Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 52— - EMERGENCY ECONOMIC STABILIZATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - TROUBLED ASSETS RELIEF PROGRAM › § 5219
When the Secretary buys mortgages, mortgage-backed securities, or other assets tied to homes (including apartment buildings), the Secretary must make a plan that tries to help homeowners and cut down on foreclosures. The plan must push loan servicers, while considering net present value to the taxpayer, to use the HOPE for Homeowners Program under section 1715z–23 or other programs. The Secretary may also use loan guarantees or credit supports to help change loans and to fix lead or asbestos problems in houses. The Secretary does not have to apply the pay limits in section 5221 or take warrants or debt under section 5223 just because of a loan change. The Secretary must work with the Corporation, the Board (for assets held for a Federal reserve bank as in section 5220(a)(1)(C)), the Federal Housing Finance Agency, HUD, and other federal holders of troubled assets to find chances to buy groups of troubled assets that make loan fixes easier. For rental properties, the plan must protect federal, state, and local rental subsidies and tenant protections, let tenants who pay rent stay when allowed, and make sure any loan change keeps enough money to maintain safe, decent housing. Upon requests under existing investment contracts, the Secretary must, when appropriate and considering net present value to the taxpayer, agree to reasonable loss-mitigation steps like extending terms, lowering rates, reducing principal, allowing more loans in a trust to be changed, or removing other limits on changes.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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12 U.S.C. § 5219
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73