Bakersfieldbubble
The Bakersfield Bubble Market

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Boycott the Bakersfield Business Conference!
San Joaquin Bank is done!
San Joaquin Bank Chairman selling his Coastal Mansion
Crisp and Cole staffer going to the pokey...
Jose Arredondo closing the Delano Chrysler store
Reich-Wing Czar stupidity called out!
Racist CONservatives looking for great White Hope (McCarthy?)
Has Bakersfield.com and other local websites becoming irrelevant?The tv stations are even worse.
Tea bag movement shrivels...
Bright House is a joke!
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posted by Bakersfieldbubble on Thursday, March 29, 2007 at 08:52 AM
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posted by Bakersfieldbubble on Friday, March 23, 2007 at 02:42 PM
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http://player.clipsyndicate...

 

PLEASE NO GOVT BAILOUTS!!!

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posted by Bakersfieldbubble on Friday, March 16, 2007 at 09:07 AM
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Who said this was going to happen? Keep in mind that 36% of all loans in Bakersfield were subprime - http://bakersfieldbubble.bl...

March 13 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. lawmakers will have to consider providing aid to about 2.2 million subprime mortgage borrowers who are at risk of defaulting and losing their homes, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd said today.

``The impact of losing 2.2 million homes I suspect will be in a lot of areas of our cities and towns that are already pretty hard hit, so we clearly want to look at that and legislate,'' Dodd, a Democrat from Connecticut, told reporters in Washington after a speech to the National League of Cities.

Foreclosures involving homeowners who took out subprime loans from 1998 until 2006 could cost $164 billion, Dodd said, quoting a December study by the Center for Responsible Lending in Durham, North Carolina. The government needs to provide at- risk homeowners ``forbearance or something like that to give them a chance to work through and get a new financial instrument here that they can manage financially better,'' Dodd said.

Delinquencies among subprime mortgage borrowers hit a four- year high in the fourth quarter, the Washington-based Mortgage Bankers Association said today. The trade group said 13.33 percent of subprime borrowers were behind on payments in the quarter, the highest rate since the third quarter of 2002.

More than two dozen mortgage lenders have gone bankrupt, closed operations or sought buyers since the beginning of last year as the effect of looser lending standards, slowing home- price gains, and less wage growth left banks holding bad loans.

Congress ``may need to do something much more quickly to provide some protection or you could end up with a lot of poverty and blight,'' Dodd said. Federal aid of a few billion dollars ``may be a lot less costly'' than $164 billion in lost wealth, he said.

Looking to Help

Mortgage defaults during the next two years may rise to $225 billion, with about $170 billion tied to subprime loans, according to a report yesterday by analyst at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. led by Srinivas Modukuri. Subprime borrowers are those with poor or limited credit backgrounds or high debt.

Dodd didn't specify the channel through which the government would offer aid. ``I don't want to settle on the specifics of it, but clearly we are looking at what we can do to help out.''

Any formal legislation proposed by Dodd would have to approved by his committee, then passed by both the full Senate and the House of Representatives before being sent to the president to sign into law.

Predatory Lending

Dodd reaffirmed a plan to introduce a bill that would combat predatory lending. ``There is a difference between a subprime lender and a predator, and I don't want to lose the subprime lender,'' he said.

The Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp and other U.S. regulators on March 2 directed banks to scrutinize underwriting standards, provide more information to customers about borrowing risks and ensure borrowers are able to repay loans.

``Finally the federal regulators are beginning to indicate that they want to start requiring similar standards to be used for prime and subprime lending,'' Dodd said, referring to the new guidelines.

``I am a strong advocate of subprime lending,'' Dodd said. ``I don't want that word to become a pejorative as junk bonds did.''

While not constituting a drag on the economy, defaults may increase to $300 billion if home prices fall and borrowers forgo refinancing because of stricter lending standards, Lehman said.

 

http://www.bloomberg.com/ap...

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posted by Bakersfieldbubble on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 at 11:34 AM
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