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Feddy bought my loan?


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2011 Nov 9, 6:36am   21,907 views  54 comments

by Bap33   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

I just wanted to let everyone know that Freddy Mac bought my 4.38% 30yFixed from WellsFargo, who had bought it in Sep from Bank X that originated my loan. Would someone please explain why Freddy Mac is buying morts from Wells Fargo? My loan might be a good gamble, because it is a full conventional, 80% of actual lender appraised value, loan. Does Freddy just go around buying loans from banks? Educate me folks.

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48   lexa   2011 Nov 14, 1:15pm  

corntrollio says

You now fixed the quoting. Before you had omitted a line of my post, so it sounded nonsensical. Why are you being disingenuous about this? You can't even act in good faith about a typo!

i did no such thing, all posts have timestampts, when one edits it, timestamp updates...

now, which post do you accuse me of editing and when?

49   thomas.wong1986   2011 Nov 14, 1:32pm  

Zlxr says

If the Banks would go back to boring and...

Sure it would equally be great if buyers went back to being rational consumers instead of overbidding and inflating home prices, double digit well above inflation and incomes. year over year.

But they dug themself a deep grave and took everyone else with them.

50   thomas.wong1986   2011 Nov 14, 1:35pm  

Zlxr says

Thomas - according to Catherine Austin Fitts at www.solari.com - $8 trillion would have paid off all the mortgages in this country. But we gave/loaned the Banks $12 trillion.

Yours, mine and everyone elses $8T. Lets pass the buck to someone else who didnt participate and knew better.

51   tatupu70   2011 Nov 14, 9:12pm  

thomas.wong1986 says

Since who in hell uses short term loans to pay employees and vendors ?

Uh, almost all companies? Here's a link for you Thomas:

http://2008financialcrisis.umwblogs.org/analysis/the-credit-crisis/

"Since bills come due at different times than revenues are received, credit is critical for the functioning of nearly every business, from Mom and Pop grocery stores, to Fortune 500 corporations. As a consequence, businesses need “working capital,” sometimes savings but more often credit"

52   Bap33   2011 Nov 14, 11:35pm  

thanks for the input all.

Now, a new issue:
I got a call from the tax assessors office to see if I had completed the addition that I pulled a permit for. I have, of course, but he was just making sure.

So, he explained that he was having to reassess my house since I bought it.
I paid 134.5K.
After all repairs and the addition I had a lender appraisal for a refi come in at 238K.
The tax assessors paper came yesterday and it has me assessed at 265K.

Now, what do I do? I am pretty sure my inpound account will not cover an assessment of that amount. ANd with my loan being bounced around, I am worried that my impound might get F-ed up (any reason for concern here?).

Any how, should I share the lender appraisal with the County and use that to challenge the tax assessment, or is that a wasted effort? ANy advice or input would be great. Thanks.

All construction contractors I know of, personally, use a revolving credit line to cover weekly exspenses too. It is becasue they go into debt against the completed job as they go, and payment always comes well after the job is complete. And those lines of credit were cut, or froze and called due, as the crap hit the fan, and that took out many many contractors and they went BR. A snowball effect as generals went bad against subs and subs went bad against suppliers and suppliers went bad against wholesalers and wholesalers went bad against whoever they go bad against.

53   Bap33   2011 Nov 15, 3:39am  

It is a great day today. I called the controller tax person, found out that my assessment is based on sales price of 134.5K, and the 260 was the old amount from before the forclosure. So, the world is a much better place today, birds are chirping, and the lamb lays with the lion. lol

Thanks.

54   corntrollio   2011 Nov 15, 4:57am  

lexa says

i did no such thing, all posts have timestampts, when one edits it, timestamp updates...

No, it doesn't update the timestamp. You know what you edited and could have just been honest about it. :)

It previously said:

corntrollio says

Fannie and Freddie do not serve the White House, but they are under conservatorship of FHFA, so they can by other corporation, the majority shareholder can dictate what happens to some extent.

you cut out a line -- but you now fixed it to what I actually said.

thomas.wong1986 says

You mean "Account Holders" are covered up to the limit of 250K. What does that say about individuals with over the limit

Who are these stupid people who are sophisticated enough to have this amount of cash in an account but too unsophisticated to figure out how to make sure all their money is FDIC insured? :) Banks make this easy for you.

thomas.wong1986 says

Trying to pay out the top Fortune 500 company like GE, HP, Exxon, etc etc bank balances which is in the BILLIONS-TRILLIONS would wipe out FDIC several times over. The whole global economy would have come to a halt. The "deep abyss" we heard about.

GE can negotiate terms with its banks and negotiate insurance too. This wouldn't be FDIC-covered anyway.

thomas.wong1986 says

Why do you think the stock market with all the industries tanked in late 2008 ? Except for keeping their cash in the bank they had very little to do with the Banks.
opps .. sorry GE we really dont have your demand checking account available to pay your employees and vendors. NSF.

As tatupu said, this had nothing to do with what you're talking about. This had to do with credit (including commercial paper, which is why money market funds got hit), not funds availability. This is well-documented, so it's a strange and uninformed argument for you to make.

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