Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title Hist
- dbackjon
- Moderator Team

- Posts: 45627
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 9:20 am
- I am a fan of: Northern Arizona
- A.K.A.: He/Him
- Location: Scottsdale
Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title Hist
Arizona may become the first state to require lenders to prove they have the right to foreclose by providing a complete list of any previous owners of the mortgage, under a bill passed yesterday by its Senate.
The legislation, which is headed to the House after being approved 28-2 in the Republican-dominated Senate, would allow foreclosure sales to be voided if lenders that didn't originate the loan can't produce the full chain of title. Arizona permits nonjudicial foreclosures, meaning property can be seized from the homeowner without a court order.
Lawmakers in states including New York, Oregon and Virginia also have proposed legislation to address concerns among consumer advocates that lenders or mortgage servicers are using incomplete or false paperwork to repossess properties in default. The attorneys general of all 50 states are jointly investigating how the mortgage-servicing industry operates.
http://readersupportednews.org/news-sec ... le-history" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The legislation, which is headed to the House after being approved 28-2 in the Republican-dominated Senate, would allow foreclosure sales to be voided if lenders that didn't originate the loan can't produce the full chain of title. Arizona permits nonjudicial foreclosures, meaning property can be seized from the homeowner without a court order.
Lawmakers in states including New York, Oregon and Virginia also have proposed legislation to address concerns among consumer advocates that lenders or mortgage servicers are using incomplete or false paperwork to repossess properties in default. The attorneys general of all 50 states are jointly investigating how the mortgage-servicing industry operates.
http://readersupportednews.org/news-sec ... le-history" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
- SuperHornet
- SuperHornet

- Posts: 20857
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 7:24 pm
- I am a fan of: Sac State
- Location: Twentynine Palms, CA
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
I don't know enough about this to have an opinion. I suspect AZ and maybe BWahlberg would probably be the best qualified people to explain/express opinion about it....

SuperHornet's Athletics Hall of Fame includes Jacksonville State kicker Ashley Martin, the first girl to score in a Division I football game. She kicked 3 PATs in a 2001 game for J-State.
- Chizzang
- Level5

- Posts: 19274
- Joined: Mon Apr 20, 2009 7:36 am
- I am a fan of: Deflate Gate
- A.K.A.: The Quasar Kid
- Location: Palermo Italy
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Interesting...
I heard a story (it sounded true) where Washington Mutual (now defunct and owned by Chase) was attempting to foreclose on a home but the homeowner hired a lawyer and made WAMU prove they owned the Title... which they were unable to do in a reasonable amount of time (the court date came and went) and WAMU had no proof of title other than data they get when they purchase bundled loans by the hundreds...
This will make the bundling and selling of loans more difficult

I heard a story (it sounded true) where Washington Mutual (now defunct and owned by Chase) was attempting to foreclose on a home but the homeowner hired a lawyer and made WAMU prove they owned the Title... which they were unable to do in a reasonable amount of time (the court date came and went) and WAMU had no proof of title other than data they get when they purchase bundled loans by the hundreds...
This will make the bundling and selling of loans more difficult
Q: Name something that offends Republicans?
A: The actual teachings of Jesus
A: The actual teachings of Jesus
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
So what happens in a case like that? Does the deadbeat homeowner suddenly become a rent-free squatter?Chizzang wrote:Interesting...
I heard a story (it sounded true) where Washington Mutual (now defunct and owned by Chase) was attempting to foreclose on a home but the homeowner hired a lawyer and made WAMU prove they owned the Title... which they were unable to do in a reasonable amount of time (the court date came and went) and WAMU had no proof of title other than data they get when they purchase bundled loans by the hundreds...
This will make the bundling and selling of loans more difficult
Delaware Football: 1889-2012; 2022-
- dbackjon
- Moderator Team

