FHA May Require Bailout, Recovery Hypothesis, Second Stimulus

The Federal Housing Administration, which insures mortgages with low down payments, may require a U.S. bailout because it has $54 billion more in losses than it can withstand, a former Fannie Mae executive said.

“It appears destined for a taxpayer bailout in the next 24 to 36 months,”…… Read More

economy

Summers’s Recovery Hypothesis Flawed

Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., said White House adviser Lawrence Summers is wrong to expect the economy to return to pre-crisis strength because consumer spending is unlikely to sustain growth. Read More

Second Stimulus

Democrats’ Offer Economic Relief Proposals. Second Stimulus?

Confronted with big job losses and no sign the U.S. economy is ready to stand on its own, Democrats are working on a growing list of relief efforts, leaving for later how to pay for them, or whether even to bother.

Proposals include extending and perhaps expanding a popular tax credit for first-time home buyers, and creating a new credit for companies that add jobs. Taken together, the proposals look a lot like another economic stimulus package, though congressional leaders don’t want to call it that. Read More

The economic recovery is not happening and Obama has spent the first stimulus money for projects that do not create jobs. Now he has a bigger problem then he did to start with. This mess that he put America in is his and his alone.

LINKS:

(1)    Video: Our Nation’s Decline Was Foretold

Before The Meltdown: Obama, ACORN and Cuomo (Video) EVIDENCE FOUND!!!

ACORN and Obama, working together in Chicago, lobbied Fannie Mae to make high risk loans. ACORN actually employed militant tactics and lawsuits to coerce lenders into lowering credit standards and make high risk loans to people they acknowledged were unqualified.

ACORN garnered at least $750,000 in ‘fees’ while Obama got elected President of the U.S. Read More

Obama was right in the middle of the meltdown.

Fannie Mae plans bonuses of up to $611,000 for 4 executives

Fannie Mae plans to pay retention bonuses of as much as $611,000 each to key executives this year as part of a plan to keep hundreds of employees from leaving the government-controlled company.

Rival mortgage finance company Freddie Mac is planning similar awards, but has not yet reported on which executives will benefit.

The two companies, which together own or back more than half of the home mortgages in the country, have been hobbled by skyrocketing loan defaults. Fannie recently requested $15 billion in federal aid, while Freddie has sought a total of almost $45 billion. Read More

Time to join the Tea Party Group? Then click on the Tea Party HQ on my side bar! This spending and giving away of the American tax payers money by Obama has to be stopped now!

LINKS:

(1) Chris Dodd confesses: Yes, I slipped in the AIG bonus protection…’cuz Treasury made me