Apr 10

Past Event

Addressing the Weak Housing Market: Is Principal Reduction the Answer?

Video

Highlights

  • Six Years into the Housing Crisis and Losses Remain

    Ed DeMarco, Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency: Virtually every homeowner in the country has suffered a loss in the crisis; the majority were playing by the rules but became the victims of timing, or circumstance or poor judgment.

  • Principal Reduction Must Be Clear and Transparent

    Ed DeMarco, Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency: Should Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac employ principal reduction, policies will have to be transparent and clearly described to ensure rules are applied consistently and fairly.

  • Principal Reduction Won’t Rescue the Housing Market

    Ed DeMarco, Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency: This is a debate about the tools we can use to balance two goals—maximizing assistance to a fraction of the nation’s underwater borrowers while minimizing costs to taxpayers.

Full Event

  • Welcome, Keynote, Discussion with Ed DeMarco

    Keynote address by (and question and answer session with) Ed DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, with introductory remarks from Karen Dynan.

    Karen Dynan and Ted Gayer

  • Panel Discussion

    Panel discussion on addressing the weak housing market, with Mark Fleming, Paul Nikodem, Anthony Sanders, and Andrew Jakabovics, and moderated by Ted Gayer.

    Karen Dynan and Ted Gayer

Audio

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Summary

The housing market remains weak years after the bursting of the housing bubble and despite numerous administration policies targeted at housing. Prices are still falling, foreclosures are proceeding, and many people have houses valued at less than the principal owed on their mortgages. Although some recent signs have been slightly more encouraging, the economic recovery has been, and continues to be, impeded by weakness in the housing market.

Some policymakers have been calling for federal regulators to push Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to do principal reduction for borrowers whose house is worth less than what they owe on their mortgages. Is principal reduction the way to finally get the housing market back on its feet? What, if any, would be the cost to taxpayers? What should the future of housing finance look like and what is needed to prepare Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for changes ahead?

On April 10, the Economic Studies program at Brookings hosted a conversation with Ed DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the conservator and regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. DeMarco was followed by a panel of housing and consumer experts. Vice President and Co-Director of Economic Studies Karen Dynan gave introductory remarks, and Co-Director of Economic Studies Ted Gayer moderated the panel. Speakers took questions from the audience.

Participants followed the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #BIHousing.

Event Agenda

  • Welcome

  • Keynote Address

    • Ed DeMarco

      Acting Director

      The Federal Housing Finance Agency

  • Panel Discussion

    • Moderator

      Portrait: Ted Gayer

      Ted Gayer

      Co-Director, Economic Studies

      Joseph A. Pechman Senior Fellow

    • Mark Fleming

      Chief Economist

      CoreLogic

    • Paul Nikodem

      Executive Director, Head of Mortgage Credit Research

      Nomura Securities International

    • Anthony B. Sanders

      Distinguished Professor of Real Estate Finance

      George Mason University

    • Andrew Jakabovics

      Senior Director, Policy Development and Research

      Enterprise Community Partners, Inc.

Details

April 10, 2012

9:30 AM - 11:00 AM EDT

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

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