Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Lovely_Friend

Mr.Bear and Mr.Fox were good friends. They often went out in search of food togetther.
One day, each of them caught a fish. Mr.Fox ate the fish right away, but Mr.Bear did not.
He just proudly hung on to it.
Mr.Fox asked surprisingly. " Why don't you eat the fish."
Mr.Bear " I will save it for later."
Mr.Fox puzzled. " But it will spoil after only an hour."
Mr.Bear smugly said " You will see."
Then Mr.Bear divided the fish into four parts. The head was for the lion.
The tail was for the tiger. The middle part was for the wolf, and he kept
the last part for himself. Mr.Fox looked at Mr.Bear for a long time and then uttered,
" Did you not say you would save it ? Now you have only got a small piece left.
How would that be enough ? " then Mr.Fox went away.
As days went by, Mr.Fox could not find food so he went to see Mr.Bear.
Mr.Fox was very surprised to see Mr.Bear carrying so many fish.
Mr.Fox asked." Where did you get those fish ? I have spend days looking and
could not find any . I am deadly hungry."
Mr.Bear said. " You remember the fish I gave the lion and the tiger ? These fish I got from them . Look over there ! The wolf is bringing some fish for me
They are returning me a favor." Mr.Fox nodded understanding the meaning
of saving it for later. ^_^

Fed to tighten up lending rules

The central bank is expected to propose regulations that would offer greater protections for home buyers and curtail abusive lending.

By Jeanne Sahadi, CNNMoney.com senior writer
December 17 2007: 2:51 PM EST

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com)
The Federal Reserve on Tuesday will propose a much stricter set of rules for mortgage lenders as part of the central bank's effort to avert abusive lending.
The proposed rules are expected to crack down on lax practices in a number of ways. Among them, the rules are likely to:
Prohibit giving people unaffordable loans. One reason for the spike in foreclosures among those with subprime adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) was that lenders measured borrowers' ability to repay the loan based on the low introductory loan rate, but not on the higher rate that the loan would reset to. The Fed may propose that lenders base affordability on a borrowers' ability to repay a loan at the reset rate.
Restrict use of 'liar' loans. The Fed is also expected to restrict the use of so-called "liar loans" or "stated income loans." When lenders make such a loan, they don't verify the income of the potential borrower. The end result: home buyers end up with homes they never could afford in the first place, let alone when their rate resets.
Prohibit or limit prepayment penalties. Homeowners who want to refinance into a more affordable loan are often prevented from doing so because of a punitive prepayment penalty - which can amount to the equivalent of six months of mortgage payments.
If the Fed doesn't ban them outright, it may at least require that lenders waive any prepayment penalties for 60 days prior to a loan rate resetting.
Curb or better disclose broker incentives. To encourage brokers to bring in more business, lenders can pay a broker to lock-in customers at higher rates than they'd otherwise qualify for.
For example, a lender might pay brokers 1 percent of the loan amount for every half point of interest added to what's known as the "par rate" - the rate the borrower would qualify for based on their credit score and other standards. This incentive is known as the "yield spread premium."
And lenders would impose prepayment penalties on the borrower as one way to ensure the lender made back the yield spread premium they paid. (How yield-spread premiums can bite you)
The Fed on Tuesday is expected to address this issue, although it is not clear how restrictive they may make the practice or if they'll just insist on clearer disclosure to the borrower of the incentives being paid.
Require or encourage escrowing of taxes and insurance. Subprime lenders often did not disclose the true cost of a home. They might have excluded home insurance and property taxes, for example. Nor did they collect taxes and insurance along with the mortgage payment and hold them in escrow for the borrower until they came due.
The Fed is likely at the very least to require all lenders to disclose the cost of insurance and taxes, if not also the collection of them with each mortgage payment for certain types of loans, according to reports in "American Banker."
Require better disclosure overall. In a letter last week to Rep. Brad Miller (D-NC), Bernanke indicated that the Fed would propose rules to address incomplete or misleading mortgage ads and to require earlier and clearer disclosures by mortgage lenders so that "consumers avoid loans that are not in their interest."
Congress has been considering its own crackdown on mortgage lenders with two bills the cover some of the same territory that the Fed is expected to cover but also go further.
While consumer advocates and lawmakers are eager to hear what the Fed is proposing and welcome the central bank taking action, they have been critical that the Fed didn't act sooner to avert the present-day mortgage mess. The Fed was given the power to issue rules to clamp down on abusive mortgage lending in 1994 under the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act (HOEPA).
"HOEPA authorized and directed the Fed to issue rules to address unfair mortgage practices. For 13 years, that authority sat on the shelf unused," said Miller (D-NC), who co-wrote the mortgage lending abuse bill that passed in the House in November.
Still, Miller said, "it would be a huge help if the Fed proposed rules that got at the real abuses."
Where the provisions in the Senate and House bills overlap with what the Fed calls for, Miller said, it's possible they would be removed from the bills under consideration. "The number of fronts would be reduced dramatically. ... maybe we wouldn't fight the same battle where we've had substantial victory."
The rules the Fed proposes on Tuesday will not be made final until the Fed receives public comments on the proposals for some period of time, after which the Fed could make amendments before issuing its final rules.