Reuters - U.S. securities regulators have
extended through August 12 an emergency rule aimed at curbing
abusive short selling in the stocks of 19 major financial
firms, including mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie
Mae .
AP - Questions and answers about the Hope for Homeowners Act of 2008, passed by Congress last weekend to try to steer as many as 400,000 struggling homeowners away from foreclosure: -- read full article
AP - Federal regulators on Tuesday extended through mid-August a temporary order banning a certain kind of short-selling of the stocks of mortgage finance companies Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and 17 large investment banks.
AP - Stocks rebounded Tuesday after the previous session's steep tumble, as a drop in oil prices and a rise in consumer confidence gave investors hope for a possible letup in Americans' financial woes. The Dow Jones industrial average rose about 190 points.
Reuters - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson and Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama
agreed on Tuesday that Washington must restore confidence in
mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Obama's
spokesman said.
Reuters - The Treasury and the nation's four
biggest banks on Monday said they will kick-start a market for
an investment product to support home financing in the latest
effort to spur a slumping housing market.
AFP - The Treasury and major US banks endorsed plans Monday to help pump additional liquidity into the strained housing market by issuing "covered bonds," or flexible mortgage-backed securities.
AP - The Bush administration and federal banking regulators joined with the nation's four largest banks Monday to endorse a new way to pump money into the battered U.S. mortgage market.
AP - Congress' plan to allow people to refinance into more affordable mortgages won't just relieve thousands of homeowners it's also expected to save the banks who issued the loans billions of dollars. -- read full article
Reuters - Merrill Lynch & Co said on
Monday it will take a $5.7 billion third-quarter write- down as
it unloads huge amounts of risky debt, and raise $8.5 billion
by selling new stock.
AFP - Wall Street titan Merrill Lynch announced it was dumping billions of dollars of mortgage debt at a steep loss and raising 8.5 billion in new capital, as the US housing crisis continued to devastate the country's banking sector.
Reuters - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson said the nation's four biggest banks were ready to
kick-start a market for covered bonds that could help
significantly expand home mortgage financing.
AFP - The Treasury and four large US banks endorsed plans Monday for "covered bonds," flexible mortgage-backed securities to help pump additional liquidity into the strained housing market.
AP - The Bush administration and federal banking regulators joined with the nation's four largest banks Monday to endorse a new way to pump money into the battered U.S. mortgage market. -- read full article
Reuters - World stocks slipped on Monday as some
disappointing earnings in Europe and a survey showing German
consumer morale at a 5-year low followed a warning that the
United States' major mortgage lenders could lose their top
credit rating.