January 14, 2013The Honorable John A. Boehner
Speaker
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
Dear Mr. Speaker:
I am writing to provide additional information regarding the extraordinary measures Treasury has undertaken in order to avoid default on the nation’s obligations.
Treasury currently expects to exhaust these extraordinary measures between mid-February and early March of this year. We will provide a more narrow range with a more targeted estimate at a later date. Any estimate, however, will be subject to a significant amount of uncertainty because we are entering the tax filing season, when the amounts and timing of tax payments and refunds are unpredictable. For this reason, Congress should act as early as possible to extend normal borrowing authority in order to avoid the risk of default and any interruption in payments.
If the extraordinary measures were allowed to expire without an increase in borrowing authority, Treasury would be left to fund the government solely with the cash we have on hand on any given day. As you know, cash would not be adequate to meet existing obligations for any meaningful length of time because the government is currently operating at a deficit.
The U.S. government makes approximately 80 million separate payments per month. These include payments for Social Security; Supplemental Security Income; Medicare; Medicaid; national security needs, including military salaries, military retirement, veterans’ benefits, and defense contractors; income tax refunds; federal employee salaries and retirement; law enforcement and operation of the justice system; unemployment insurance; disaster relief; goods and services sold to the government under contracts with small and large businesses; and many others. If Congress does not act to extend borrowing authority, all of these payments would be at risk. This would impose severe economic hardship on millions of individuals and businesses across the country.
It is important to point out that extending borrowing authority does not increase government spending; it simply allows the Treasury to pay for expenditures Congress has previously approved. Failure to meet those obligations would cause irreparable harm to the American economy and to the livelihoods of all Americans. Even a temporary default with a brief interruption in payments that Congress subsequently restores would be terribly damaging, calling into question the willingness of Congress to uphold America’s longstanding commitment to meet the obligations of the nation in full and on time. It should also be noted that default would increase our borrowing costs and damage economic growth and therefore add to future budget deficits, not decrease them. This is why no President or Secretary of the Treasury of either party has ever countenanced even the suggestion of default on any legal obligation of the United States.
Protecting the full faith and credit of the United States is the responsibility of Congress because only Congress can extend the nation’s borrowing authority. No Congress has ever failed to meet that responsibility. It must be understood that the nation’s creditworthiness is not a bargaining chip or a hostage that can be taken to advance any political agenda; it is an essential underpinning of our strength as a nation. Threatening to undermine our creditworthiness is no less irresponsible than threatening to undermine the rule of law, and no more legitimate than any other common demand for ransom.
In an address to the nation in 1987, President Reagan said, “Unfortunately, Congress consistently brings us to the edge of default before facing its responsibility. This brinkmanship threatens the holders of government bonds and those who rely on Social Security and veterans benefits. Interest rates would skyrocket. Instability would occur in financial markets and the federal deficit would soar. The United States has a special responsibility to itself and the world to meet its obligations. It means we have a well-earned reputation for reliability and credibility – two things that set us apart in much of the world.”
President Obama has put forth detailed proposals to restore fiscal responsibility to the federal budget, and he strongly believes Democrats and Republicans should join together to reduce our deficits. In the meantime we must protect America’s creditworthiness by ensuring that our government can pay the bills it has already incurred. Therefore, I respectfully urge Congress to meet its responsibility to the country by extending normal borrowing authority well before the risk of default becomes imminent.
Sincerely,
Timothy F. Geithner
Category Archives: Lewisboro
New mortgage rules could crimp lending | Katonah Real Estate
So what are the rules going to mean for real estate professionals and their clients? Here’s a quick overview of a few issues of concern. Start with the potential impacts on underwriting during 2013, well before they officially take effect next January.
Will lenders finally begin loosening up a little? After all, since 2010 they’ve been telling us that one of the key reasons for their ultra-strict underwriting is the “regulatory uncertainty” flowing out of the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation — the risk that federal agencies will impose new mortgage rules that open banks up to costly lawsuits by defaulting consumers.
Well, now they’ve got their once-feared regulation, and it creates a broad “safe harbor” that essentially shields them from such litigation nightmares if they simply follow the guidelines. Will they loosen up?
The day the QM rules were released, I asked David Stevens — chairman and president of the Mortgage Bankers Association, former FHA commissioner and former head of Long & Foster Real Estate, the largest independent realty brokerage in the U.S. — that very question.
Stevens could not have been more emphatic: ” I completely disagree” that the QM rules will ease any standards, he said. And in fact, “I think on the margins, things will be a tad tighter.”
What? Why tighter? Just about all lenders already follow the QM basics — full documentation of applicant’s income, assets, employment, credit history — so why would lenders even think about getting more restrictive?
