Trump Considering Plan To Make Mortgages Transferrable To New Home
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Poast new message in this thread
Date: November 12th, 2025 3:25 PM
Author: ...,,..;...,,..,..,...,,,;..,
Open Source Intel
@Osint613
·
2h
The Trump administration is exploring a plan to make mortgages transferable, letting homeowners keep their existing loan terms, rates, and lenders when buying a new house.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49423756) |
Date: November 12th, 2025 3:25 PM
Author: ...,,..;...,,..,..,...,,,;..,
how does this work? people who want to upgrade are still gonna be screwed.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49423759) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 3:45 PM
Author: ...,,..;...,,..,..,...,,,;..,
(liz warren)
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49423850) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 3:29 PM
Author: .,...,..,,,.,:,,.,.,.,:::,,..,:,.,,:..:.,:.::,.
lmao at assuming these maga-morons have any sign of intelligence.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49423778) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 7:59 PM
Author: .,.,...,..,.,.,:,,:,.,.,:::,...,:,...:..:.,:.::,.
Boomers? I'm Gen Y and have a sub 3%, as does everyone who bought 4-5 years ago and wasn't a moron.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424658) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 1:17 PM
Author: .,.,.....,.,.;,.,,,:,.,.,::,...,:,..;,..
the idea is that the 2% ppl are never selling so home prices have remained high despite rate increases. in theory, something like this would increase liquidity and push prices down.
another option to get the same effect would be to ride it out until more and more boomers start dying/sent to nursing homes.
lib option is to force a paradigm shift where everyone lives in shitty apartments in perpetuity
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49430358) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 3:37 PM
Author: .;:..;:.;.:.;.,,,..,.:,.;....;,;;;..;,..,,.,,....,
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49423819) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 4:59 PM
Author: ...,,..;...,,..,..,...,,,;..,
how's this work if you're upgrading houses? i assume you can't get a greater loan amount at 2%.
so for even the lucky youngs who bought starter houses on 2% mortgages and are trapped in their starter houses, they're fucked if they wanna upgrade.
this is really gonna favor boomers
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424017) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 5:04 PM
Author: ...,,..;...,,..,..,...,,,;..,
it favors boomers because they have less of a need to upgrade in price b/c they're downsizing.
they dont have to worry about getting a second mortgage at 6% rates.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424030)
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Date: November 12th, 2025 5:10 PM
Author: ...,,..;...,,..,..,...,,,;..,
if boomers are able to cheaply downgrade, PE groups will find a way to buy their houses depriving young ppl of buying them
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424043) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 5:23 PM Author: sealclubber
we are finally going the correct direction with demand by getting rid of
and more importantly keeping out
illegal aliens
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424078)
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Date: November 12th, 2025 4:16 PM Author: AZNgirl Raping Taj Mahal because it's White
when will amerishits give up this stupid fasination with "owning" a home. in germany ppl just rent
the only reason this shit even works in the US is cause of mortgage interest deduction and then cap gains exemption upon sale
otherwise its not even clear it wld be financially better than renting, so its massively subsisdized thru the tax system
and this shit drives up prices, u shld actually get rid of these tax benefits if u want to reduce prices
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49423913) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 5:12 PM
Author: .;:..;:.;.:.;.,,,..,.:,.;....;,;;;..;,..,,.,,....,
Germany is definitely the model country
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424046) |
Date: November 12th, 2025 5:29 PM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Is the only purpose of this rule to prevent the "lock in" effect? If so, it seems like it would be much easier to simply allow people to pay off mortgages for less than face value if rates go down. For example, I currently owe about $150k on my 2% mortgage with about 10 years remaining. A bond price calculator tells me that my mortgage would trade for about $105k on the bond market, since the coupon (i.e., interest payment) on my mortgage is less than the current market rate. That's already the way it works in Denmark (one of the few countries other than the U.S. where fixed-rate mortgages are the norm). And banks would probably welcome this change, because it would allow them to reallocate the money tied up in my low-interest mortgage to a new mortgage at the current market rate. That would also solve the lock-in problem while avoiding the administrative hassle of underwriting new properties.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424105) |
Date: November 12th, 2025 6:16 PM Author: Civil Attorney
Is it “strongly being looked at”?
