“The Obama administration will extend mortgage assistance . . . to investors who bought multiple homes before the market imploded, helping some speculators who drove up prices and inflated the housing bubble,” reports Bloomberg News. “Landlords can qualify for up to four federally-subsidized loan workouts starting around May, as long as they rent out each house or have plans to fill them, under the revamped Home Affordable Modification Program, also known as HAMP, according to Timothy Massad, the Treasury’s assistant secretary for financial stability. The program pays banks to reduce monthly payments by cutting interest rates, stretching terms, and forgiving principal.” “John Burns, an Irvine, California-based real estate consultant, said it’s ‘ridiculous’ for taxpayers to come to the aid of individuals who made bad bets. ‘What kind of precedent are you going to set?,’ Burns said. ‘Are you going to refund people who lost money on the stock market too?’” “The Obama administration announced last month that it would triple incentives to owners of mortgages . . . The extension will apply to all loans, including those held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored mortgage financiers. About 700,000 landlords will be eligible.”
The participation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will drive up the cost to taxpayers of bailing out these government-sponsored mortgage giants, which have cost more than $170 billion to bail out, and have not repaid one penny of their bailout, unlike the private banks, which repaid their bailouts. The tab for bailing out Fannie and Freddie could go much higher. The Obama administration earlier lifted the $400 billion limit on bailouts for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which helped spawn the mortgage crisis, so that they could continue to buy up junky mortgages at taxpayer expense, and showered their executives with $42 million in compensation. In May 2010, the administration and its congressional allies blocked efforts to reform Fannie and Freddie.
