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Statement of
Michael H. Krimminger, Special Advisor
For
Policy, Office of the Chairman;
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation on Oversight of Implementation
of the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008
and
Efforts to Mitigate Foreclosures
Subcommittee on Financial Services
And
General Government Committee on Appropriations
United States Senate; Courtroom 2525,
E.M. Dirksen U.S. Courthouse
Chicago, Illinois
December 4, 2008

Chairman Durbin, I appreciate the opportunity to testify on behalf of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) regarding recent efforts to stabilize the nation's financial
markets and reduce foreclosures.
The events of the past several months are unprecedented. Credit markets have not
been functioning normally, contributing to a rising level of distress in the economy. In
addition, high levels of foreclosures are contributing to downward pressure on home
prices. The impact on confidence resulting from the cumulative impact of these events
has required the government to take extraordinary steps to bolster public confidence in
our financial institutions and the American economy.
Achieving this goal requires a sustained and coordinated effort by government
authorities. Congress passed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008
(EESA), which provides authority for the purchase of troubled assets and direct
investments in financial institutions, a mechanism for reducing home foreclosures, and a
temporary increase in deposit insurance coverage. Working with our colleagues at the
Treasury Department and our fellow bank regulators, the FDIC is prepared to undertake
all necessary measures to preserve confidence in insured financial institutions.
Despite what we hear about the credit crisis and the problems facing banks, the bulk of
the U.S. banking industry is healthy and remains well-capitalized. What we do have,
however, is a liquidity problem. This problem originally arose from uncertainty about the
value of mortgage-related assets, but credit concerns have broadened over time,
making banks reluctant to lend to each other or lend to consumers and businesses.
In my testimony, I will detail recent actions by the FDIC to restore confidence in insured
financial institutions. I also will discuss the FDIC's continuing efforts to address the root

cause of the current economic crisis – the failure to deal effectively with unaffordable
loans and unnecessary foreclosures.
Recent Actions to Restore Confidence
The FDIC has taken several actions in coordination with Congress, the Treasury
Department, the Federal Reserve Board, and other federal regulators, designed to
restore confidence in insured financial institutions. These have included temporarily
increasing deposit insurance coverage and providing guarantees to new, senior
unsecured debt issued by banks, thrifts or holding companies. These measures will help
banks fund their operations.
Increased Deposit Insurance
With the enactment of the EESA, deposit insurance coverage for all deposit accounts
was temporarily increased to $250,000, the same amount of coverage previously
provided for self-directed retirement accounts. Temporarily raising the deposit insurance
limits has bolstered public confidence and successfully provided additional liquidity to
FDIC-insured institutions.
The FDIC implemented the coverage increase immediately upon enactment of EESA.
The FDIC website and deposit insurance calculators were updated promptly to reflect
the increase in coverage and ensure that depositors understand the change. It is
important to note that the increase in coverage to $250,000 is temporary and only
extends through December 31, 2009. The FDIC will work closely with Congress in the
coming year to ensure that consumers are fully informed of changes to the deposit
insurance coverage level, as well as the temporary nature of the increase, and
understand the impact on their accounts.
Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program
On October 14, the FDIC Board of Directors approved an interim final rule and on
November 21 adopted a final rule for a new Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program
(TLGP) to unlock inter-bank credit markets and restore rationality to credit spreads. This
voluntary program is designed to free up funding for banks to make loans to
creditworthy businesses and consumers.
The program has two key features. The first feature is a guarantee for new, senior
unsecured debt issued by banks, thrifts, bank holding companies, and most thrift
holding companies, which will help institutions fund their operations. Eligible entities
include: 1) FDIC-insured depository institutions; 2) U.S. bank holding companies; and 3)
U.S. savings and loan holding companies that either engage only in activities that are
permissible for financial holding companies under section 4(k) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (BHCA) or have an insured depository institution subsidiary that is the
subject of an application under section 4(c)(8) of the BHCA regarding activities closely
related to banking. Bank and savings and loan holding companies must own at least