Should we “wait two weeks”?
Are “many people saying this”?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424237) |
Date: November 12th, 2025 6:17 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
I've proposed this before - I think xoxo is being short sighted on the difficulty and the benefits
1. It's not that hard. Almost all this debt is securitized. Just write a rule that the servicers/trustees can substitute out collateral upon certain paramaters and payment of like a $5,000 fee. Commercial loans already often permit this occasionally.
2. It'd be much easier on a residential loan. People stomping their feet about "diligence" really are missing (i) the new property will be subject to the same federal underwriting standards and subject to teh same "diligence" and (ii) that "diligence" is really just looking at the number on the appraisal. If you made the borrower pay $5,000 if transfer fees, taht would more than cover everything.
3. This is a "give" to people with low mortgages, but you're getting a win here in that they're selling their house and providing liquidity into the market. It's important to remember that these people don't have to sell the starter homes they bought at 2.8% interest. They can either continue to live in them, or just keep them as rentals.
The Trump administration is looking into this because the housing market is broken after handing out 3% mortgages to everyone and then jacking it up to 8%. Some of that is mitigated by rates going down to 6% - but things aren't improving. This will be the slowest year in terms of housing in 30 years, and the median FIRST TIME buyer is literally 40.
It's not helping anyone that people are sitting in these homes where essentially they're payment would double if they moved into the exact same house next door.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424239) |
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Date: November 13th, 2025 1:32 AM Author: AZNgirl Raping Taj Mahal because it's White
this is how socialist think, that things can be free and only positive when the govt manipulates markets
just off the top of my birdbrain head, wldnt the banks lose TONS of money giving out loans at below market rates which is what they are essentially doing by letting faggots transfer lower interest loans
how the furk does that work for the jew banks, they wld just be subsisidzing prior homeowners loans by charging moar for new homeowners
this is just a ponzi scheme like SS/medicare
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49425560) |
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Date: November 13th, 2025 12:23 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
This is really incorrect analysis. Think of it this way.
1. Scenario 1 - $500,000 3.0% loan that is not transferable. The borrower stays in the house. Bank has already made their fees. Bondholder collects 3.0% interest.
2. Scenario 2 - Borrower sells their house. Real estate agents collect fees. New buyer takes out a loan at 7% interest. Bank collects fees from new loan, new bondholders get 7% interest. Old borrower buys new house for $1 million. Take out new loan for $500,000 at 7%. Bank makes fees. Bondholders get 7% interest. Old bondholders continue to collect 3.0% interest plus $10,000 transfer fee. Plus you get people matched ecnomically to the best house fit for them rather than stuck because of their interest rate.
It's very easy to see some clear winners from this proposal. There are losers too, but you have to squint much harder to find them.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49426608) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 8:43 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
Seems like a dumb take that the government can just take your land for the good of the community but they can't force a lender (who participated in a government program) to swap out for collateral that meets the same guidelines (when the lender never visited the original collateral in the first place).
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424877)
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Date: November 12th, 2025 8:59 PM Author: Madison Avenue Lemming Enslaved to Conformity
I assume the loans would be limited to the remaining principal balance.
Lenders would be entitled to appraisals on the new collateral, and you could build in a margin of safety and charge a fee to port them. So if you borrow $1MM to buy a $1.2MM house and then buy a $2MM house after paying down $100K of principal, you could allow the borrower to port the $900K principal loan to the $2MM house, but require it go have a loan to value after any new money or second mortgage is applied that would make sure the $900K is by 10%.
This would be good for people like me who have 2.3% mortgages, but I’m not sure it’d lower home prices. It might increase liquidity by allowing people to sell their homes more easily.
But if you borrow $1MM secured by $1.2MM in real estate, you should be able to swap out the collateral if the LTV stays the same or is better, as long as you are willing to pay the transaction fees. The only issue I would foresee here is regional concentration risk. Like if everyone traded NY mortgages for Florida mortgages. RMBS deals are set up to have geographical diversity to protect against the risk of regional economic downturns, natural disasters, etc. But maybe you could require it to be within 100 miles of the original property or something.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424923) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 9:12 PM
Author: ...,,..;...,,..,..,...,,,;..,
this, plus make life difficult for foreigners to own property in the US. plus heavily penalize investment property ownership generally and favor owner-occupied buyers
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49424950) |
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Date: November 12th, 2025 9:21 PM Author: peeface
very modest numbers of people are being deported. no more than under Obama, and nowhere near enough to deal with the problem.
they may not be competing with deranged lawyers for houses, but they are certainly competing with young people buying a first home and trying to start a family.
there are endless ways the government could fuck with the real estate industry. tighten lending to residential investors by classifying it as higher risk or putting low concentration limits on it. exclude FM/FM purchase of mortgages originating from a non-natural person. i assume finance policy nerds could come up with hundreds of them using existing law.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49425004)
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Date: November 13th, 2025 12:29 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
It's ironic how many people in this thread about this being socialism or government engineering.
How do all you libertarian nonthinkers rail against rent control constantly, and not realize the interest rate lock ins have to the exact same economic effect?
You have a class of people who have to stay attached to a certain property, or in essence, their rent will double?
It's an easy fix - which world is the economy better off?
1. Scenario 1 - $500,000 3.0% loan that is not transferable. The borrower stays in the house. Bank has already made their fees. Bondholder collects 3.0% interest. Borrower just lives in that house until they die even though it's no longer a fit for them.
2. Scenario 2 - Borrower sells their house to live closer to their new job or bigger house for their family. Real estate agents collect fees. New buyer takes out a loan at 7% interest. Bank collects fees from new loan, new bondholders get 7% interest. Old borrower buys new house for $1 million. Take out new loan for $500,000 at 7%. Bank makes fees. Bondholders get 7% interest. Old bondholders continue to collect 3.0% interest plus $10,000 transfer fee. Plus you get people matched ecnomically to the best house fit for them rather than stuck because of their interest rate.
It's very easy to see some clear winners from this proposal. There are losers too, but you have to squint much harder to find them.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49426632) |
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Date: November 13th, 2025 8:15 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
I'm assuming you'll have to pay something fee to cover the expenses of papering the new loan.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49428438) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 12:42 PM Author: sealclubber
lol and you just randomly came up with $10,000
okay, sure
mortgages are not lines of credit. they are contracts based on certain property at certain interest rates at a certain time
the government needs to stay the fuck out of this
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49430247) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 1:34 PM
Author: .,.,.....,.,.;,.,,,:,.,.,::,...,:,..;,..
we get it that your a foreign fag who thinks everyone should live in apartments forever
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49430421) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 5:42 PM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Banks are doing this currently because it's much better for the bank if someone pays off their 3% mortgage and takes out a new mortgage at 7% than if someone continues to pay a 3% mortgage. They would be creating an administrative headache for themselves in order to lose money.
Regarding your second point, as I think about it, that is another reason to prefer my proposal (which is to allow borrowers to pay off their mortgages for less than face value when mortgage rates increase). Under my proposal, that would create an incentive for people to sell their house and rent or move to an assisted living center or something like that, which would increase the number of homes available for purchase. But if all you do is make mortgages transferable, then by definition you take one home off the market for every home you put back on the market, which doesn't do anything to increase the supply of housing.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431406) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 12:24 AM Author: sealclubber
you are a fucking pumo and therefore a pussy
you didn't even set forth your scenarios as proposals
so, now looking at the second as a proposal, why would we want anyone to be able to pay off a mortgage
at less than face value
just because mortgage rates have increased?
why should the bank eat that risk?
why should the government get involved in something so common as residence loans?
the obvious answer is-they shouldn't.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432376) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 12:32 AM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Holy fucking shit. I know lawyers are mathematically illiterate, but am I the only person on this bort who understands how bond prices work? Bond prices go down when interest rates go up. There is zero risk to the bank because the bank already lost money when interest rates went up. Trading a $500k mortgage at 3% for a $350k mortgage at 7% is not a loss for the bank because the monthly mortgage payments would be exactly the same. In fact, that is how you calculate the fair payoff value using a bond price calculator. Basically, if you are paying $1,500 per month on a 30-year mortgage at 3%, you calculate what mortgage value would give you a $1,500 monthly payment at 7%. That value is the payoff value for the 3% mortgage.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432384) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 12:35 AM Author: sealclubber
mortgages are not bonds
if they were to be treated as such, the market would treat them as such
to force the market to treat them as such is just typical dimwit theorists thinking they can outthink the market
in other words, stfu dimwit
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432388) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 10:29 AM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Holy fucking shit are you stupid? I think the answer is obvious. Yes, of course mortgages are bonds. You pay a lump sum of money and get a coupon (i.e., a mortgage payment) every month for the next 15 or 30 years. That's the very definition of a bond. Granted, I'm not an expert on securities law, but I don't think mortgages can be bought sold quite as easily as regular bonds. Which is precisely why banks will sell off many of their mortgages to Fannie and Freddie who turn them into securities that can be traded more easily. But a mortgage-backed security is ultimately a bond fund. Its price will go up and down with interest rates just like a government or corporate bond.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432874) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 5:35 PM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
You can get exactly the same benefit with far less administrative hassle if you allow people to pay off their mortgages for less than face value when mortgage rates go up. In your example, rather than transferring the $500k 3% loan to a new property, the borrower simply pays it off for $350k. (You can use a bond price calculator to figure out the fair price. It will depend on how many years are left on the mortgage.) The bank will be fine with this change, because they will earn the same amount of money investing $350k at 7% as they would having $500k tied up at 3%. And it means that their underwriters don't have to evaluate new collateral or underwrite the loan a second time.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431373) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 6:40 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
What you're saying makes sense in theory but not in practice because there are no banks at play here.
The loans are all securitized. It really doesn't effect that securitization trust if the borrower keeps paying the same amount under the note, but you substitute out the collateral for a higher quality piece of collateral.
But IMO it fucks with everything if you allow early prepayment at a discount. You then have a loss on the loan - what class of certificates gets hit with the loss, etc?
Also a lot of people are holding these on their books because it effects their accounting treatment. They might not be as thrilled as you think if all the sudden they start paying off early.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431646)
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Date: November 14th, 2025 8:24 PM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Seriously? We allow people to refinance mortgages, where they pay off early to take advantage of lower rates, which actually requires the bondholder to take a loss. Yet somehow we still securitize mortgages without any issues. But you want to claim that allowing people to pay off loans early at a price below value (which costs the bondholder nothing because they can reinvest the cash at a higher rate) is going to somehow cause problems?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431871) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 9:04 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
100% yes.
Prepayments are a risk that is underwritten and disclosed in the offering documents and modeled by the banks.
The bondholders never agreed (i) to accept less money in a prepayment and (ii) what classes of certificates would eat that loss.
It'd be an enormous mess.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431966) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 12:26 AM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Jesus Christ you're dumb. Learn how bond prices work. When you refinance, the bondholder loses money, because the value of the mortgage went up when rates went down. Banks charge higher interest rates to compensate for this risk, and bondholders know that they are taking this risk when they purchase securitized mortgages. But when you prepay a mortgage for less than face value after rates go up, THERE IS NO FUCKING LOSS TO THE BONDHOLDER. THE BONDHOLDER ALREADY ATE THAT LOSS WHEN RATES WENT UP, BECAUSE BOND PRICES DROP WHEN RATES GO UP. If you reinvest $350k at 7%, the bond is worth exactly the same as it was when you were owed $500k at 3%. The coupon is exactly the same. Literally nothing has changed as far as the bondholder is concerned.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432377) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 1:47 AM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
See below - the bonds have a waterfall of who gets paid when.
