What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. The bottom line is the assets are still overpriced. When mortgage payments come in line with what the home would rent for, then we have found some sort of sane equilibrium. I say let the house prices fall.

  2. The mortgage modifications would work well if you has a smart borrower to start with. Most people that bought homes lately have payed 300-400 times their value in 1990. People who bought these homes had no intention what so ever of living in these homes. Their only intention was that of finding another idiot who would pay even more than they did so they could pocket the profit. People that kicked elders and children out of their old neighborhoods so the could increase rents threefold, while they drank 3.00 dollar coffee at Starbucks everyday deserve no pity.

  3. “the mortgage mods are a farse ”

    That’s about right. They use the modifications as a marketing tool but don’t actually make any viable change from what I can tell. They do things like
    a)push out the maturity date of the mortgage which gives a small monthly reduction in payments but makes the total amount paid over time much worse:
    b)roll into a lower rate (but only where they can still make their spread); and
    c) reduce payments where principal payments have been made but fix monthly payments were locked in.

    Often they also charge for the modification by adding to the principal amount.

    Of course its easy to say they should giving principal reductions or interest rate deductions without compensation, but if they did this they would be in liquidation themselves.

    The problem is that they have no budget to make these sorts of changes. So they make changes that don’t cost money…beter than nothing.

  4. *** ALERT****

    Tribune Files for Bankruptcy

    http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/12/08/tribune-files-for-bankruptcy/?hp

    The Tribune Company filed for bankruptcy protection in a federal court in Delaware on Monday, as the owner of The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Cubs baseball team struggled to cope with rising debt and falling ad revenue.

    In a court filing, Tribune said it had nearly $13 billion in debt, compared to $7.6 billion in assets. Most of that debt was taken on when Mr. Zell acquired the company — a deal he struck using mostly borrowed money. All of the now privately held company’s equity is owned by an employee stock-ownership plan.

    Tribune has sought to ameliorate its woes by selling off assets like the Chicago Cubs, but the company still faces a looming debt crunch.

    While Tribune must contend with hefty interest payments over the next year, its most pressing problem was a maintenance covenant on some of its debt that limits the company’s borrowings to no more than nine times earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization.

    Even if the company continues to make interest payments, failure to maintain that level of debt means technical default — which does not always lead to a bankruptcy filing, though in Tribune it apparently did. Other newspaper publishers have halted making interest payments on their debt, but have yet to file.

    Please Dave tell me that everything is OK. You and your ilk are going to get smoked in 2009 and I can’t wait!!!

    The What

    Someday this war is gonna end…

  5. People who had their mortgages modified were already in some kind of danger of default. People who are making their payments on time aren’t being offered this option. I would be more interested to know how long it is before these mortgages are considered to be “safe” again.