one insured and operating depository institution. The FDIC may allow other affiliates of
an insured depository institution to be eligible on a case-by-case basis, after written
request and positive recommendation by the appropriate federal banking agency.
The guarantee applies to all senior unsecured debt issued by participating entities on or
after October 14, 2008, through and including June 30, 2009. Issuers will be limited in
the amount of guaranteed debt they raise, which generally may not exceed 125 percent
of senior unsecured debt that was outstanding as of September 30, 2008, and
scheduled to mature before June 30, 2009. For eligible debt issued on or before June
30, 2009, coverage is only provided until the earlier of the date of maturity of the debt or
June 30, 2012.
The debt guarantee will be triggered by payment default, as opposed to bankruptcy or
receivership as provided in the interim rule. This improvement in the nature of the
guarantee has enabled FDIC-guaranteed debt issued by participating institutions to
attain the highest ratings for that class of investment and helped ensure wide
acceptance of FDIC-guaranteed debt instruments within the investment community.
Between issuance of the final rule and November 28, three institutions have issued
approximately $17.3 billion in FDIC-guaranteed debt, with maturities ranging from two
years to three and a half years. The lower costs and longer term maturities of this debt
will provide banks with a stronger, more stable funding base to support increased
lending. Other banking companies have plans to issue FDIC-guaranteed debt in coming
weeks.
Under the final rule, premiums are charged on a sliding scale depending on the length
of the debt maturity. The range will be 50 basis points on debt of 180 days or less, and
a maximum of 100 basis points for debt with maturities of one year or longer, on an
annualized basis. Short-term debt issued for one month or less, including overnight
federal funds, will not be eligible for the program.
The second feature of the new program provides insurance coverage for all deposits in
non-interest-bearing transaction accounts, as well as NOW accounts that pay minimal
interest, at insured depository institutions unless they choose to opt out. These
accounts are mainly payment processing accounts such as payroll accounts used by
businesses. Frequently, such accounts exceed the current maximum insurance limit of
$250,000. Many smaller, healthy banks had expressed concerns about deposit outflows
based on market conditions.
The temporary guarantee on non-interest bearing transaction accounts will expire
December 31, 2009, consistent with the temporary statutory increase in deposit
insurance. This aspect of the program allows bank customers to conduct normal
business knowing that their cash accounts are safe and sound. The guarantee has
helped stabilize these accounts, and helped the FDIC avoid having to close otherwise
viable banks because of large deposit withdrawals.

A 10 basis point surcharge will be applied to deposits in non-interest bearing transaction
deposit accounts not otherwise covered by the existing deposit insurance limit of
$250,000. This surcharge will be added to the participating bank's existing risk-based
deposit insurance premium paid on those deposits.
It is important to note that the TLGP does not rely on taxpayer funding or the Deposit
Insurance Fund. Instead, both aspects of the program will be paid for by direct user fees
as described above. Coverage for both parts of the program is initially automatic. An
entity must make an election to opt in or opt out of the program by December 5.
Participating institutions will be subject to supervisory oversight to prevent rapid growth
or excessive risk-taking. The FDIC, in consultation with the entity's primary federal
regulator, will determine continued eligibility and parameters for use.
The TLGP is similar to actions by the international community. If the FDIC had not
acted, guarantees for bank debt and increases in deposit insurance by foreign
governments would have created a competitive disadvantage for U.S. banks. Along with
Treasury's actions to inject more capital into the banking system, the combined
coordinated measures to free up credit markets have had a stabilizing effect on bank
funding.
Since these measures were implemented on October14, we have seen steady progress
in reducing risk premiums in money and credit markets. Short-term Libor (London
Interbank Offer Rate) and commercial paper rates have moderated, as have short-term
interest rate spreads including the Libor – Treasury (TED) spread and the Libor –
Overnight Index Swap (OIS) spread. While it is clearly too early to declare the end of
the crisis in our financial markets, as a result of the coordinated response of the Federal
Reserve, the Treasury, the FDIC and our counterparts overseas, we are making steady
progress in returning money and credit markets to a more normal state.
The FDIC's action in establishing the TLGP is unprecedented and necessitated by the
crisis in our credit markets, which has been fed by rising risk aversion and serious
concerns about the effects this will have on the real economy. The FDIC's action is
authorized under the systemic risk exception of the FDIC Improvement Act of 1991. In
accordance with the statute, the Secretary of the Treasury invoked the systemic risk
exception after consultation with the President and upon the recommendation of the
Boards of the FDIC and the Federal Reserve. The systemic risk exception gives the
FDIC flexibility to provide such guarantees which are designed to avoid serious adverse
effects on economic conditions or financial stability.
TARP Capital Purchase Program
As a part of EESA, the Treasury also has developed a Capital Purchase Program (CPP)
which allows certain financial companies to make application for capital augmentation of
up to three percent of risk weighted assets. As mentioned earlier, the federal
government intervened to inject capital in banks and to guarantee a larger portion of
their liabilities so they can better meet the credit needs of the economy. The ongoing

