Plan Skirts Housing's Biggest Troubles
September 8, 2008; Page A14
The government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac likely will help ease mortgage rates for home buyers, say economists, home builders and housing experts. But it won't cure the housing market's biggest ailments: falling home prices and rising foreclosures.
"This is another marginal step in the right direction," says Richard DeKaser, an economist at National City Corp., a large Cleveland bank. "But it doesn't resolve the glut of homes on the market or remove pressure on prices."
The housing market is stuck in a vicious cycle. It started with an oversupply of homes that eventually caused prices to plummet. Falling prices led to waves of foreclosures, as homeowners ran into problems refinancing their mortgages or selling their houses. Banks are reluctant to lend when home values keep sinking and defaults are rising, curbing housing demand further and fueling more price drops and defaults.
Investors and economists feared that a collapse of Fannie and Freddie would greatly exacerbate the downward spiral by essentially freezing the mortgage market. "The government's move takes that serious disruption to the financial market off the table," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.
Mr. Zandi says that while the takeover of the mortgage giants won't immediately stop the home-price slide, it should limit price declines to 5% to 10% over the next year, rather than the doomsday scenario of additional declines of 15% to 20% that some economists were predicting if Fannie and Freddie failed or pulled back dramatically....