vote4ronpauleeze
Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2008
- Messages
- 177
I posted this in another thread, but thought I'd make it more visible here...
Look at this scenario:
Say a house has a mortgage on it for $200k.
The current value of that house is $170k.
The Treasury can buy the mortgage for 40 cents on the dollar (many have proposed that this would be the ballpark purchase price), so $80k.
Even though it has a high probability for default, there's still a great opportunity to profit.
Say the mortgagor defaults and the house goes through foreclosure where it is bought at 60% of the fair market value. That means the mortgage holder receives proceeds of 60% of $170k or $102k.
That leaves the mortgage holder (in this case the Treasury) a profit of $22k or a return of 27.5% to go back to the taxpayers.
So, really this plan can produce a profit and many have speculated that it will... In short, the banks STILL took the loss as they only got $80k on their initial $200k, but they also received some capital when it was sold and were able to turn around lend it into the capital markets.
Look at this scenario:
Say a house has a mortgage on it for $200k.
The current value of that house is $170k.
The Treasury can buy the mortgage for 40 cents on the dollar (many have proposed that this would be the ballpark purchase price), so $80k.
Even though it has a high probability for default, there's still a great opportunity to profit.
Say the mortgagor defaults and the house goes through foreclosure where it is bought at 60% of the fair market value. That means the mortgage holder receives proceeds of 60% of $170k or $102k.
That leaves the mortgage holder (in this case the Treasury) a profit of $22k or a return of 27.5% to go back to the taxpayers.
So, really this plan can produce a profit and many have speculated that it will... In short, the banks STILL took the loss as they only got $80k on their initial $200k, but they also received some capital when it was sold and were able to turn around lend it into the capital markets.