financial crisis has already disrupted a number of the channels through which marketbased financing is normally provided to U.S. businesses and households. Private assetbacked securitization remains virtually shut down, and the commercial paper market is
now heavily dependent on credit facilities created by the Federal Reserve. In this
environment, banks will need to provide a greater share of credit intermediation than in
the past to support normal levels of economic activity. By contrast, a significant
reduction in bank lending would be expected to have strong, negative procyclical effects
on the U.S. economy that would worsen the problems of the financial sector.
Before the recent capital infusions, banks appeared to be on course to significantly
reduce their supply of new credit as a response to an unusually severe combination of
credit distress and financial market turmoil. Standard banking practice during previous
periods of severe credit distress has been to conserve capital by curtailing lending. In
the present episode, lending standards were likely to be tightened further due to higher
funding costs resulting from overall financial market uncertainty. There was ample
evidence in the Federal Reserve's Senior Loan Officer Survey in October that bank
lending standards were being tightened to a degree that is unprecedented in recent
history.1
Government intervention was essential to interrupt this self-reinforcing cycle of credit
losses and reduced lending. We fully support the CPP as a means of countering the
procyclical economic effects of financial sector de-leveraging. We see the TLGP as a
necessary complement to this effort, and are looking at additional ways that we might
structure our liquidity guarantees to enhance the incentive and capacity to lend on the
part of FDIC-insured institutions.
The combined federal policy response will make capital and debt finance more readily
available to banks on favorable terms. The expectation is that banks will actively seek
ways to use this assistance by making sound loans to household and business
borrowers. Doing so will require a balanced perspective that takes into account the
long-term viability of these borrowers and the fact that they may have unusual shortterm liquidity needs.
We recognize that banks will need to make adjustments to their operations, even cutting
back in certain areas, to cope with recent adverse credit trends. However, the goal of
providing government support is to ensure that such adjustments are made mostly in
areas such as dividend policy and the management compensation, rather than in the
volume of bank lending. These considerations are consistent with the precept that the
highest and best use of bank capital in the present crisis is to support lending activity.
Ongoing supervisory assessments of bank earnings and capital will take into account
how available capital is deployed to generate income through expanded lending.
In addition, we maintain that compensation programs must discourage excessive risktaking and the pursuit of near-term rewards with long-term risks. Only compensation
structures that create appropriate incentives for bank managers and reward long-term
performance are consistent with the basic principles of safe-and-sound banking. The

