NAR, String em up, string em up, string em up!

mrt144

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So tracking the current housing bust and I just love all these flim flam NAR press releases. This commentary from Motley Fool takes the cake though;

http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2007/09/04/desperate-realtors-applaud-bailout.aspx

Spoiler :
This didn't take long. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) -- you know, the trade group that spends millions lobbying our legislatures in order to ensure those fat, 6% cuts on residential housing sales -- is in favor of President Bush's proposed housing bailout, beginning with Federal Housing Administration changes and including the proposed tax break to be given to debtors whose banks hand them a pile of money in the form of debt forgiveness.

NAR President Pat Combs details the organization's alleged concern for homebuyers here. Of course, the NAR attempts to couch this support not for what it is (an appeal to the government to save its own skin by reinflating the housing bubble that put a Cadillac in every garage and a Rolex on every wrist), but as an appeal to humanity: "Many families who have been making their mortgage payments at the starter rate but were unable to keep them up after the loan reset have been unable to refinance through the FHA ..."

That's true, but it ignores the reasons we got to this tight spot. And foremost among them were years' worth of Realtor press releases touting rising home prices, but also "affordability." The latter was the appealing buzzword for exotic mortgages with teaser rates -- the only thing that made these bubbling assets affordable. The myth about housing always increasing in price is, of course, an old NAR favorite.

By bum-rushing buyers into bidding wars in hot markets (I saw one from the inside, once) and issuing positive spin to gullible mainstream media outlets, the Realtors could create a self-fulfilling prophecy, for a while. But now the roof is on fire, as all of those exotic mortgages threaten to toast the NAR's crop of gullible buyers. Unfortunately for them, an inevitable result of the NAR's getting people to bid up houses and buy with zilch down payments is that far fewer homes and buyers qualify for FHA assistance.

Although the NAR helped make this mess, now that its 6% is on the line, it wants the taxpayers to clean it up. The press release is worth reading if only to see the depths of the NAR's ignorance. It calls for the president and Congress to deliver a dose of medicine that would kill the patient entirely, including raising FHA loan limits and reducing or eliminating cash down payments altogether.

Do these yahoos still not realize why housing is tanking? It's precisely because the loans that many Realtors jawboned people into taking were too big and had too little equity. As a result, the derivatives backed by those loans are, in some cases, all but worthless. Bear Stearns (NYSE: BSC), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Countrywide Financial (NYSE: CFC), Impac Mortgage Holdings (NYSE: IMH), Accredited Home Lenders (Nasdaq: LEND), not to mention BNP Paribas and dozens of other banks all around the world, can tell you just what happens when no one believes in the quality of the real-estate-backed derivatives, and there's no equity to fall back on: The market for the derivatives disappears, and there's no more money forthcoming to make new loans.

If the NAR gets its way, the people of the U.S. who didn't go out and spend irresponsibly during this housing bubble will be tasked with stepping in to guarantee the bad loans of those who did, spurred by the 6-percenters at the NAR. That might not even be enough to reanimate the dead monster bubble, but it might buy those Realtors a few more months of commissions.

This kind of shameless, pecuniary self-interest should surprise no one. After all, it's tone-deaf real-estate agents who came up with the infamous "Suzanne" advertisement that now serves as the poster child for the triumph of greed, duplicity, and bullying over old-fashioned financial reason.

That the greedy and thoroughly discredited NAR supports these bailout measures ought to be the final proof that they are not in the public interest. For the rest of the no-bailout case, see my comments last Friday.

At the time of publication, Seth Jayson, a top-10 CAPS player, had no shares of any company mentioned here. See his latest CAPS blog commentary here. View his stock holdings and Fool profile here. Fool rules are here.

I don't know how I can express my disgust with Realtors enough. After this whole thing, I would want to avoid a Realtor as much as possible. They arent motivated by getting you into the right house. The entire basis of having a Realtor is flawed.

As stated a Realtor is paid on a commision, which really means they want you to buy a more expensive house. a system where they would be paid based on a flat rate might not help though because there isnt incentive to show you the right house, or to move your house off the market faster than another.

I dont have a solution just yet, but im sure we could figure out a compensation scheme that encourages Realtor Scum to do their job with the buyer and seller's best interest at heart.
 
if the NAR and the homebuyers are bailed out of the housing crisis thanks to government intervention, I'm gonna keep it archived and pull it out everytime someone will go on a tirade about how the US is the epitome of the free market.

But more seriously, I don't think a bailout will happen. Particularly, I don't see how a Republican government could do it.
 
I've found that most realtors are interested in getting you into a house quickly. The faster they can convince you, the faster they get their cheque. Why put in 100% more time just to get a 50% larger commission?
 
I don't particularly favor realtors, but to place the blame on them ignores the fact that the loans are given by mortgage lenders who are also motivated by a commission on the loan. The bigger the loan, the higher the commission. The lenders are the ones that are supposed to scrutinize whether the borrower is borrowing within their means.

A few sectors are at fault here, from investment banking firms like Goldman Sachs all the way down to the individual homebuyer.
 
I don't particularly favor realtors, but to place the blame on them ignores the fact that the loans are given by mortgage lenders who are also motivated by a commission on the loan. The bigger the loan, the higher the commission. The lenders are the ones that are supposed to scrutinize wether the borrower is borrowing within their means.

A few sectors are at fault here, from investment banking firms like Goldman Sachs all the way down to the individual homebuyer.

definitely realtors arent solely to blame but NAR gets my ire because of the complete hype job theyve been doing through the entire thing. the financial firms can't pretend that the ride is going according to plan. they actually have to answer for their risk. NAR and realtors don't and they want something to happen so they can continue to hype housing.

imagine if a equity broker association made the claims NAR did. they'd have the FTC all over them. It'd be like an association for boiler room operations.
 
I don't particularly favor realtors, but to place the blame on them ignores the fact that the loans are given by mortgage lenders who are also motivated by a commission on the loan. The bigger the loan, the higher the commission. The lenders are the ones that are supposed to scrutinize whether the borrower is borrowing within their means.

A few sectors are at fault here, from investment banking firms like Goldman Sachs all the way down to the individual homebuyer.
That and in order for some people to pass muster, a bunch of loan applications had falsified info and such so that they could be given out to people that either didn't have any business buying their particular digs or didn't have any business purchasing a home at the time, period.

Then they were tucked into the securities and got themselves rated as investment grade when a bunch of these loans could have dragged down the entire security a rating or two.

Yeah, fun stuff.
 
string em up? string em up? string em up? man that sounds SOOOOO racist!
 
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