Mark Zandi famous quotes
Last updated: Sep 5, 2024
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Our economy isn't going to recover until the housing market finds its footing.
-- Mark Zandi -
Potential home buyers have a two-step decision process. First, they determine whether they can afford to make a purchase - does their income safely cover their mortgage payment? Then they determine whether owning is a better financial choice than renting - are the costs of owning a home lower than the cost of renting it?
-- Mark Zandi -
No one should expect the value of their house to appreciate quickly - counting on your home to be a significant part of your retirement saving isn't a winning strategy - but it is reasonable to expect that prices generally will rise with at least the rate of inflation for some time to come.
-- Mark Zandi -
In a forbearance, the homeowner pays interest and principal on a smaller mortgage, at least for a time, but still owes the full amount. The lower monthly payment helps with affordability, giving stressed homeowners a break.
-- Mark Zandi -
Housing was ground zero for the Great Recession. Between early 2006 and Obama's inauguration in 2009, average house prices fell by a third across the country. In certain areas, including cities as diverse as Akron, Orlando and Las Vegas, house prices fell by more than half.
-- Mark Zandi -
Distressed properties are often vacant and in disrepair, and thus sold at significant discounts. As the share of distressed sales grows, home prices fall.
-- Mark Zandi -
The FHA's success provides strong evidence that government can and should play a role in the nation's mortgage finance system. It also demonstrates that although government intervention in the economy during the Great Recession was messy, things would have been a lot messier without it.
-- Mark Zandi -
The most important point is, in a time of crisis, there is no way out but for the government to be bold and aggressive.
-- Mark Zandi -
Indeed, the FHA was born out of the Great Depression, which was also caused in significant part by a foreclosure crisis. Mortgages in the early 1930s were mostly three- to five-year 'bullet' loans, which did not amortize and were due in full at maturity.
-- Mark Zandi -
Investor demand for distressed property has been healthy, as rents rise to levels that can cover investors' costs while they wait for properties to appreciate. Giving investors a small tax break should further juice up demand, supporting prices for distressed homes and the market in general.
-- Mark Zandi -
It has become fashionable to rail against government intervention in the economy, and the FHA is a favorite example by those trying to show the government's overreach. In reality, the FHA shows how government action during the Great Recession forestalled a much worse economic fate.
-- Mark Zandi -
There is plenty of blame to go around for the U.S. housing bubble, but not much of it belongs to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The two giant housing-finance institutions made many mistakes over the decades, some of them real whoppers, but causing house prices to soar and then crater during the past decade weren't among them.
-- Mark Zandi -
There is no better way to quickly buoy hard-pressed homeowners than helping them take advantage of the currently record low fixed mortgage rates and significantly reduce their monthly mortgage payments.
-- Mark Zandi -
The Obama administration deserves credit for quickly ending the housing free fall. In particular, Obama empowered the Federal Housing Administration to ensure that households could find mortgages at low interest rates even during the worst phase of the financial panic.
-- Mark Zandi -
The key to house prices is the share of foreclosure or short sales in the total housing market. When that share rises, house prices will fall, because distressed properties sell for significantly less - currently around 25 percent below non-distressed houses.
-- Mark Zandi -
The Bush tax cuts should be extended permanently for families with annual incomes of less than $250,000 and should be phased out slowly for those making more than that. Raising taxes on anyone now, when the economic recovery is so fragile, would be a mistake.
-- Mark Zandi -
The average credit score of today's FHA borrowers is higher than the average American household with a score. As it becomes more costly and difficult to get a FHA loan, loans from private mortgage lenders will become more attractive and their market share will grow.
-- Mark Zandi -
Lenders look at potential borrowers from many angles before extending credit: How much of its income will a household need to put into debt repayment? How large is the down payment? Does the borrower have a job with a stable income? What is the borrower's credit score?
-- Mark Zandi -
It is hard to be enthusiastic about the economy's prospects when house prices are falling: Households spend less, small business owners can't use homes as collateral for loans and local governments are forced to cut jobs and programs as property-tax revenue disappears.
-- Mark Zandi -
They called me the sexiest economist in America, and that was years ago, when I had hair and body mass and my teeth were shiny.
-- Mark Zandi -
We need to get rid of the debt ceiling law. It's anachronistic and it's a problem.
-- Mark Zandi -
There is a banking adage that if it's growing like a weed, it's a good chance that it's a weed.
-- Mark Zandi -
Yes. I don't think it would be appropriate at this point to raise taxes on anyone, certainly not in 2011.
-- Mark Zandi -
A home is still the biggest asset that most Americans own.
-- Mark Zandi -
In a normal time, I don't think economic policy makes a large difference one way or another. But in times of crisis it makes all the difference in the world.
-- Mark Zandi -
Buying a home wouldn't make much sense if house prices were likely to decline further; no one wants to catch a falling knife.
-- Mark Zandi -
I've done work for both Democrats and Republicans.
-- Mark Zandi -
I only have two things in my life, my family and work. If there's any time left over, then I play sports.
-- Mark Zandi -
A housing renaissance has begun. This may be hard to believe after the dizzying, six-year-long crash in home sales, construction and house prices. But housing turned the corner last year, and it will take off in 2013.
-- Mark Zandi -
Defaulting on the nation's debt would be cataclysmic. The U.S. Treasury's Aaa rating is the one constant in the world's financial system. When times are bad anywhere on the planet, global investors flock to Treasury bonds because they know they will get their money back.
-- Mark Zandi -
The principal linkages between Japan and the U.S. global economies are trade, financial markets, and commodity markets.
-- Mark Zandi -
The discussion in Washington has changed dramatically. I mean, it's no longer a question of should we address entitlements - it's no longer a question of do we need to reduce spending in the future.
-- Mark Zandi -
Our biggest challenge is to eliminate the popular perception that economists don't have anything useful to say.
-- Mark Zandi -
Past experience with fiscal austerity at home and overseas strongly suggests that it is best for the economy's long-run performance to restrain government spending rather than raise taxes.
-- Mark Zandi -
The extension and expansion of the payroll tax holidays for workers would be number one on my list and key to avoiding recession.
-- Mark Zandi -
There are different flavors of recession. You can get into some pretty dark scenarios pretty quickly.
-- Mark Zandi -
My policy is I will help any policymaker who asks, whether they be a Republican or a Democrat.
-- Mark Zandi -
The Tea Party was born out of the disgust many Americans felt early in the financial crisis upon learning that the federal government was even contemplating reducing the principal on some troubled mortgages.
-- Mark Zandi -
Too-easy credit and millions of bad loans made during the U.S. housing bubble paved the way for the financial calamity and Great Recession that followed. Today, by contrast, credit is too tight. Mortgage loans are particularly hard to get, creating a problem for the housing market and the broader economy.
-- Mark Zandi
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