federal banking regulators expect that all banks will compensate their managers in ways
that will encourage the type of sustainable lending that leads to long-term profitability.
Bank supervisors will consider the incentives built into compensation policies when
assessing the quality of bank management.
Thus far, a number of the largest banking companies in the U.S. have taken advantage
of the CPP, significantly bolstering their capital base during a period of economic and
financial stress. In addition, over 1,200 community financial institutions have applied to
this program. We understand that Treasury will soon finalize terms of the CPP program
for the great majority of banks which are not actively traded public companies, including
those organized as Subchapter S corporations and mutuals.
It is critically important that community banks (commonly defined as those under $1
billion in total assets) participate in this program. Although, as a group, community
banks have performed somewhat better than their larger competitors, they have not fully
escaped recent economic problems.
Community banks control eleven percent of industry total assets; however, their
importance is especially evident in small towns and rural communities. Of the 9,800
banking offices located in communities with populations of under 10,000, 67 percent are
community banks. In these markets, the local bank is often the essential provider of
banking services and credit. Their contribution to small business and agriculture lending
is especially important and disproportionate to their size. As of June 30, bank lending by
community banks accounted for 29 percent of small commercial and industrial loans, 40
percent of small commercial real estate loans, 77 percent of small agricultural
production loans, and 75 percent of small farm land loans.2 Although the viability of
community banks as a sector continues to be strong, the CPP offers an opportunity for
individual institutions to strengthen their balance sheets and continue providing banking
services and credit to their communities.
Also, on November 12, the FDIC issued an Interagency Statement on Meeting the
Needs of Creditworthy Borrowers to all FDIC supervised institutions. The statement
encourages financial institutions to support the lending needs of creditworthy borrowers,
strengthen capital, engage in loss-mitigation strategies and foreclosure-prevention
strategies with mortgage borrowers, and assess the incentive implications of
compensation policies. Further, on November 20, the FDIC announced the availability
of a comprehensive package of information, termed "mod-in-a-box" to give servicers
and financial institutions all of the tools necessary to implement a systematic and
streamlined approach to modifying loans. This approach is based on the FDIC loan
modification program initiated at IndyMac Federal Bank, which is described in detail
later in this testimony.
Efforts to Reduce Unnecessary Foreclosures
Minimizing foreclosures is essential to the broader effort to stabilize global financial
markets and the U.S. economy. There were an estimated 1.5 million U.S. foreclosures

last year, and another 1.2 million in the first half alone of 2008. Foreclosure is often a
very lengthy, costly and destructive process that puts downward pressure on the price
of nearby homes. While some level of home price decline is necessary to restore U.S.
housing markets to equilibrium, unnecessary foreclosures perpetuate the cycle of
financial distress and risk aversion, thus raising the very real possibility that home prices
could overcorrect on the downside.
The continuing trend of unnecessary foreclosures imposes costs not only on borrowers
and lenders, but also on entire communities and the economy as a whole. Foreclosures
may result in vacant homes that may invite crime and create an appearance of market
distress, diminishing the market value of other nearby properties. Foreclosures add
inventory and create distressed sale prices which place downward pressure on
surrounding home values. In addition, the direct costs of foreclosure include legal fees,
brokers' fees, property management fees, and other holding costs that are avoided in
workout scenarios. These costs can total between 20 and 40 percent of the market
value of the property.3 The FDIC has strongly encouraged loan holders and servicers to
adopt systematic approaches to loan modifications that result in affordable loans that
are sustainable over the long term.
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act
The EESA, recently passed by Congress, provides broad authority to the Secretary of
the Treasury to take action to ameliorate the growing distress in our credit and financial
markets, as well as the broader economy. The EESA specifically provides the Secretary
with the authority to use loan guarantees and credit enhancements to facilitate loan
modifications to prevent avoidable foreclosures. We believe that it is essential to utilize
this authority to accelerate the pace of loan modifications in order to halt and reverse
the rising tide of foreclosures that is imperiling the economy.
The FDIC has proposed to Treasury the creation of a guarantee program based on the
FDIC's practical experience in modifying mortgages at IndyMac Federal Bank in
California. We believe this program could prevent as many as 1.5 million avoidable
foreclosures by the end of 2009. As outlined in more detail below, we have proposed
that the government establish standards for loan modifications and provide for a defined
sharing of losses on any default by modified mortgages meeting those standards. By
doing so, unaffordable loans could be converted into loans that are sustainable over the
long term. This proposal is authorized by the EESA and may be implemented under the
authority provided to the Secretary under that statute. We have strongly advocated this
type of approach to Treasury and continue to believe that it offers the best mechanism
for providing appropriate protection for homeowners.
In recent months, the FDIC has demonstrated through our actions with the troubled
loans owned or serviced by IndyMac Federal Bank that it is possible to implement a
streamlined process to modify troubled mortgages into loans that are affordable and
sustainable over the long-term. Not only can the approach used successfully at IndyMac

