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For release on delivery
8:30 a.m. EDT
October 25, 2010

Welcoming Remarks
by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
“Mortgage Foreclosures and the Future of Housing Finance”
a Joint Conference Sponsored by the Federal Reserve System
and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Arlington, Virginia

October 25, 2010

Good morning. It’s my pleasure to welcome you to this joint conference of the
Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Our
program over the next two days will highlight policy-oriented research on U.S. housing
and mortgage markets. I would like to thank the many talented people throughout the
Federal Reserve System and at the FDIC who have worked together to make this
conference a reality.
Before I address the specific topics of this conference, I would like to note that we
have been concerned about reported irregularities in foreclosure practices at a number of
large financial institutions. The federal banking agencies are working together to
complete an in-depth review of practices at the largest mortgage servicing operations.
We are looking intensively at the firms’ policies, procedures, and internal controls related
to foreclosures and seeking to determine whether systematic weaknesses are leading to
improper foreclosures. We take violations of proper procedures seriously. We anticipate
preliminary results of the review next month. In addition, Federal Reserve staff members
and their counterparts at other federal agencies are evaluating the potential effects of
these problems on the real estate market and financial institutions.
Any discussion of housing policy in this country must begin with some
recognition of the importance Americans attach to homeownership. For many of us,
owning a home signaled a passage into adulthood that coincided with the start of a career
and family. High levels of homeownership have been shown to foster greater
involvement in school and civic organizations, higher graduation rates, and greater
neighborhood stability.

-2Recognizing these benefits, our society has taken steps to encourage
homeownership. Tax incentives, mortgage insurance from the Federal Housing
Administration, and other government policies all contributed to a long rise in the U.S.
homeownership rate--from 45 percent in 1940 to a peak of 69 percent in 2004. But, as
recent events have demonstrated, homeownership is only good for families and
communities if it can be sustained. Home purchases that are very highly leveraged or
unaffordable subject the borrower and lender to a great deal of risk. Moreover, even in a
strong economy, unforeseen life events and risks in local real estate markets make highly
leveraged borrowers vulnerable.
It was ultimately very destructive when, in the early part of this decade, dubious
underwriting practices and mortgage products inappropriate for many borrowers became
more common. In time, these practices and products contributed to problems in the
broader financial services industry and helped spark a foreclosure crisis marked by a
tremendous upheaval in housing markets. Now, more than 20 percent of borrowers owe
more than their home is worth and an additional 33 percent have equity cushions of 10
percent or less, putting them at risk should house prices decline much further. With
housing markets still weak, high levels of mortgage distress may well persist for some
time to come.
In response to the fallout from the financial crisis, the Fed has helped stabilize the
mortgage market and improve financial conditions more broadly, thus promoting
economic recovery. What may be less well known, however, is what the Fed has been
doing at the local level. As the foreclosure crisis has intensified, Federal Reserve staff in
our research, community development, and supervision and regulation divisions have

-3actively collaborated to support foreclosure prevention at the local level and promote
neighborhood stabilization initiatives.
A key initiative developed under the leadership of Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago President Charles Evans has been the Mortgage Outreach and Research Effort,
known as MORE. MORE involves all 12 Federal Reserve Banks and the Board of
Governors in a collaboration that pools resources and combines expertise to inform and
engage policymakers, community organizations, financial institutions, and the public at
large.
The Fed is particularly well suited to such an effort. Our community development
experts are working on the ground to promote fair and equal access to banking services
and improve communities. Further, Federal Reserve staff members are conducting
empirical research on mortgage- and foreclosure-related topics, and are reaching out to
industry experts as well. We are focusing on the hardest-hit cities and regions of the
country.
A new publication released this week offers details about the MORE effort.
Copies are available here today, and it is available online at the website of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Chicago. 1 The report identifies approaches the Fed has taken to
mitigate the foreclosure crisis, and I’d like to share some highlights of that work.
We have helped many of our community development partners organize day-long
“mega events” that have served thousands of troubled borrowers. Moreover, we’ve
brought together housing advocates, lenders, academics, and key government officials to
1

See Federal Reserve System, Mortgage Outreach and Research Efforts (MORE) Initiative (2010),
Addressing the Impact of the Foreclosure Crisis: Federal Reserve Mortgage Outreach and Research
Efforts (Chicago: Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago), available at
www.chicagofed.org/digital_assets/others/in_focus/foreclosure_resource_center/more_report_final.pdf.

