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"What they were trying to do was to spread the pain of the reduction to the lender," John said. "If you pay off 100 cents on the dollar on these loans, then that pain goes to the taxpayer." McCain's proposal is similar in some ways to a plan that has been advocated by the liberal Center for American Progress starting last December, but its ideological precursor is the Depression-era Home Owners' Loan Corporation, which traded bonds for defaulted mortgages with lenders and investors at a discount and reworked the loan terms to help borrowers. The problem, say economists and housing analysts, is that times have changed considerably since the 1930s, and many mortgages are now bound up in the labyrinthine investments that have brought financial institutions to their knees. Legal contracts with investors -- known as pooling and servicing agreements
-- limit the ability to alter loans or take them out of the pool. "You can't just go to Countrywide and say, 'Please sell us 100 mortgages out of your securitized pool,'" White said. The contract "specifically tells them they can't do that." Deutsche Bank estimates that more than 80 percent of the $1.8 trillion in outstanding troubled loans
-- those made to "subprime" borrowers with weak credit and "Alt-A" borrowers who didn't document their incomes or provide large down payments
-- are tied up in mortgage-backed securities. The remaining 20 percent, about $318 billion according to Deutsche Bank, are "whole loans," easier to modify because they don't have multiple investors. The bailout package already directs the Treasury secretary to renegotiate whole mortgages it acquires from troubled financial companies, and to use its leverage to rework loans that are part of larger investment pools. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Wednesday that under the new program and the earlier housing rescue "we're going to be working to avoid foreclosures." Helping homeowners whose mortgages are pooled into larger investments is tougher. "The problem is these things are not transparent. It's not at all clear who holds which pieces and where they've gone," Jakabovics said. His organization has proposed changing the law to encourage mortgage holders to allow refinances like those envisioned under McCain's plan, including by denying tax-advantaged status to investments that block such changes.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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