This note from a "real" researcher on how much money it will take to "stabilize" the mortgage markets. Not far from my proposal eh?
By Lingling Wei and Kevin Kingsbury
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--It may take a long time for investors to start bidding for mortgages again.
In recent months, companies from mortgage lenders, hedge funds and firms investing in structured products - such as asset-backed bonds - have been racing to dump mortgage assets to repay creditors, as the fallout from the credit squeeze continues to reverberate. The upshot: Businesses are earning even less from selling loans, more lenders are failing, and investors - except for those savvy specialists in distressed investing - are reluctant to dip their toes back.
In a report titled "De-Leveraging Destroying Value - New Capital Needed," analyst Paul Miller Jr. at Friedman Billings Ramsey estimated that it takes roughly $150 billion to $250 billion of new capital to "normalize pricing" in the mortgage market. But it's also a kind of Catch-22 situation: Without new capital, it could be difficult for asset prices to come back up; without pricing adjustment and better returns, new capital may be hard to come by.
Miller projected that it will take six to 12 months for the prices of mortgage assets to normalize and for capital to flow back into the space. "There is no quick fix here," he noted. And until then, lenders will continue to come under pressure with respect to earnings and book values.
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