• News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment

Marketplace

Friday, March 28, 2008

Listen to the show

A broker takes up ARMS with us

Coming Soon sign

Yesterday, we aired a story about adjustable rate mortgages as part of our Housing Madness series. Retired real estate broker Ann Hymes wrote in to let us know that ARMS aren't the problem here. She talks to Scott Jagow.

Coming Soon sign (iStockPhoto)

More on Housing - Real Estate

TEXT OF INTERVIEW

Scott Jagow: Yesterday, we talked about adjustable rate mortgages as part of our series, Housing Madness. I asked for your stories about ARMS. We got quite a few e-mails. One of them came from retired real estate broker Ann Hymes of Maryland. She made the point that adjustable rate mortgages aren't the problem here.

Ann Hymes: I'm very much in favor of them -- if, in fact, you understand the risk, and you can deal with that risk, and you're willing to take the consequences, then I think it's a very legitimate instrument.

In fact, Hymes recently got an adjustable rate mortgage by choice, because she couldn't afford a fixed-rate deal on the home she wanted.

Hymes: And I took a loan that I would never have recommended to a client of mine. It was about 80 percent of my income.

Jagow: Why did you do that? Why did you feel you could take that risk?

Hymes: I think because I was able to cut back on so many other things in my life that I could therefore up the ratio a little bit -- quite a little bit -- on the housing expense. But to me, this whole financial crisis is about people who don't have the information available to make that choice.

Jagow: Well, from your background as a real estate broker, how could we change the situation?

Hymes: Well, I've given that a lot of thought, especially with this bailout of such a huge megabank, because to me, the people who gambled and speculated, I don't have sympathy for. But the others were the vulnerable -- the people who didn't have information, who signed things they didn't understand, and really were victims of people in my industry, for starts, the realtors, and people who wanted to make a loan to get a commission. There needs to be a lot more thought given to regulation of loans. You know, it's unconscionable that people signed onto these because they were so hopeful of being homeowners. They signed onto mortgages that they were doomed the day they signed their names.

Jagow: Ann Hymes from St. Michaels, Maryland. Thanks for writing in.

Hymes: Thanks for your call. Bye!

Music From This Show

  • Different Ways Shore Buy
  • Price To Pay Lucinda Williams Buy
  • Late Shift The Hard To Get Buy
  • Aurora En Pekin Marc Ribot y Los Cubanos Postizos Buy
  • A Change Would Do You Good Sheryl Crow Buy

Marketplace Confessional

I am not buying the whole "there might not even be a recession, and if there is one, it will be brief." If oil prices continue to rise, driving inflation, the Federal Reserve will eventually be forced to raise interest rates in the middle of a slowdown. We are already seeing signs of a Japan style "liquidity trap" which is preventing the free flow of money from the banks to Main Street. I think the government's efforts to bail out the housing market will be about as effective as the response to Hurricane Katrina...

More | Share your own rant

The Specials

Conversations from the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Consumer Consequences game

Find out what the world would look like if everyone lived like you. An interactive game from American Public Media.

Play

Marketplace on iTunes U

Marketplace is now available in iTunes U, Apple's online education platform. Get free, downloadable content in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

Sustainability

What is "sustainability?" It boils down to this: Don't eat your seed corn.

Learn more

 ©2008 American Public Media