A “bad bank” entity for pooling and standardized restructuring and resecuritization of underwater mortgages may be the best bet for the housing market to pull itself out of the negative equity quagmire of the last several years, according to a proposal by a Georgetown University law professor. In his white paper – Clearing the Mortgage Market Through Principal Reduction: A Bad Bank for Housing RTC 2.0 – Adam Levitin makes the case that the best option for “clearing the market” lies via “negotiated, quasi-voluntary principal reduction” using a privately funded Resolution Trust Corporation-style entity. “Such an RTC 2.0 would provide a framework for implementing ‘quasi-voluntary’ principal reductions in the context of litigation or regulatory settlement or the federal government’s exercise of its secondary market power to exclude...
The new FHFA director’s whirlwind first week resulted in widespread staffing cuts at the regulator and a dramatic change in leadership at the GSEs. So far, criticism has been muted.
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