Because, said Stevens, the rules also create new quality control requirements for lenders that add to costs, as well potentially severe financial risks if they make a mistake and approve a loan outside the QM parameters for safe harbor treatment.
Plus the Dodd-Frank law limits total points and fees for qualified mortgages at 3 percent of the loan amount, including fees paid both by the borrower and lenders to loan officers. That could negatively impact large lenders, home builders and realty brokerages who use affiliated companies for certain loan-related services — title, settlement, appraisal among others. Now, they’ll somehow have to cram originator/ broker compensation and the affiliates’ fees into deals to pass the 3 percent test — if they can.
Though the CFPB says it’s open to suggestions on how to handle computation of the 3 percent cap, the entire issue is troubling to wholesale lenders and big banks that own highly-profitable affiliates. It does nothing to encourage them to loosen up on anything. To the contrary, under current practices, they don’t have to worry about this stuff at all.
So expect no underwriting favors for your buyers this year. Lenders aren’t in the mood.
Also worrisome, according to Stevens, is the rule’s treatment of jumbo mortgages, which are crucial financing tools for buyers in higher-cost market such as California, Hawaii, metropolitan Washington D.C., New York and parts of New England.
Under the CFPB regulations, to achieve QM safe harbor protection, a loan generally must not have a “back end” total debt-to-income (DTI) ratio in excess of 43 percent. Stevens estimates that 22 percent to 25 percent of all jumbos — loans that exceed the Fannie Mae-Freddie Mac conventional loan limits — have DTIs beyond that cap, and many others come with interest-only payment terms to limit borrowers’ monthly outlays.
But the Dodd-Frank law, and the new rules, prohibit interest-only features in loans that get the QM stamp of approval. Since the jumbo market lacks the strong secondary market support of Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie Mae, lenders are expected to avoid all non-QM loans. As a result, buyers in upper-cost areas can expect worse treatment looking ahead: Even larger down payments and much more rigorous underwriting scrutiny.
Already, California’s U.S. senators, Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, have written to the CFPB warning that its rule, at least in current form, “would have a disproportionate impact on California and other high cost states, potentially limiting access to affordable credit even more.” They asked CFPB director Richard Cordray to review the jumbo situation and try to lighten up on the harsh treatment.
At least for the near future, there will be some flexibility possible for the large numbers of prospective home buyers who cannot meet the mandatory 43 percent DTI test. As long as their loans can get green lights from the automated underwriting systems of Fannie Mae (Desktop Underwriter), Freddie Mac (Loan Prospector), FHA’s “Total” overlay underwriting system or from the VA, they will be eligible for QM status even if their DTI’s exceed the 43 percent limit.
This will continue to be the case for as long as Fannie and Freddie remain in conservatorship — but no longer than seven years — or until FHA and VA adopt their own QM rules.
Since FHA and VA loans frequently have back-end DTIs above 43 percent, this will keep the door open to some, but not all, borrowers who need special considerations on credit defects and other issues in their applications. However, since automated underwriting approval will be required, manual underwriting may no longer get them in the door.
Some other provisions in the rules that could affect your business:
- Seller-financed notes and mortgages, which can provide creative solutions to a wide variety of buyer incapacities, will not be affected by the federal QM regulations at all. There will be no restrictions on the terms, rates or payment features that home sellers can offer purchasers who might not be a candidate for a bank loan. However, sellers who make more than five such notes during the course of a year will not qualify for this exemption.
- Subprime loans in the QM era? Not a chance from major financial institutions. Those folks will either have to find a way to qualify under FHA’s rules — which may be increasingly unlikely since FHA is toughening, not relaxing, credit standards and raising fees — or just not become home buyers at all.
Shanghai Housing Market Posts Huge Sales Spike | Katonah Realtor
California association signs with Rapattoni | Katonah NY Real Estate
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The Nevada County Association of Realtors has signed a multiyear contract with Rapattoni Corp. to use the company’s multiple listing service software and service.
Based in Grass Valley, Calif., the Nevada County Association of Realtors has approximately 640 members, who will join about 200,000 users of Rapattoni’s MLS products nationwide. the company said.
Rapattoni’s Web-based MLS system is compatible with the Internet Explorer and Firefox Web browsers, and can be operated natively on PCs and Mac computers; it also works on most popular tablet devices and has a map-centric, touch-based interface, the company said. Rapattoni plans to release a smartphone version of its mobile interface early this year.
The agreement with Rapattoni will allow the Nevada County Association of Realtors to implement a couple of optional features built into the MLS system. One of these is Secure Logon, which features RSA Adaptive Authentication from information technology company EMC Corp. and is designed to prevent unauthorized MLS access and identify fraud and malware threats.
