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Jul 29 2009, 4:20 pm

Frank Threatens Banks With Cramdowns

Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee today threatened banks that they'd better stop foreclosures, or else. Or else what? Or else Congress will pass cramdown legislation -- that's what! That would allow bankruptcy judges to rewrite mortgage contracts to whatever struggling homeowners could afford. I wouldn't count on any follow through to that threat.

Frank said:

"People in the servicing industry and in the broader financial industry must understand that if this last effort to produce significant modifications fails, the argument for reviving the bankruptcy option will be extremely strong, and I think there is a substantial chance that the outcome will be different."

That may be true for his chamber of Congress. After all, Democrats have an easy time passing pretty much whatever they want in the House. Not so for the Senate. In fact, when cramdown legislation was offered in the Senate last spring, it failed miserably. Only 45 Senators voted in favor -- no where near the 60 necessary. In other words, the Senate would have at least as difficult a time passing cramdowns as passing national health care reform and cap and trade.

But the climate for passing cramdown legislation has changed: now it's even less likely. Unlike last spring, the economy and housing market are showing signs of stabilization. That should make moderate Senators even more unlikely to change their votes in favor. These days, the Senate has all the power. Frank can threaten all he wants, but unless he knows of some way to sway moderate Senators, those threats may fall on deaf ears.

Comments (3)

Brewer Caldwell

We need this out here in Phoenix. Brewer Caldwell
sees homes every day that end up in foreclosure and the families kicked out when the bank and borrower could have come to terms on an agreement. The banks are sitting on that big pile of cash from the bailout and are less likely to want to book a loss on the loan when they can postpone until the auction date.

Barney Frank's threat to pass cramdown legislation on banks, like his earlier threat to subpeona the names of those in AIG who received bonuses, is his way of deflecting accountability for his role in creating the entire sub-prime mortgage housing mess. He has lost all credibility as Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

PacificGatePost

Government Capping Compensation?

The government is not improving the lot of shareholders, but is escalating its own intrusion into the boardrooms of America.

http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/2009/07/government-capping-compensation.html

Sweeping expansion of government incompetence into corporations is an invasion that will not be reversed. In the meantime, there is need for a fix in the process of corporate governance.