- Posts: 45627
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 9:20 am
- I am a fan of: Northern Arizona
- A.K.A.: He/Him
- Location: Scottsdale
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
93henfan wrote:So what happens in a case like that? Does the deadbeat homeowner suddenly become a rent-free squatter?Chizzang wrote:Interesting...
I heard a story (it sounded true) where Washington Mutual (now defunct and owned by Chase) was attempting to foreclose on a home but the homeowner hired a lawyer and made WAMU prove they owned the Title... which they were unable to do in a reasonable amount of time (the court date came and went) and WAMU had no proof of title other than data they get when they purchase bundled loans by the hundreds...
This will make the bundling and selling of loans more difficult
If so, how can I get in on that action?
They still owe the mortgage - it is just not a secured debt any longer. The mortgage holder would be in the same position as any other unsecured creditor. Could still go after the debtor, just not foreclose. A judge could still liquidate assets to satify debts
-
TwinTownBisonFan
- Supporter

- Posts: 7704
- Joined: Sat Mar 07, 2009 1:56 pm
- I am a fan of: NDSU
- Location: St. Paul, MN
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
would appear to be the intent of the bill...Chizzang wrote:Interesting...
I heard a story (it sounded true) where Washington Mutual (now defunct and owned by Chase) was attempting to foreclose on a home but the homeowner hired a lawyer and made WAMU prove they owned the Title... which they were unable to do in a reasonable amount of time (the court date came and went) and WAMU had no proof of title other than data they get when they purchase bundled loans by the hundreds...
This will make the bundling and selling of loans more difficult
North Dakota State University Bison 2011 and 2012 National Champions


Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Technically, you don't "owe" the mortgage; the mortgage serves as collateral for the promissory note; you owe the promissory note.dbackjon wrote:93henfan wrote:
So what happens in a case like that? Does the deadbeat homeowner suddenly become a rent-free squatter?
If so, how can I get in on that action?
They still owe the mortgage - it is just not a secured debt any longer. The mortgage holder would be in the same position as any other unsecured creditor. Could still go after the debtor, just not foreclose. A judge could still liquidate assets to satify debts
What you say is correct, though, assuming that the bank can prove it is the holder of the promissory obligation. You owe the bank the money on the promissory note, but the note is now unsecured. If the bank gets a judgment on the note, it could proceed to lien up your assets (including your residence), and then sell your assets to pay the debt. But that it is much more time-consuming process than a straight foreclosure.
What could have possibly gone wrong? How could the mortgages which were security for the promissory obligations, become separated from the notes and thus become worthless. Google "MERS." If your mortgage was, at any time, assigned to MERS, there is a good chance that no bank could ever foreclose against you (as case law is developing on this issue at this moment).
- dbackjon
- Moderator Team

- Posts: 45627
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 9:20 am
- I am a fan of: Northern Arizona
- A.K.A.: He/Him
- Location: Scottsdale
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Thanks for the clarification.
MERS was designed, IIRC, to save banks/mortgage companies money, by forgoing the traditional step of registering mortgages at the county clerk's office, by doing it centrally, and electronically.
MERS was designed, IIRC, to save banks/mortgage companies money, by forgoing the traditional step of registering mortgages at the county clerk's office, by doing it centrally, and electronically.
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
That one was one reason. But another reason was to avoid payment of mortgage filing fees every time the mortgage was assigned from one institution to another. Since MERS was the "nominee" of the original mortgagee (the original lender, that is), the argument was that any assignment of the mortgage did not need to be publicly recorded unless and until the mortgagor defaulted (an assignment simply being recorded internally at MERS).dbackjon wrote:Thanks for the clarification.
MERS was designed, IIRC, to save banks/mortgage companies money, by forgoing the traditional step of registering mortgages at the county clerk's office, by doing it centrally, and electronically.
In the event of default, MERS would assign the mortgage to the "holder" so that the holder could foreclose; or it would not assign the mortgage and initiate a foreclosure on behalf of its "principal," the "assignee" bank.
A number of courts have held that MERS lacked standing to initiate foreclosures, because it was merely the nominee of the original mortgagee and held no interest in the promissory notes. So assignments from MERS to the so-called assignee bank became commonplace. But then courts began questioning whether the so-called assignee bank actually was the holder of the promissory note, because MERS never had an interest in the promissory note itself, and was merely assigned nominee status as to the mortgage (but not the note). The courts questioned how MERS could assign something that it never had an interest in (the promissory note) to the "assignee" bank which was trying to foreclose. This becomes as a problem, because the bank cannot foreclose on the mortgage unless it proves that it is the holder of the note (i.e., the party to whom the borrower owes the money).
BTW, MERS is currently in the chain of 60,000,000 mortgages in the US, and courts in judicial foreclosure states are carefully scrutinizing every foreclosure in which MERS is in the chain to be sure that the bank trying to foreclose can prove it holds both the mortgage and the note -- and that the two have never been separated.
This is a potentially huge, looming problem for the mortgage industry and could trigger a need for government intervention.
Look for congress to pass legislation which allows for foreclosure even if the note and mortgage have been separated at some point, or allow for foreclosure even if the law of assignments has not been technically followed. The other solution would be another massive government bailout program of perhaps nearly $1T ...
-
kalm
- Supporter