The other is a real estate statistics tool that generates TrendVision reports powered by Trendgraphix Inc. The reports show current, historical and seasonal trends in real estate pricing, inventory, and days on market, Rapattoni said.
“We are looking forward to the implementation of the Rapattoni MLS and the powerful new tools we are bringing to our members,” said Kathy Hinman, the Nevada County Association of Realtors’ executive officer, in a statement.
The Wilmington Regional Association of Realtors, a local Realtor association in North Carolina that serves about 1,700 members, signed a multiyear contract extension for Rapattoni MLS in December.
MAP: Homeowners With No Mortgage | Cross River Realtor
Katonah 2012 sales up 48% – Prices down 12% | RobReportBlog
Katonah 2012 sales up 48% – Prices down 12% | RobReportBlog
Katonah NY Sales 2012 2011 64 Sales 43 48.83% UP $661,500.00 Median Price $753,500.00 12.20% DOWN $365,000.00 Low Price $333,500.00 $4,000,000.00 High Price $3,600,000.00 2721 Ave. Size 3052 $303.00 Ave. Price/foot $289.00 196 Ave. DOM 178 95.17% Ave. Sold/Ask 93.51% $846,804.00 Ave. Sold Price $919,470.00
Katonah NY Homes | Americans are Moving More Often
Rising home values, affordable prices, pent up demand and fewer households underwater on there are motivating more American families to move more often. The average home buyer is expected to stay in a home only 13 years, down from a peak of 20 years in 2009.
Based on a long-run calculation that averages mobility tendencies over a number of years, the typical buyer of a single-family home-including first-time buyers as well as move up buyers- can be expected to stay in the home is now approximately 13 years, according to recent article published by the National Association of Home Builders.
The NAHB work updates a previous article that used data from the American Housing Survey (funded by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and conducted in odd-numbered years by the Census Bureau) through 2007. The new study incorporates AHS data through 2011.
The mobility tendencies observed in the 2011 data imply that the expected length of stay in an owner-occupied, single-family home would be about 16 years (the time it would take half of single-family buyers to move out). However, 2011 is likely to be an atypical year, so the article repeats the analysis using mobility tendencies observable in earlier years, with results as shown in the figure below.
If a single estimate is needed for how long buyers who move in today or in the near future can be expected to remain in their homes, the article recommends 13 years, based on the rounded average across all data points.
The article also shows that, over the 1987-2011 period, the expected length of stay in a single-family home has been consistently longer for trade-up buyers than for first-time buyers. Averaged over those years, the expected length of stay in a single-family home is about 11 and a half years for first-time buyers, compared to 15 years for buyers who have owned a home before.
The National Association of Realtors reported that the average tenure is still nine years in its recent 2012 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, up from six years before the housing crash in 2007, but the average buyers expectation is to live in theuir new home 15 years.
North Salem 2012 Sales Up 76% – Prices drop 7.8% | RobReportBlog
North Salem 2012 Sales Up 76% – Prices drop 7.8% | RobReportBlog
North Salem NY Sales 2012 2011 46 Sales 26 76.92% UP $472,500.00 Median Price $512,500.00 7.80% DOWN $125,000.00 Low Price $147,500.00 $2,600,000.00 High Price $6,480,000.00 2762 Ave. Size 3545 $224.00 Ave. Price/foot $280.00 238 Ave. DOM 244 93.04% Ave. Sold/Ask 92.66% $639,674.00 Ave. Sold Price $1,188,035.00
Pound Ridge NY Homes | The next ‘fiscal cliff’ fight has officially begun
In the next stage of the “fiscal cliff” fight — news outlets are already calling it the “debt ceiling fight,” though the White House would probably prefer to think of it as a sequester fight — the debate will essentially boil down to two questions: What kind of entitlement and spending cuts will Republicans be demanding? And will Democrats manage to get revenue on the table? On the Sunday morning shows, leaders from both parties laid down their opening positions.
The challenge for the Democrats will be to make the case that changes to the tax code shouldn’t stop with the George W. Bush tax cuts, which they’ve so monolithically focused on in the lead-up to Dec. 31. On Sunday, CNN’s Candy Crowley challenged Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) to answer whether he thought “that taxes have been raised enough on the wealthy.” Durbin’s response was revealing: Rather than focus directly on the tax treatment of the wealthiest, he framed the need for more tax revenue in terms of broader “tax reform” to get rid of loopholes and deductions, eluding to the need to eliminate tax breaks for the “1 percent”:
I can tell you that there are still deductions, credits, special treatments under the tax code which ought to be looked at very carefully. We forgo about $1.2 trillion a year in the tax code, money that otherwise would go to the government, and when you look closely, some of those things are near and dear to us individually and to the economy — the mortgage interest deduction, charitable deductions, deductions for state and local taxes, but beyond that, trust me, there are plenty of things within that tax code, these loopholes where people can park their money in some island offshore and not pay taxes, these are things that need to be closed. We can do that and use the money to reduce the deficit.
