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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Monday, November 10, 2025

Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director Bill Pulte confirmed he is "working on" a plan to introduce 50-year mortgage terms for home buyers.

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Trump and his cronies are now pushing 50-year mortgages. Buckle up. This is going to make the 2008 mortgage crisis look like the good old days.

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-- MeidasTouch (@meidastouch.com) Nov 8, 2025 at 2:39 PM

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Anyone else taste the desperation here?

These people don't know what to do. They're guessing at best.

#1 | Posted by Zed at 2025-11-10 08:00 AM | Reply

Good point. And this sinister idea will entice some people to feudalize themselves with a 50-year debt.

Republicans want Americans to work longer as if life expectancy for the middle class is 100.

#2 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2025-11-10 08:39 AM | Reply

What else did you expect from a billionaire?

Creating a permanent class of serfs.

#3 | Posted by Nixon at 2025-11-10 08:44 AM | Reply

One party wanted to fund building of residential housing units and help out with $25000 downpayments.

The other party says "you can pay your mortgage until you die".

Both sides are not the same.

#4 | Posted by Nixon at 2025-11-10 12:57 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

Bring Back Slavery!

#5 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-11-10 01:10 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

In the future, you will buy a car and you kids will owe for it!

#6 | Posted by Brennnn at 2025-11-11 01:49 AM | Reply

America was heading well towards feudalism before Trumpf 2.0, now we are accelerating full speed into the past under his nefarious junta: Feudal States of America.

Meanwhile, Trumpf Crime Family (TCF) scion Barron made $20m this year in nebulous crypto-currency deals. He'll never suffer from feudalistic debts, indentured servitude, or 50-effin' year mortgages. And he's still in college.

#7 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2025-11-11 05:34 AM | Reply

Yeah... make lenders landlords in perpetuity.

I was about to say "yeah just like insurance companies" then I remembered insurance companies are the largest lenders in the nation... thus we pander...

Talk about taking us back in time... that is how loans used to work.

#8 | Posted by RightisTrite at 2025-11-11 07:48 AM | Reply

School loan debts, car loan debts, medical debts, grocery bill debts, tax debts, home loan debts. Debt is one of the critical mechanisms used to control the masses. People in debt are never free; being in debt is the opposite of freedom.

#9 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2025-11-11 07:59 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Pro tip, from one who lends money on real estate for a living: amortization is the lender's friend, equity build-up is the borrower's friend, your house is not an investment, and real estate values can fall as well as rise.

After 30 years, longer amortization doesn't help lower monthly debt service very much. For example, assume a $500,000 mortgage at 6.00%. on a 30-year schedule. Monthly payment is $2,997 and after seven years (typical holding period for a home, in the US) a borrower has paid down $51.8k. For a 40-year amortization, the monthly payment goes down by only 8.2% ($246) and after seven years, only $26,129 has been repaid. If, after seven years, real estate prices have stagnated, and interest rates have gone up only 75bp, to 6.75%, a borrower pays the same as the 30-am mortgage. In other words, it is easy to see how a longer amortization presents very little upside, and a larger amount of downside. All for 8% less in payment...

#10 | Posted by catdog at 2025-11-11 08:24 AM | Reply

Is there anything stopping private banks from developing their own 50 year mortgage?

It's a stupid idea that simply encourages people to buy more than they can afford.

#11 | Posted by eberly at 2025-11-11 08:51 AM | Reply

Good article on the costs and benefits ...

50-year mortgages: What it could mean for homebuyers
www.newsnationnow.com

...
Would it lower monthly payments?

Extending the length of a mortgage is meant to ease monthly payments and broaden access to homeownership. In theory, those savings could amount to a few hundred dollars each month, but that's not guaranteed.

Because longer loans expose lenders to greater risk, they generally come with higher interest rates. That's why 15-year mortgages are currently at 5.5%, compared with roughly 6.2% for 30-year loans.

If rates were the same on a 30-year and 50-year mortgage, a typical homebuyer putting 20% down could pay about $250 less each month with the longer loan -- but would pay far more in total interest over time.
Is buying or renting a home the better option?

If 50-year rates were higher by a similar margin to the gap between 15- and 30-year loans, the monthly savings would shrink to around $60.

"A savings of $150 to $200 isn't really fixing the problem," Dan Frio, a mortgage adviser and host of "The Rate Update," told NewsNation on Monday.

Monthly payment at today's median existing home price of $415,200, assuming 20% down at current interest rates, according to Fannie Mae's mortgage calculator. Calculation doesn't include taxes and insurance.

- - - 15-year fixed mortgage (at 5.5%): $2,714 per month (principal and interest)

- - - 30-year fixed mortgage (at 6.2%): $2,034 per month (principal and interest)

- - - *50-year fixed mortgage (at 6.2%): $1,798 per month (principal and interest)

- - - *50-year fixed mortgage (at 6.9%): $1,973 per month (principal and interest)
...


Lots more in the article ...


#12 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-11-11 12:36 PM | Reply

You're also paying interest for an additional 20 years.

#13 | Posted by ClownShack at 2025-11-11 12:38 PM | Reply

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