serve as a model for the servicing and banking industry, but we believe it can provide
the foundation for a loss sharing guarantee program under the EESA.
IndyMac Federal Bank Loan Modifications
As the Committee knows, the former IndyMac Bank, F.S.B., Pasadena, California, was
closed July 11. The FDIC is conservator for a new institution, IndyMac Federal Bank,
F.S.B. (IndyMac Federal), which continues the depository, mortgage servicing, and
certain other operations of the former IndyMac Bank, F.S.B. As a result, the FDIC has
inherited responsibility for servicing a pool of approximately 653,000 first lien mortgage
loans, including more than 60,000 mortgage loans that are more than 60 days past due,
in bankruptcy, in foreclosure, and otherwise not currently paying. As conservator, the
FDIC has the responsibility to maximize the value of the loans owned or serviced by
IndyMac Federal. Like any other servicer, IndyMac Federal must comply with its
contractual duties in servicing loans owned by investors. Consistent with these duties,
we have implemented a loan modification program to convert as many of these
distressed loans as possible into performing loans that are affordable and sustainable
over the long term. In addition, we are seeking to refinance distressed mortgages
through FHA programs, including FHA Secure and HOPE for Homeowners, and have
sent letters proposing refinancing through FHA to almost 2,000 borrowers.
On August 20, the FDIC announced a loan modification program to systematically
modify troubled residential loans for borrowers with mortgages owned or serviced by
IndyMac Federal. This program modifies eligible, delinquent mortgages to achieve
affordable and sustainable payments using interest rate reductions, extended
amortization and, where necessary, deferring a portion of the principal. By modifying the
loans to an affordable debt-to-income ratio and using this menu of options to lower
borrowers' payments for the life of their loan, the program improves the value of these
troubled mortgages while achieving economies of scale for servicers and stability for
borrowers. Of the more than 60,000 mortgages serviced by IndyMac Federal that are
more than 60 days past due, in bankruptcy, in foreclosure, and otherwise not currently
paying, approximately 40,000 are potentially eligible for our loan modification program.4
Initially, the program was applied only to mortgages either owned by IndyMac Federal
or serviced under IndyMac Federal's pre-existing securitization agreements.
Subsequently, we have obtained agreements to apply the program to many delinquent
loans owned by Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, and other investors.
It is important to recognize that securitization agreements typically provide servicers
with sufficient flexibility to apply the IndyMac Federal loan modification approach. While
some have argued that servicing agreements preclude or routinely require investor
approval for loan modifications, this is not true for the vast majority of servicing
agreements. In fact, the American Securitization Forum has repeatedly confirmed that
most servicing agreements do allow for loan modifications for troubled mortgages that
are delinquent or where default is "reasonably foreseeable" if the modification is in the
best interest of securityholders as a whole.5 If, as under the model applied at IndyMac
Federal, the modification provides an improved net present value for securityholders as