Durbin, in essence, outlined the Democratic strategy for the next round of the “fiscal cliff” debate: Find revenue to offset the sequester by promising to get rid of “loopholes” in the tax code, framed as common-sense tax reform. (Tax policy experts Len Burman and Joel Slemrod have some ideas about where to start.)
The recent outcry over the corporate tax giveaways in the recent “fiscal cliff” deal could help them make the case for finding more revenue, as Durbin suggested (though the White House’s promise for revenue-neutral corporate reform could complicate matters). “Max Baucus has been the first to say we need to sit down and look at these,” he said. “And who knows who represents the algae lobby on Capitol Hill, but they must have been very happy with the outcome.”
However, Republicans have made their opening position as clear as well: They believe the debate over tax revenue has been closed altogether. “The tax issue is behind us. Now, the question is what are we going to do about the real problem. … Now it’s time to pivot and turn to the real issue, which is our spending addiction,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told ABC News’s George Stephanopoulos.
40-year home loan feasible, but ‘challenging’ | Katonah NY Real Estate
KUALA LUMPUR: The long tenure of up to 40 years to repay loans under the My First Home Scheme is feasible but it comes with some challenges, analysts said.
The scheme helps to lessen house buyers’ burden and gives them greater opportunity to own their first house in the Klang Valley, they said.
But finding a decent house costing RM200,000 to RM400,000 there will be tough for young adults, they pointed out.
The home scheme, launched by the Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak in March 2011, is part of the government’s efforts to help young adults own a house, with 100 per cent financing from banks.
Under the scheme, individuals with a monthly income not exceeding RM5,000 (previously RM3,000) will be eligible to buy their first house of up to RM400,000 without paying the 10 per cent down payment.
The government, via Cagamas, will guarantee the initial 10 per cent of the loan.
For joint borrowers, the income limit has been increased to RM10,000 per month.
The higher income limit of purchasers is effective this year.
The loan repayment period is up to 40 years, or when the buyer reaches 65 years old, whichever is earlier. This means, a buyer needs to be 25 years old or younger, if he wants to apply for a 40-year loan.A research head from a local brokerage said the scheme can be a catalyst for the property industry as it spurs young adults to be first-time house buyers.
“Property developers can also take advantage of this by building more affordable houses as there is a group of ready buyers.
“However, as cost to build a house has increased, the government would need to figure out a way to solve it before you can see many developers jumping on the bandwagon,” he added.
Based on dipstick calculation, a buyer earning RM5,000 a month would be in a “borderline situation” if he were to purchase a RM400,000 house via a 40-year loan under the scheme.
“The new lending guidelines require banks to look at a borrower’s net income,” said a bank officer who declined to be named.
“This would mean that by default, his net income would be about RM4,500, that is without factoring in his car loan.
“A 40-year loan period would mean that he has to pay up about RM1,790 a month (based on an interest rate of 4.5 per cent).“Under the new lending guidelines, the approval or rejection of the loan would depend on his other commitments, like personal loan or car loans. It’s going to be borderline.
While the longer tenure for loan repayment may have its benefits, it does have some “loopholes”.
“Today, getting a RM400,000 property in the Klang Valley will be a challenge. So, you can imagine if one were to look for a decent new development under RM300,000 or RM200,000.
“Let’s assume that the supply of properties worth RM400,000 are in abundance. How many young adults will have a monthly income of RM5,000 a month at the age of 25 years?
“I guess the likelihood of individuals aged 25 or below buying a RM400,000 property will be low, but if they opt to buy a property as joint borrowers, it is still very much possible,” said an analyst.
The good news is, the government has established the Perumahan Rakyat 1Malaysia Bhd (PR1MA) with the sole purpose of developing and maintaining affordable and quality houses, specifically for the middle income group. These houses are expected to be priced between RM100,000 and RM400,000.
Currently, PR1MA is accepting applications for one of its projects in Nusajaya – a double-storey link house (1,384 sq ft and above) for as low as RM199,000. Its website stated that more projects are underway, in Penang and Seremban.

So what are the rules going to mean for real estate professionals and their clients? Here’s a quick overview of a few issues of concern. Start with the potential impacts on underwriting during 2013, well before they officially take effect next January.

