Two US banks and top mortgage finance giants have imposed moratoriums on home foreclosures until a comprehensive government plan emerges to ease the mortgage crisis, officials said on Friday.
The moves came following calls by lawmakers for such a reprieve and as the White House announced US President Barack Obama would unveil the plan on Wednesday.
JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup, as well as government-controlled mortgage finance units Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae, said they would freeze home foreclosures at the epicenter of global financial turmoil that has slammed the brakes on economic expansion.
Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, said in a letter to a key Democractic lawmaker that his bank would impose a three-week foreclosure moratorium through March 6.
“We stand ready to work with you to put the appropriate processes in place, including a national modification standard, to reduce the incidence of foreclosure and to encourage long-term, sustainable home mortgages,” he told Barney Frank, head of the House of Representatives’ financial committee.
“We believe three weeks is adequate time for the Treasury to announce — and for us to implement — a new plan,” he said.
Citigroup said in a statement on Friday its moratorium, effective Thursday, could last until March 12.
Company CEO Vikram Pandit had told lawmakers on Wednesday that the bank would offer the reprieve, saying the bank would “commit to making sure that people stay in their houses,” a Citigroup spokesman said.
Citigroup said it would extend the moratorium until Obama has finalized the details of a loan modification program or on March 12, whichever is earlier.
“The company will not initiate or complete any new foreclosures on eligible customers during this time,” it said.
Obama is scheduled to outline a plan to address the home mortgage crisis on Wednesday, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said on Friday.
Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae said in separate statements on Friday they were immediately suspending all foreclosure sales through March 6. The suspension does not apply to vacant properties.
“The extension will provide servicers with more time to help troubled borrowers find an alternative to foreclosure,” Freddie Mac said in a statement.
Since the beginning of the US mortgage crisis in 2007 that sparked global financial turmoil, Citigroup said it had worked with about 440,000 homeowners to avoid potential foreclosures on combined mortgages totaling about US$43 billion.
The US Treasury said this week that it would commit US$50 billion to prevent home mortgage foreclosures.
“Stemming foreclosures and restructuring troubled mortgages will help slow the downward spiral harming financial institutions and the real American economy,” it said in a statement on Tuesday.
“We will soon be announcing a comprehensive plan” that among others will drive down overall mortgage rates, the Treasury said.
To drive down mortgage rates, the authorities remained committed to spend as much as US$600 billion for purchasing of mortgage-backed securities and debt, it said.
Taiwanese suppliers to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC, 台積電) are expected to follow the contract chipmaker’s step to invest in the US, but their relocation may be seven to eight years away, Minister of Economic Affairs J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) said yesterday. When asked by opposition Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Niu Hsu-ting (牛煦庭) in the legislature about growing concerns that TSMC’s huge investments in the US will prompt its suppliers to follow suit, Kuo said based on the chipmaker’s current limited production volume, it is unlikely to lead its supply chain to go there for now. “Unless TSMC completes its planned six
Intel Corp has named Tasha Chuang (莊蓓瑜) to lead Intel Taiwan in a bid to reinforce relations between the company and its Taiwanese partners. The appointment of Chuang as general manager for Intel Taiwan takes effect on Thursday, the firm said in a statement yesterday. Chuang is to lead her team in Taiwan to pursue product development and sales growth in an effort to reinforce the company’s ties with its partners and clients, Intel said. Chuang was previously in charge of managing Intel’s ties with leading Taiwanese PC brand Asustek Computer Inc (華碩), which included helping Asustek strengthen its global businesses, the company
Power supply and electronic components maker Delta Electronics Inc (台達電) yesterday said second-quarter revenue is expected to surpass the first quarter, which rose 30 percent year-on-year to NT$118.92 billion (US$3.71 billion). Revenue this quarter is likely to grow, as US clients have front-loaded orders ahead of US President Donald Trump’s planned tariffs on Taiwanese goods, Delta chairman Ping Cheng (鄭平) said at an earnings conference in Taipei, referring to the 90-day pause in tariff implementation Trump announced on April 9. While situations in the third and fourth quarters remain unclear, “We will not halt our long-term deployments and do not plan to
TikTok abounds with viral videos accusing prestigious brands of secretly manufacturing luxury goods in China so they can be sold at cut prices. However, while these “revelations” are spurious, behind them lurks a well-oiled machine for selling counterfeit goods that is making the most of the confusion surrounding trade tariffs. Chinese content creators who portray themselves as workers or subcontractors in the luxury goods business claim that Beijing has lifted confidentiality clauses on local subcontractors as a way to respond to the huge hike in customs duties imposed on China by US President Donald Trump. They say this Chinese decision, of which Agence