If you followed the rules, the subordinate certificates would take almost all the losses. I suppose you could re-do the laws to require all the bonds to reconfigure their waterfalls to account for your econ 101 efficient market hypothetheis bullshit, but why wouldn't a law firm take up the class A holders holding $500 mm worth of debt saying "the contract says i'm supposed to get all the principal up until the loan amount - this person paid less than the loan amount, ergo the senior bondholders should get all the money."
Or if you gave it all to the senior bondholders, the junior bondholders would flip out because your plan would effectually zero them out.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432474) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 10:24 AM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Oh my God are you a fucking idiot? Learn how bond prices work. When you refinance a mortgage, the bondholder takes a loss. Since interest rates went down, the bond price went up, so when you pay off the mortgage for face value, the bondholder loses money. But it still happens all the time and doesn't create any issues. Mortgage lenders charge slightly higher rates to compensate for this additional risk. No big deal.
BUT WHEN YOU PAY OFF A MORTGAGE FOR LESS THAN FACE VALUE AFTER RATES GO UP, NOBODY LOSES MONEY. THE BONDHOLDER ALREADY LOST THEIR MONEY, BECAUSE BONDS LOSE VALUE WHEN RATES GO UP. If you trade a $500k bond at 3% for a $350k bond at 7%, the value of the bond is the same. The coupon is the same. Literally nothing has changed and nobody lost any money. This is not fucking rocket science.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432861) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 9:14 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
Dumb post. These presumably would all be fannie and freddie loans subject to the same underwriting guidelines.
They would be reviewed in the exact same way they were originally (not much, just checking the dollar amount on the appraisal).
It's not like these are commercial loans where banks actually did site visits and projections, etc.
The only decent point was you may shift the risk pool of the securitization if people moved geographic locations - but that doesn't see to be that material of a risk to me.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431998) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 8:22 PM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
JFC learn how bond pricing works. Bond prices go down when interest rates go up. The bondholder has already suffered a loss when interest rates went up. If you replace a bond for $500k at 3% with a $350k bond yielding 7%, then value of the bond is exactly the same. It won't fuck with anything at all if you replace one mortgage with another mortgage of equal value.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431859) |
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Date: November 14th, 2025 9:11 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
You don't know what you're talking about.
The securitization never contemplated mortgages being paid off at a discount. So say someone owed $500,000 in principal and you let them get out for $350,000.
Does that $350,000 all go to the A tranche? Because all principal goes to them first? Because if that's the case then wouldn't the bond in the first loss position basically lose all their interests because all these loans are going at a "loss" and they're the first loss? Seems like that would be devastating to anyone holding that position.
I'm sure smarter people than me could fix it all, but it wouldn't be easy and would be subject to massive litigation.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49431991) |
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Date: November 15th, 2025 10:46 AM
Author: .,.,,...,...,..,....,...,...,...
Good God you're a fucking idiot. When you purchase a bond, you are purchasing a coupon that is paid at regular intervals. There is no concept of "principal." What you are calling "principal" will fluctuate every single day as interest rates go up and down. As long as the coupon doesn't change, the value of the bond is unchanged.
For example, a 30-year mortgage for $475k at 3% will result in a payment of about $2,000 per month. A 30-year mortgage for $300k at 7% will also result in a payment of $2,000 per month. In other words, as far as the bondholder is concerned, they are the same fucking mortgage. They will get $2,000 per month for the next 30 years. It makes zero difference that the "principal" is a different number. If you pay off the $475k mortgage at 3% for $300k and then use the $300k to write a new mortgage at 7%, absolutely nothing has changed. The bond's coupon is exactly the same. Nobody lost any money. The bondholder already lost that money when interest rates went up, because their bond that used to be worth $475k is now worth only $300k.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5796831&forum_id=2"#49432910) |
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