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shanon1

07/17/13 2:44 PM

#27662 RE: MonestHind #27655

Just another attempt by the media re-running the old June news, but 8 men have a lot of power and influence especially with select wall street support, I mean look at how 8 cats captured the Hawaiian islands with the help of a garrison of marines, very similar thing could happen here, the end of the Fannie, Freddie monarchy/monopoly, Hawaii is still here on earth but with different rulers and all the subsequent changes. Do you think we as shareholders will get nothing, zilch, nada. Compromises, deals, treaties so much to wade thru.
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Demar

07/17/13 2:51 PM

#27664 RE: MonestHind #27655

S. 1217: Housing Finance Reform and Taxpayer Protection Act of 2013

Prognosis:
2% chance of getting past committee.
0% chance of being enacted.


http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/113/s1217


The Corker-Warner Housing Reform Won't Work:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323873904578569820608849816.html

Why It Would Be a Mistake to Unwind Fannie and Freddie http://www.americanbanker.com/bankthink/why-it-would-be-a-mistake-to-unwind-fannie-and-freddie-1060106-1.html

GSE Critics Ignore Loan Performance
http://www.americanbanker.com/bankthink/gse-critics-ignore-loan-performance-1059187-1.html

Corker-Warner GSE Bill: Includes Unconstitutional Taking of Property
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3029736/posts

"Some advocate for the wind down of the guarantee businesses of Fannie and Freddie, either by stepping down loan limits or restricting their underwriting authority in some formulaic way. The theory is that private investors will fill the void in the market created by the enterprises’ forced withdrawal and that the transition will be seamless."

"My question to the advocates of this approach is: what if it isn’t seamless and substantial demand for mortgage credit goes unmet? If policymakers get the size or pace of a forced wind down wrong, we will suffer a credit contraction, house prices will fall and the U.S. economy will once again be at risk for a recession. When I ask the proponents of wind down “what then?”, the answer is that the FHFA will wind the enterprises back up. This is precisely the kind of start/stop government policymaking that prevents private investors from taking risk. Until Congress provides private investors with a credible transition plan from the government- dominated market that exists today to one with a better balance of private risk and public support, I predict that private risk taking in the mortgage markets will remain muted."

Statement by James E. Millstein former Chief Restructuring Officer of the United States Department of the Treasury before the Committee on Financial Services U.S. House of Representatives April 24, 2013

http://financialservices.house.gov/uploadedfiles/hhrg-113-ba00-wstate-jmillstein-20130424.pdf


"MonestHind, provide substantial answers to the questions below to demonstrate the veracity of your ten statements and claims. If you have no substantial answers to the questions below, your ten tips are simply useless, negative hype."