the market place. Would our mythical mortgage in Salinas, secured by a house worth $187,000, trade for $205,700? Not hardly.
No one can get a loan for a 110 percent of value in this market, let alone 125 percent, or 100 percent for that matter. Those looking for mortgages should expect to put 20 percent down. Values in a bankruptcy sale would reflect this reality and then some. Based on the liquidation prices received by the FDIC and other distressed debt sellers, this mortgage paper would likely be scooped up for half or a third of the home's value.
Buyers of the paper would immediately negotiate with borrowers to create loans that are conforming (80 percent LTV) and performing.
Read more at...
http://mises.org/daily/5805/How-to-Fix-the-Housing-Crisis