Fresh off a speech in Phoenix in which he outlined his
vision for the housing market, President Obama took to the web Wednesday to
answer questions from Americans wondering what the government can do to help.
Taking questions submitted online in an event live-streamed
in cooperation with real estate site Zillow (Z), Obama reiterated in broad
terms his support for scaling down government-backed housing finance firms Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, a key theme of his speech in Phoenix on Tuesday.
"We're actually confident that the private market can
step in, do a good job, and the government can be a backstop so that we still
have affordability and 30-year mortgages," he said.
Obama said the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will
release new guidelines "as soon as the fall" in an attempt to
simplify the mortgage-application process.
Related: Top 10 consumer complaints
While he touted home ownership as a key aspect of the
"American Dream," Obama also expressed support for an expansion of
affordable rental housing, praising moves by institutional investors to buy and
rent out residential properties. These investors, he added, can help stabilize
home values in neighborhoods that have been blighted by foreclosures.
Obama touted immigration reform as another way to strengthen
the housing market.
"We know that if we get immigration reform done,
suddenly you've got all kinds of families coming out the shadows, paying taxes,
paying penalties," he said. "They're also going to be really likely
to buy homes, often times in some of the neighborhoods where you had the most
foreclosures."
Throughout the discussion, Obama emphasized the importance
of the housing market to the broader economy.
"This is where most Americans have their wealth,"
he said. "If we get that right, it makes a big difference everywhere
else"
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