a whole in the securitization compared to foreclosure, the modification is permitted
under the agreements as well as applicable tax and accounting standards. In fact, the
agreements at IndyMac Federal were more restrictive than those that apply to many
other securitizations as they limited modifications to mortgages that were "seriously
delinquent" rather than permitting modification when default was "reasonably
foreseeable." As a result, the model applied at IndyMac Federal can be applied broadly
for securitized as well as for portfolio loans.
Using the model at IndyMac Federal to achieve mortgage payments for borrowers that
are both affordable and sustainable, the distressed mortgages will be rehabilitated into
performing loans and avoid unnecessary and costly foreclosures. By taking this
approach, future defaults will be reduced, the value of the mortgages will improve, and
servicing costs will be cut. The streamlined modification program will achieve improved
recoveries on loans in default or in danger of default, and improve the return to
uninsured depositors, the deposit insurance fund, and other creditors of the failed
institution. At the same time, many troubled borrowers can remain in their homes. Under
the program, modifications are only being offered where doing so will result in an
improved value for IndyMac Federal or for investors in securitized or whole loans, and
where consistent with relevant servicing agreements.
Applying workout procedures for troubled loans in a failed bank scenario is something
the FDIC has been doing since the 1980s. Our experience has been that performing
loans yield greater returns than non-performing loans. In recent years, we have seen
troubled loan portfolios yield about 32 percent of book value compared to our sales of
performing loans, which have yielded over 87 percent.
Through this week, IndyMac Federal has mailed more than 24,000 loan modification
proposals to borrowers, and will mail over thousands more this week and next. We have
contacted many thousands more in continuing efforts to help avoid unnecessary
foreclosures. Already, over 5,400 borrowers have accepted the offers, verified their
incomes, and are now making payments on their modified mortgages. Thousands more
are making lower payments as we complete verification of incomes. I am pleased to
report that these efforts have prevented many foreclosures that would have been costly
to the FDIC and to investors. This has been done while providing long-term sustainable
mortgage payments for borrowers who were seriously delinquent. On average, the
modifications have cut each borrower's monthly payment by more than $380 or 23
percent of their monthly payment on principal and interest. Our hope is that the program
we announced at IndyMac Federal will serve as a catalyst to promote more loan
modifications for troubled borrowers across the country.
Loss Sharing Proposal to Promote Affordable Loan Modifications
Although foreclosures are costly to lenders, borrowers and communities, efforts to avoid
unnecessary foreclosures are not keeping pace with delinquencies. By the end of 2009,
more than 4.4 million non-GSE mortgages are estimated to become delinquent. While
the HOPE for Homeowners refinancing program is part of the solution, the limitations

inherent in refinancing mortgages out of securitization transactions indicate that other,
more streamlined approaches are necessary.
A major acceleration in loan modifications is essential if we are to stem the growing
flood of foreclosures. Yet today, only around 4 percent of seriously delinquent loans are
being modified each month. While the FDIC's experience at IndyMac demonstrates that
modifications provide a better return than foreclosure in the vast majority of mortgages
today, many servicers continue to rely on slower custom modifications that are not
focused on long-term affordability. Many servicers continue to argue that they are
concerned about proving to investors that modifications provide a better return than
foreclosure. As a result, far too many of the responses to troubled mortgages have
focused on repayment plans, temporary forbearance, or short-term modifications often
based on verbal financial information.
Today, the stakes are too high to rely exclusively on industry commitments to apply
more streamlined loan modification protocols. The damage to borrowers, our
communities, our public finances, and our financial institutions is already too severe. An
effective remedy requires targeted, prudent incentives to servicers that will achieve
sustainable modifications by controlling the key risk from the prior, less sustainable
modifications – the losses on redefault. The FDIC's loss sharing proposal addresses
this risk directly by providing that the government will share up to 50 percent of the
losses with lenders or investors if a mortgage -- modified under the sustainable
guidelines used at IndyMac Federal -- later redefaults. With the government sharing the
risk of future redefaults, we propose to reduce this risk even further by modifying the
mortgages to an even more affordable 31 percent ratio of first mortgage debt to gross
income. By controlling this risk, the greater net present value of many more
modifications compared to foreclosure will be clear.
Over the next two years, an estimated 4 to 5 million mortgage loans will enter
foreclosure if nothing is done. We believe that this program has the potential to reduce
the number of foreclosures by up to 1.5 million, thereby helping to reduce the overhang
of excess vacant homes that is driving down U.S. home prices. In addition, this
approach keeps modified mortgages within existing securitization transactions, does not
require approval by second lienholders, ensures that lenders and investors retain some
risk of loss, and protects servicers from the putative risks of litigation by providing a
clear benefit from the modifications.
The program, limited to loans secured by owner-occupied homes, would have a
government loss-sharing component available only after the borrower has made six
payments on the modified mortgage. Some of the other features of the proposal include:


Standard Net Present Value (NPV) Test – In order to promote consistency and
simplicity in implementation and audit, a standard test comparing the expected
NPV of modifying past due loans compared to foreclosure will be applied. Under
this NPV test, standard assumptions will be used to ensure that a consistent

standard of affordability is provided based on a 31 percent borrower mortgage
debt-to-income ratio.