- Posts: 69154
- Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2009 3:36 pm
- I am a fan of: Eastern
- A.K.A.: Humus The Proud
- Location: Northern Palouse
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Why did they ever need to make the process so complicated?JoltinJoe wrote:That one was one reason. But another reason was to avoid payment of mortgage filing fees every time the mortgage was assigned from one institution to another. Since MERS was the "nominee" of the original mortgagee (the original lender, that is), the argument was that any assignment of the mortgage did not need to be publicly recorded unless and until the mortgagor defaulted (an assignment simply being recorded internally at MERS).dbackjon wrote:Thanks for the clarification.
MERS was designed, IIRC, to save banks/mortgage companies money, by forgoing the traditional step of registering mortgages at the county clerk's office, by doing it centrally, and electronically.
In the event of default, MERS would assign the mortgage to the "holder" so that the holder could foreclose; or it would not assign the mortgage and initiate a foreclosure on behalf of its "principal," the "assignee" bank.
A number of courts have held that MERS lacked standing to initiate foreclosures, because it was merely the nominee of the original mortgagee and held no interest in the promissory notes. So assignments from MERS to the so-called assignee bank became commonplace. But then courts began questioning whether the so-called assignee bank actually was the holder of the promissory note, because MERS never had an interest in the promissory note itself, and was merely assigned nominee status as to the mortgage (but not the note). The courts questioned how MERS could assign something that it never had an interest in (the promissory note) to the "assignee" bank which was trying to foreclose. This becomes as a problem, because the bank cannot foreclose on the mortgage unless it proves that it is the holder of the note (i.e., the party to whom the borrower owes the money).
BTW, MERS is currently in the chain of 60,000,000 mortgages in the US, and courts in judicial foreclosure states are carefully scrutinizing every foreclosure in which MERS is in the chain to be sure that the bank trying to foreclose can prove it holds both the mortgage and the note -- and that the two have never been separated.
This is a potentially huge, looming problem for the mortgage industry and could trigger a need for government intervention.
Look for congress to pass legislation which allows for foreclosure even if the note and mortgage have been separated at some point, or allow for foreclosure even if the law of assignments has not been technically followed. The other solution would be another massive government bailout program of perhaps nearly $1T ...
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Everyone was getting rich creating pools of mortgages, and selling them as securities, in theory "spreading the risk" around to the point where there was zero market risk -- but in truth simply poisoning everyone's well, because so many of the underlying mortgages were non-conforming, risky loans with gimmicky repayment terms (short-term ARMs, interest only balloon notes, etc).kalm wrote:Why did they ever need to make the process so complicated?JoltinJoe wrote:
That one was one reason. But another reason was to avoid payment of mortgage filing fees every time the mortgage was assigned from one institution to another. Since MERS was the "nominee" of the original mortgagee (the original lender, that is), the argument was that any assignment of the mortgage did not need to be publicly recorded unless and until the mortgagor defaulted (an assignment simply being recorded internally at MERS).
In the event of default, MERS would assign the mortgage to the "holder" so that the holder could foreclose; or it would not assign the mortgage and initiate a foreclosure on behalf of its "principal," the "assignee" bank.
A number of courts have held that MERS lacked standing to initiate foreclosures, because it was merely the nominee of the original mortgagee and held no interest in the promissory notes. So assignments from MERS to the so-called assignee bank became commonplace. But then courts began questioning whether the so-called assignee bank actually was the holder of the promissory note, because MERS never had an interest in the promissory note itself, and was merely assigned nominee status as to the mortgage (but not the note). The courts questioned how MERS could assign something that it never had an interest in (the promissory note) to the "assignee" bank which was trying to foreclose. This becomes as a problem, because the bank cannot foreclose on the mortgage unless it proves that it is the holder of the note (i.e., the party to whom the borrower owes the money).
BTW, MERS is currently in the chain of 60,000,000 mortgages in the US, and courts in judicial foreclosure states are carefully scrutinizing every foreclosure in which MERS is in the chain to be sure that the bank trying to foreclose can prove it holds both the mortgage and the note -- and that the two have never been separated.
This is a potentially huge, looming problem for the mortgage industry and could trigger a need for government intervention.
Look for congress to pass legislation which allows for foreclosure even if the note and mortgage have been separated at some point, or allow for foreclosure even if the law of assignments has not been technically followed. The other solution would be another massive government bailout program of perhaps nearly $1T ...
Who can be bothered with following the niceties of assignment law (or paying a new recording fee every time a mortgage is assigned?) when there was so much money being made?
-
kalm
- Supporter

