Posts Tagged ‘fdic’

Banking profits down 87%

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

The banking sector had its worst quarterly performance in nearly twenty years as profits fell 86.5% across the sector. The weakening has forced the FDIC to begin replenishing the deposit insurance reserve this fall. The major loss in profits was tied to loan loss reserve provisions which require banks to keep additional cash on hand due to poor loan performance.

From Market Watch:

In the three months from April to June, banks posted their second worst earnings performance since 1991, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said Tuesday.

Earnings for the quarter totaled just $5 billion, compared with $36.8 billion a year ago, a decline of 86.5%, the FDIC said in its second-quarter banking profile.

“The results are pretty dismal,” said FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair at a press conference.
Higher loss provisions were the main reason for the drop.

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Banking profits down 87%

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Can the FDIC take over my bank? Please?

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

The FDIC is reducing mortgage payments and interest rates for delinquent borrowers at the federally-controlled IndyMac Bank. FDIC spokesperson Shelia Bair said that the FDIC hopes to keep nearly 30,000 delinquent borrowers in their home with the changes.

Must be nice though. If you’re in trouble with your mortgage I’m sure you’re rooting for an FDIC take-over. They seem to be far more willing to work with delinquent borrowers than traditional, private servicing companies.

More from Bloomberg:

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. may lower mortgage interest rates for delinquent IndyMac Federal Bank FSB borrowers a month after suspending foreclosures on $15 billion in loans it’s managing as successor to a failed lender.

The FDIC, which is running IndyMac while seeking a buyer, may also extend repayment terms or base payments on reduced principal to help borrowers, FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said today in a conference call with reporters. The program might serve as a “catalyst to promote more loan modifications for troubled borrowers throughout the country,” Bair said.

“We hope to keep tens of thousands of troubled borrowers in their homes and avoid the negative consequences that foreclosures can have on the broader economy,” she said.

Bair has led regulators in pressing mortgage-servicing companies to modify loans amid rising foreclosures in the worst housing slump since the 1930s. IndyMac Federal has about 740,000 mortgages that it owns or services for other companies, the FDIC said. The bank services $184 billion in mortgage loans.

The rest is here:
Can the FDIC take over my bank? Please?

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[Covered Wagons] Roof + Covered = A New Bond Market

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Ok, now we are getting somewhere, albeit slow as molasses.

Treasury Secretary Paulson is pushing for covered bonds as a financial instrument to create more liquidity for US mortgages.

From my perspective, these are the types of things that have to happen for the US to see our way out of this credit crunch.

Covered bonds are debt securities backed by cash flows from mortgages or public sector loans. They are similar in many ways to asset-backed securities created in securitization, but covered bond assets remain on the issuer???s consolidated balance sheet.

The key here is recourse. In other words, if the bank goes under the bond holder has “recourse.” A basic concept but became obsolete during the securitization hay day because as it turned out, the bond holders had little recourse since the asset was split into so many pieces, it was very difficult to track down the asset.

Covered bonds are big in Europe.

Paulson issued best practices guidance (is that corporate speak or what?) to try to get the market jump started and was joined by FDIC, OTS and OCC as well as Bank of America, Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo (WaMu and B of A have experience in these instruments). I wonder if WaMu didn’t attend because they are simply trying to survive?

Bankers involved in the field reckon that a US covered bond market could ultimately outstrip the roughly ???2,000bn European market. However, it faces limitations in the near term due to restrictions placed on the bonds’ treatment by the FDIC, which importantly has oversight of banks if they become insolvent.

For example, the FDIC said banks should be restricted from using covered bonds for more than 4 per cent of their funding in order to avoid depleting the assets available to repay ordinary depositors and other unsecured creditors if a bank failed.

In the US, the cost of issuing covered bonds and the FDIC restrictions mean they could lie low in the pecking order of banks’ funding preferences, at least initially, according to analysts at Citigroup. Funding through Fannie and Freddie or through the Federal Home Loan Banks both appear more attractive for now, the analysts said.