Systematic Loan Review by Participating Servicers – Participating servicers
would be required to undertake a systematic review of all of the loans under their
management, to subject each loan to a standard NPV test to determine whether
it is a suitable candidate for modification, and to modify all loans that pass this
test.



Reduced Loss Share Percentage for "Underwater Loans" – For loan-to-value
ratios (LTVs) above 100 percent, the government loss share will be progressively
reduced from 50 percent to 20 percent as the current LTV rises. If the LTV for the
first lien exceeds 150 percent, no loss sharing would be provided.



Simplified Loss Share Calculation – In general terms, the calculation would be
based on the difference between the net present value of the modified loan and
the amount of recoveries obtained in a disposition by refinancing, short sale or
REO sale, net of disposal costs as estimated according to industry standards.
Interim modifications would be allowed.



De minimis Test – To lower administrative costs, a de minimis test excludes
from loss sharing any modification that did not lower the monthly payment at
least 10 percent.



Eight-year Limit on Loss Sharing Payments – The loss sharing guarantee
ends eight years after the modification.

Assuming a re-default rate of 33 percent, our plan could reduce the number of
foreclosures initiated between now and year-end 2009 by some 1.5 million at a
projected program cost of $24.4 billion.
This proposal efficiently uses federal money to achieve an objective that is critical to our
economic recovery – stability in our mortgage and housing markets. Mortgage loan
modifications have been an area of intense interest and discussion for more than a year
now. Meanwhile, despite the many programs introduced to address the problem, the
problem continues to get worse. During the second quarter of this year, we saw new
mortgage loans becoming 60 days or more past due at a rate of more that 700,000 per
quarter – net of past due loans that returned to current status. No one can dispute that
this remains the fundamental source of uncertainty for our financial markets and the key
sector of weakness for our economy. We must decisively address the mortgage
problem as part of our wider strategy to restore confidence and stability to our economy.
While the proposed FDIC program would require a cash outlay in the event of default,
we must consider the returns this guarantee would deliver in terms of our housing
markets and, by extension, the economic well-being of our communities. While we

support the various initiatives taken to date, if we are to achieve stability in our credit
and financial markets we cannot simply provide funds to market participants. We must
address the root cause of the financial crisis – too many unaffordable mortgages
creating too many delinquencies and foreclosures. The time is overdue for us to invest
in our homes and communities by adopting a program that will prudently achieve largescale loan modifications to minimize the impact of foreclosures on households, lenders
and local housing markets.
Conclusion
The FDIC has engaged in unprecedented actions to maintain confidence and stability in
the banking system. Although some of these steps have been quite broad, we believe
that they were necessary to avoid consequences that could have resulted in sustained
and significant harm to the economy. The FDIC remains committed to achieving what
has been our core mission for the past 75 years – protecting depositors and maintaining
public confidence in the financial system.
I will be pleased to answer any questions the Committee might have.

1. Federal Reserve Board, Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending
Practices, October 2008,
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/snloansurvey/200811/
2. Small commercial and industrial loans and small commercial real estate loans
are in amounts under $1 million. Small agricultural production loans and small
farm land loans are in amounts under $500,000.
3. Capone, Jr., C. A., Providing Alternatives to Mortgage Foreclosure: A Report to
Congress, Washington, D.C.: United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 1996.
4. Loans not eligible for a modification proposal under the IndyMac Federal
modification program include non-owner-occupied loans, loans subject to
bankruptcy proceedings, completed foreclosures, and loans secured by
properties held after a prior foreclosure.
5. ASF Streamlined Foreclosure and Loss Avoidance Framework for Securitized
Subprime Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loans, Dec. 6, 2007; ASF Statement of
Principles, Recommendations and Guidelines for the Modification of Securitized
Subprime Residential Mortgage Loans, June 2007.

Last Updated 12/04/2008