Gross calls for U.S. to refinance home mortgages

Pimco's Bill Gross said the U.S. government should offer to refinance mortgages for homeowners as a way to stimulate the struggling economy.
AUG 17, 2010
Pimco’s Bill Gross said the U.S. government should offer to refinance mortgages for homeowners as a way to stimulate the struggling economy. “Policymakers should quickly engineer a refinancing opportunity for all mortgagees who are current on payments, and [whose mortgages] are included in [government-sponsored enterprise] securitized mortgages," Mr. Gross said Tuesday at a conference hosted by the Treasury Department in Washington. “This home [re]financing, to my way of thinking … where you take 5%, 6%, 7% mortgages and turn them into 4% mortgages, basically will provide a push — a stimulus of $50 to $60 billion in consumption — as well as a potential lift of 5% to 10% in terms of housing prices," Mr. Gross said. Mr. Gross, who is managing director and co-chief investment officer at Pacific Investment Management Co. LLC, also called for the “full nationalization” of mortgage-finance system, and argued that the larger role for the private sector being pushed by policymakers was unrealistic. The U.S. government, with its ownership of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, already owns 95% of mortgages, he said. He explained that the U.S. economy “is approaching a cul de sac of stimulus, which will slow it to a snail's pace, incapable of sufficient job growth going forward” and that “unemployment rates will approach and remain at double-digit levels, unless a positive fiscal stimulus is provided within the next six months.” Mr. Gross later told the Huffington Post that the refinancing scheme would be the one thing the government can do to stimulate the economy “that doesn't increase the deficit and that doesn't require legislation.” At the conference, Mr. Gross said that lowering interest rates on current mortgages would likely hurt Pimco's own holdings of mortgage-backed securities. Mr. Gross said he was against the private sector playing a bigger part in housing finance. “Pimco advocates 100% public finance [for the mortgage market] with government guarantees that are protected by adequate down payments, obviously, and sufficient insurance premiums to never again permit American taxpayers to subsidize a $300 billion or $400 billion black hole,” he said. Fannie and Freddie should be consolidated “into one true GNMA, a government national mortgage association,” Mr. Gross said. "We are skeptical of other public/private models currently being considered because they're more expensive — primarily resulting in higher mortgage rates — and therefore favoring Wall Street as opposed to Main Street."

Latest News

Social Security trustees see one less year in insolvency countdown, project shortfall to start 2034
Social Security trustees see one less year in insolvency countdown, project shortfall to start 2034

New report shows dimmed outlook for benefits to retirees and disabled Americans, creating further pressure for federal tax hikes or more borrowing.

NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale
NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale

Open letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins questions whether the Ivy League university withheld material information prior to its $750 million taxable bond offering.

Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group
Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group

The Las Vegas-based hybrid RIA overseeing $8.8 billion in assets has named Andy Kalbaugh president to help scale its advisor platform.

Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios
Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios

The wealth tech giant – in collaboration with Fidelity, BlackRock, State Street, and Franklin Templeton – is offering its advisor and wealth firm users more ways to diversify.

Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again
Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again

Deal volume increased post-election but now caution has taken over.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave