U.S. approves housing market rescue bill
26/07/2008 15:27
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress approved a massive
housing market rescue bill on Saturday, offering emergency
financing to Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac ,
creating a new regulator for the mortgage titans and setting up
a $300 billion (151 billion pound) fund to help troubled
homeowners.
With the U.S. housing market in its deepest slump since the
Great Depression, Congress acted with unusual speed in recent
days to move the election-year bill to the White House, which
has said President George W. Bush will sign it.
The bill, approved by the House of Representatives on
Wednesday and the Senate on Saturday, also offers tax breaks to
spur home-buying; sets up the first national licensing system
for mortgage brokers and loan officers; and sends about $4
billion to localities for buying and repairing foreclosed homes
in communities hit hard by a rising foreclosure rate and
falling home prices.
(Reporting by Kevin Drawbaugh and Patrick Rucker, editing
by Jackie Frank)