- Posts: 69154
- Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2009 3:36 pm
- I am a fan of: Eastern
- A.K.A.: Humus The Proud
- Location: Northern Palouse
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
I know, I was taking a shot at the "free market" folks. Beware when things become unneccessarily complicated. If it's intentional, somebody is stealing, if not, nobody knows what the fuck is going on. Or in the case of the recent crisis, it might be a combination of both.JoltinJoe wrote:Everyone was getting rich creating pools of mortgages, and selling them as securities, in theory "spreading the risk" around to the point where there was zero market risk -- but in truth simply poisoning everyone's well, because so many of the underlying mortgages were non-conforming, risky loans with gimmicky repayment terms (short-term ARMs, interest only balloon notes, etc).kalm wrote:
Why did they ever need to make the process so complicated?
Who can be bothered with following the niceties of assignment law (or paying a new recording fee every time a mortgage is assigned?) when there was so much money being made?
Last edited by kalm on Mon Feb 28, 2011 8:46 am, edited 1 time in total.
-
blueballs
- Level3

- Posts: 2590
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 7:00 am
- I am a fan of: Cap'n's porn collection
- A.K.A.: blueballs
- Location: Central FL, where bums have to stay in their designated area on the sidewalk
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
This is absolutely correct.JoltinJoe wrote:Technically, you don't "owe" the mortgage; the mortgage serves as collateral for the promissory note; you owe the promissory note.dbackjon wrote:
They still owe the mortgage - it is just not a secured debt any longer. The mortgage holder would be in the same position as any other unsecured creditor. Could still go after the debtor, just not foreclose. A judge could still liquidate assets to satify debts
What you say is correct, though, assuming that the bank can prove it is the holder of the promissory obligation. You owe the bank the money on the promissory note, but the note is now unsecured. If the bank gets a judgment on the note, it could proceed to lien up your assets (including your residence), and then sell your assets to pay the debt. But that it is much more time-consuming process than a straight foreclosure.
What could have possibly gone wrong? How could the mortgages which were security for the promissory obligations, become separated from the notes and thus become worthless. Google "MERS." If your mortgage was, at any time, assigned to MERS, there is a good chance that no bank could ever foreclose against you (as case law is developing on this issue at this moment).
Blueballs: The ultimate 'bad case of the wants.'
- dbackjon
- Moderator Team