-4discuss foreclosure issues and develop solutions. In some cases, alliances have been
formed right on the spot to create and implement programs to keep people in their homes.
We have also partnered with the U.S. departments of Labor and Treasury and
with the HOPE NOW Unemployment Taskforce to help unemployed homeowners avoid
losing their homes. This collaboration led to the creation of an online tool that allows
homeowners and servicers to document unemployment insurance benefits as income in
order to qualify for federally sponsored mortgage modification programs.
Each Federal Reserve Bank has an online Foreclosure Resource Center with
information on foreclosure-related resources, including an enhanced Foreclosure
Mitigation Toolkit, which provides detailed steps and information for localities seeking to
develop foreclosure prevention activities. The toolkit also includes a new Foreclosure
Recovery Resource Guide, which helps consumers recover from the foreclosure process.
A number of Federal Reserve research projects also have been initiated as part of
the MORE program. They include studies focusing on foreclosure prevention, financial
education, and adverse neighborhood effects resulting from foreclosures. You will hear
more about that research over the next two days. Community development researchers
across the Federal Reserve System launched a study in 2009 of the planning and early
implementation stages of the federal Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP).
Researchers interviewed more than 90 recipients of the Department of Housing and
Urban Development’s NSP funds in the fall of 2009. These interviews and other data
gathered during this study provide the first nationwide examination of the effect of the
NSP and served as the basis for a number of Federal Reserve System reports currently in
progress.

-5Under the auspices of the MORE initiative, the Federal Reserve sponsored
conferences such as this one, and the summit held last month on Real Estate Owned and
Vacant Property Strategies for Neighborhood Stabilization. Participants at that meeting
examined the community effects of foreclosed and vacant properties with the goals of
helping practitioners better understand barriers to stabilizing neighborhoods, sharing
practices that show promise, and discussing regional differences. As part of that summit,
the Federal Reserve released 17 papers analyzing trends, challenges, and possible
solutions for addressing foreclosures and promoting neighborhood stabilization. A few
of the emerging solutions highlighted at the event were: a national “first-look” property
program, which gives nonprofits and municipalities the right of first refusal on
repossessed properties to facilitate neighborhood stabilization; new methods of municipal
code enforcement; and innovative land-banking strategies. We will be using these ideas
and others to inform our community development efforts over the coming year.
To ensure that we have access to more detailed data on mortgage and credit
markets, the Federal Reserve System has created the Risk Assessment, Data Analysis,
and Research, or RADAR, data warehouse. This new platform will help inform our
monetary policy, bank supervision and regulation, and community development.
Over the next two days, I understand that you will be hearing about policyoriented research on the U.S. housing and mortgage markets--an area of first-order
importance to policymakers. You will have the opportunity to discuss the current
situation and the outlook for mortgage foreclosures, consider their consequences for
neighborhoods, and evaluate efforts to mitigate foreclosures. Also, you will learn results

-6from various studies that have examined mortgage modifications and factors that have led
to defaults. Finally, you will consider the future of housing finance.
All the papers on the conference program are of direct interest to policymakers
and should lead to better-informed policy. I hope we can draw upon this information and
the success of the MORE program to explore new and creative ways to address the
foreclosure crisis. At the Fed, we will continue to encourage further research, participate
in discussions, and coordinate work among groups striving for sustainable
homeownership and the recovery of housing markets.