FDIC created an expedited procedure for recourse for bond holders in the spring. Covered bonds are capped at 4% of total liabilities so its not a major fix, but it’s a start.

Here’s a better explanation, in the way that only Felix Salmon can provide.

The investors have to be brought back into the fold.

I repeat:

“Covered” seems to be a synonym for collateralized, but it also has other meanings that may be appropriate in this effort to salvage the housing market. Think of covered wagons, which can be circled in times of crisis. With banks reluctant to lend their own money for mortgages, and the private securitization market quiescent if not dead, the cost of mortgage loans has been rising even as housing prices fall, making a bad situation worse. At best, a covered bond market would provide a cheaper source of financing for banks while reassuring investors that their money is safe.

Essentially investors would buy into a pool of mortgages that would be kept on the balance sheet of the bank that made the loans. These would be high-quality loans, and at the first sign of trouble in the underlying mortgages, those mortgages would be replaced in the mortgage pool. Thus, investors would be assured of repayment unless the underlying mortgages suffered major losses and the issuing bank failed. That might make investors burned by existing mortgage securities more willing to return to the market.

At best, a covered bond market would provide a cheaper source of financing for banks while reassuring investors that their money will be safe. It is highly unusual for the government to take such a major role in getting a market established, but Treasury officials said their action was needed to get more money into housing loans.

Paulson may not be a good public speaker, but he brought something tangible to the table.

And credit for his move is covered. (ok, sorry)

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[Covered Wagons] Roof + Covered = A New Bond Market

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Real estate recap: Week of real estate in review (Edition VII)

Monday, May 5th, 2008

C2a_real_estate_recap_2This week, the Connect2Agent real estate recap week in review is taking it to a reform side. In this edition, we will be highlighting some of the reforms within the real estate industry that have swept across the country, while tossing in a story of high living. So sit back, buckle up and take a leisurely ride on our real estate ferris wheel.

FDIC throws out some life jackets

The FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) has put a proposal to Congress aiming to help distressed homeowners. The proposal is for Homeownership Preservation Loans that would help delinquent borrowers pay down up to 20% of the principal on their current mortgage. To qualify, homeowners would have to have a mortgage that originated between January 1, 2003 and June 30, 2007. Curious homeowners can find more information by visiting the FDIC’s website.

Pause for thought: If a homeowner does qualify for this loan, which requires them to pay the restructured mortgage and the amount of the HPL (Homeownership Preservation Loan) costs, will it end up digging them even farther into debt?

The apple of his eye is being built in Dubai

Billionaire Mukesh Ambani is having his family’s new dream custom house built in Dubai for the mere pocket change price tag of $1 billion. When completed, this will be the most expensive house in the world, not to mention the largest.

What does $1 billion buy you?

  • a 550- to 600-foot-high abode with 400,000 square feet of living space, 40,000-50,000 of which is strictly for residential purposes
  • 6 floors of parking space that can accomodate 150-200 cars
  • a 4-story-high outdoor space
  • various health and entertainment levels that include gyms, yoga rooms and ice rooms
  • a house in which no two rooms will look alike and no two levels of floors will use the same building materials

Built for a king, but accommodating a billionaire, his wife and three kids, this will be a must-see when done. Check out the preview at the end of this post.

Reside-and-dash renters will have to pay to play

The Florida House will be voting on a new law that brings renters to the equality table for breaking their lease early. So far, the bill has not received any opposition. It would make Florida renters liable for at least 2 months rent for breaking their lease early.

If passed, the bill will be a boost to landlords who will be able to say to their renters, “You break it, you buy it.”

Come share your story

If you have news real estate buyers and sellers can use, we invite you to share your story. Comment below or drop us a line.

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Washington Report: Low-Cost “Gap” Financing

Monday, May 5th, 2008

Capitol Hill is buzzing over a surprise proposal last week from a top federal banking official to provide low-cost “gap” financing to home owners stuck with loans that were unaffordable from the start.

Read the original here:
Washington Report: Low-Cost “Gap” Financing

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