- Posts: 45627
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 9:20 am
- I am a fan of: Northern Arizona
- A.K.A.: He/Him
- Location: Scottsdale
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
JoltinJoe wrote:That one was one reason. But another reason was to avoid payment of mortgage filing fees every time the mortgage was assigned from one institution to another. Since MERS was the "nominee" of the original mortgagee (the original lender, that is), the argument was that any assignment of the mortgage did not need to be publicly recorded unless and until the mortgagor defaulted (an assignment simply being recorded internally at MERS).dbackjon wrote:Thanks for the clarification.
MERS was designed, IIRC, to save banks/mortgage companies money, by forgoing the traditional step of registering mortgages at the county clerk's office, by doing it centrally, and electronically.
In the event of default, MERS would assign the mortgage to the "holder" so that the holder could foreclose; or it would not assign the mortgage and initiate a foreclosure on behalf of its "principal," the "assignee" bank.
A number of courts have held that MERS lacked standing to initiate foreclosures, because it was merely the nominee of the original mortgagee and held no interest in the promissory notes. So assignments from MERS to the so-called assignee bank became commonplace. But then courts began questioning whether the so-called assignee bank actually was the holder of the promissory note, because MERS never had an interest in the promissory note itself, and was merely assigned nominee status as to the mortgage (but not the note). The courts questioned how MERS could assign something that it never had an interest in (the promissory note) to the "assignee" bank which was trying to foreclose. This becomes as a problem, because the bank cannot foreclose on the mortgage unless it proves that it is the holder of the note (i.e., the party to whom the borrower owes the money).
BTW, MERS is currently in the chain of 60,000,000 mortgages in the US, and courts in judicial foreclosure states are carefully scrutinizing every foreclosure in which MERS is in the chain to be sure that the bank trying to foreclose can prove it holds both the mortgage and the note -- and that the two have never been separated.
This is a potentially huge, looming problem for the mortgage industry and could trigger a need for government intervention.
Look for congress to pass legislation which allows for foreclosure even if the note and mortgage have been separated at some point, or allow for foreclosure even if the law of assignments has not been technically followed. The other solution would be another massive government bailout program of perhaps nearly $1T ...
So typical Wall Street - create an instrument that is illegal, immoral, and too big too fail.
-
TwinTownBisonFan
- Supporter

- Posts: 7704
- Joined: Sat Mar 07, 2009 1:56 pm
- I am a fan of: NDSU
- Location: St. Paul, MN
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
nah, just unethical, needlessly complex and too greedy to care.dbackjon wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:
That one was one reason. But another reason was to avoid payment of mortgage filing fees every time the mortgage was assigned from one institution to another. Since MERS was the "nominee" of the original mortgagee (the original lender, that is), the argument was that any assignment of the mortgage did not need to be publicly recorded unless and until the mortgagor defaulted (an assignment simply being recorded internally at MERS).
In the event of default, MERS would assign the mortgage to the "holder" so that the holder could foreclose; or it would not assign the mortgage and initiate a foreclosure on behalf of its "principal," the "assignee" bank.
A number of courts have held that MERS lacked standing to initiate foreclosures, because it was merely the nominee of the original mortgagee and held no interest in the promissory notes. So assignments from MERS to the so-called assignee bank became commonplace. But then courts began questioning whether the so-called assignee bank actually was the holder of the promissory note, because MERS never had an interest in the promissory note itself, and was merely assigned nominee status as to the mortgage (but not the note). The courts questioned how MERS could assign something that it never had an interest in (the promissory note) to the "assignee" bank which was trying to foreclose. This becomes as a problem, because the bank cannot foreclose on the mortgage unless it proves that it is the holder of the note (i.e., the party to whom the borrower owes the money).
BTW, MERS is currently in the chain of 60,000,000 mortgages in the US, and courts in judicial foreclosure states are carefully scrutinizing every foreclosure in which MERS is in the chain to be sure that the bank trying to foreclose can prove it holds both the mortgage and the note -- and that the two have never been separated.
This is a potentially huge, looming problem for the mortgage industry and could trigger a need for government intervention.
Look for congress to pass legislation which allows for foreclosure even if the note and mortgage have been separated at some point, or allow for foreclosure even if the law of assignments has not been technically followed. The other solution would be another massive government bailout program of perhaps nearly $1T ...
So typical Wall Street - create an instrument that is illegal, immoral, and too big too fail.
North Dakota State University Bison 2011 and 2012 National Champions


- UNI88
- Supporter

- Posts: 30565
- Joined: Mon Aug 25, 2008 8:30 am
- I am a fan of: UNI
- Location: Sailing the Gulf of Mexico
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Are you two talking about MERS or the United States Government?TwinTownBisonFan wrote:nah, just unethical, needlessly complex and too greedy to care.dbackjon wrote:So typical Wall Street - create an instrument that is illegal, immoral, and too big too fail.
Being wrong about a topic is called post partisanism - kalm
MAQA - putting the Q into qrazy qanon qult qonspiracy theories since 2015.
It will probably be difficult for MAQA yahoos to overcome the Qult programming but they should give being rational & reasonable a try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
MAQA - putting the Q into qrazy qanon qult qonspiracy theories since 2015.
It will probably be difficult for MAQA yahoos to overcome the Qult programming but they should give being rational & reasonable a try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
- AZGrizFan
- Supporter

