How insane is this? Has Bernanke gone completely off his rocker? I am sorry, but when I read this I went completely off the deep end. This is simply a bailout of the banking and financial service sector, and this will do far more damage to the US economy than just about anything I can think of. With all the debt this country has, to even consider this type of proposition is absolute madness, and I mean that in the harshest terms possible.
Bernanke Calls Plan to Buy Mortgages `Worthwhile' (Update2)
By Alison Vekshin
Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said it's ``worthwhile'' to consider letting the federal government buy distressed mortgages if the worst housing slump in a quarter century deepens.
``I think that it is worthwhile to be thinking about possible approaches one might take if the housing situation were to get much worse,'' Bernanke said today in response to a question during his semiannual appearance before the House Financial Services Committee in Washington.
The Fed chairman acknowledged regulators made ``mistakes'' in mortgage-market oversight and said he is working ``very hard'' to address the subprime-mortgage crisis. The Fed is also developing rules to improve consumer protection against ``unfair and deceptive'' credit-card practices, Bernanke said.
Taking note of the call for increased safeguards, committee Chairman Barney Frank lauded Bernanke for ``a very significant change'' in policy from his predecessor, Alan Greenspan. Frank criticized the Fed last year for failing to use its authority to write consumer-protection rules, and won House passage of a plan to extend those powers to two other bank regulators.
Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, yesterday unveiled a $15 billion proposal that would let the government buy loans to help as many as 1 million struggling homeowners.
Bernanke said he supports addressing the housing slump through private-sector efforts, reforming the Federal Housing Administration to refinance troubled mortgages and improving oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-backed companies that are the biggest buyers of U.S. mortgages.
`Different Alternatives'
``We need to be thinking about different alternatives and preparing for contingencies,'' Bernanke said in response to a question about the mortgage-purchase plan.
Separately, Bernanke said the Fed will propose new rules to curb abuses by credit-card issuers ``this spring,'' using its authority under the Federal Trade Commission Act.
``We are actively reviewing potentially unfair and deceptive practices by issuers of credit cards,'' Bernanke said.
He said the Fed plans to finish the rules this year along with steps requiring card issuers to give consumers more notice before increasing interest rates or fees.
The central bank also will move by July to bolster consumer protections in mortgage lending, Bernanke said today.
The mortgage-lending rules were proposed by the Fed in December after Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd demanded the agency use its authority under a 1994 law to develop new consumer protections. The rules would ban low- documentation loans, limit penalties for borrowers who prepay debts and require lenders to determine whether borrowers can repay.
Foreclosure-Prevention Plan
Bernanke criticized a foreclosure-prevention measure that would let judges modify mortgages in bankruptcy proceedings.
The plan, part of legislation Senate Democrats aim to advance this week, would ``have some conflicting effects'' and lead to higher mortgage rates, Bernanke said.