Pretty good article for all the "Experts" in here with an axe to grind. The good news is, as long as the economy hangs in there, housing will continue to heal. With the amount of foreclosures and "Shadow Inventory" working it's way down, perhaps we will get to a normal "Market" again that doesn't require $40 Billion a month in MBS purchases by the FED
"At the core of QE3 and every other program aimed at saving the financial system is the ultimate mission of stunting the natural market process. It is hard to find any system that is purely market based especially when it comes to housing. The US since the Great Depression has heavily subsidized housing via Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and other programs but also through more subtle benefits like those offered via the mortgage interest deduction. Yet each step that has been taken to “fix” the housing market has become more dramatic in fashion and is like using a bazooka to remove one cockroach. At first if you recall it was a suspension of mark-to-market accounting. Then it was programs like TARP and Maiden Lanes designed to transfer toxic assets off bank balance sheets (a good amount still sit in the Fed balance sheet). Today the Fed is now on QE3 and will need to commit half-a-freaking-trillion dollars over the next year in MBS purchases just to make interest rates stay the same or tick lower by a tiny amount. To think that this kind of massive action will have no repercussions is simply ignoring what we are now seeing. In essence, to keep things going at the current pace the Fed needs to get more dramatic.
What about the shadow inventory?
At first shadow inventory did not exist. Then it was an issue of defining what constituted shadow inventory. Now, with half a decade of action items we realize that:
-a. Suspension of mark-to-market was largely the first step in creating a massive amount of shadow inventory
-b. Deny this pool of properties exists while working behind the scenes to off load properties initially. Now banks are selling into a largely controlled system (i.e., the Fed/GSEs are the only game in town)
-c. If the market was truly functioning, why in the world would the Fed need a market intervention program like QE3?
http://www.doctorhousingbubble.com/m...+Love+SoCal%29
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