- Posts: 59959
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 4:40 pm
- I am a fan of: Sexual Chocolate
- Location: Just to the right of center
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Great. But, if Fannie and Freddie go away as has been rumored lately, the packaging and selling of loans will become a thing of the past anyways. What a concept: retain the risk you underwrite on your OWN balance sheet.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:would appear to be the intent of the bill...Chizzang wrote:Interesting...
I heard a story (it sounded true) where Washington Mutual (now defunct and owned by Chase) was attempting to foreclose on a home but the homeowner hired a lawyer and made WAMU prove they owned the Title... which they were unable to do in a reasonable amount of time (the court date came and went) and WAMU had no proof of title other than data they get when they purchase bundled loans by the hundreds...
This will make the bundling and selling of loans more difficult
You will see homeownership plummet to the 50% or less range if that happens.
"Ah fuck. You are right." KYJelly, 11/6/12
"The future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam." Barack Obama, 9/25/12

"The future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam." Barack Obama, 9/25/12

-
kalm
- Supporter

- Posts: 69154
- Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2009 3:36 pm
- I am a fan of: Eastern
- A.K.A.: Humus The Proud
- Location: Northern Palouse
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Given the rate of unemployment and amount of personal debt, is that bad thing in the long run?AZGrizFan wrote:Great. But, if Fannie and Freddie go away as has been rumored lately, the packaging and selling of loans will become a thing of the past anyways. What a concept: retain the risk you underwrite on your OWN balance sheet.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
would appear to be the intent of the bill...![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
You will see homeownership plummet to the 50% or less range if that happens.![]()
![]()
- AZGrizFan
- Supporter

- Posts: 59959
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 4:40 pm
- I am a fan of: Sexual Chocolate
- Location: Just to the right of center
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Nope. Thank Bill Clinton & Barney Frank for coming up with an arbitrary # of 65% that they just HAD to hit.kalm wrote:Given the rate of unemployment and amount of personal debt, is that bad thing in the long run?AZGrizFan wrote:
Great. But, if Fannie and Freddie go away as has been rumored lately, the packaging and selling of loans will become a thing of the past anyways. What a concept: retain the risk you underwrite on your OWN balance sheet.![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
You will see homeownership plummet to the 50% or less range if that happens.![]()
![]()
"Ah fuck. You are right." KYJelly, 11/6/12
"The future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam." Barack Obama, 9/25/12

"The future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam." Barack Obama, 9/25/12

- GannonFan
- Level5

- Posts: 19233
- Joined: Mon Jul 23, 2007 6:51 am
- I am a fan of: Delaware
- A.K.A.: Non-Partisan Hack
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
Well, throw Bush into that as well since he made it a selling point of his administration that he was boosting home ownership rates.AZGrizFan wrote:Nope. Thank Bill Clinton & Barney Frank for coming up with an arbitrary # of 65% that they just HAD to hit.kalm wrote:
Given the rate of unemployment and amount of personal debt, is that bad thing in the long run?![]()
![]()
As for where the rates go in the absence of Fannie/Freddie, there are plenty of schools of thought out there that eventually the levels won't be vastly different with or without those government entities. Plenty of other countries have similar home ownership rates and yet they don't have bodies like that out there to help get there.
Proud Member of the Blue Hen Nation
- dbackjon
- Moderator Team

- Posts: 45627
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 9:20 am
- I am a fan of: Northern Arizona
- A.K.A.: He/Him
- Location: Scottsdale
Re: Arizona Bill Would Void Foreclosures Without Full Title
GannonFan wrote:Well, throw Bush into that as well since he made it a selling point of his administration that he was boosting home ownership rates.AZGrizFan wrote:
Nope. Thank Bill Clinton & Barney Frank for coming up with an arbitrary # of 65% that they just HAD to hit.![]()
![]()
As for where the rates go in the absence of Fannie/Freddie, there are plenty of schools of thought out there that eventually the levels won't be vastly different with or without those government entities. Plenty of other countries have similar home ownership rates and yet they don't have bodies like that out there to help get there.
Or mortgage deductions... 60-65% seems to be a common number



