U.S. weighing troubled mortgage loan guarantees
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. officials said on Thursday they were weighing the possibility of government guarantees for troubled mortgage loans to try to induce lenders to modify terms and slow a rising tide of home foreclosures.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp Chairman Sheila Bair told the Senate Banking Committee that voluntary loan modification programs weren't working well enough and said talks on a guarantee program were under way with the Treasury Department.
The Treasury official running a congressionally approved bailout plan for financial firms confirmed that loan guarantees were possible, but would not say when such a plan might be ready.
"We are looking at it very closely and working with our colleagues around the administration to understand the plan, to understand how it would be implemented ... and how it would interact with the other programs," said Neel Kashkari, interim assistant secretary for financial stability. "It's something we're very seriously considering."
U.S. home foreclosure filings in the third quarter were up 71 percent from the same period a year earlier, research firm RealtyTrac said on Thursday, even though foreclosure filings fell compared with August as some states slowed the process.
"We are falling badly behind and more needs to be done," Bair said, underscoring her frustration with the slow pace at which lenders have been modifying loans.
LEND, DON'T HOARD
Earlier this month, Congress approved a $700 billion (430 billion pounds) program to buy up bad assets from financial firms in the hope of spurring fresh lending. Since then, the Treasury has said it would use $250 billion of that money to recapitalize banks.
Kashkari, facing a series of questions from sceptical lawmakers about how banks are being held to account, said the Treasury expects banks that receive a capital injection to use the money for loans rather than to boost salaries and pump up dividends. Continued...
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