Why Trump’s push for a 50-year mortgage could backfire
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Trump’s idea for a 50-year US mortgage probably won’t help the US housing market in the long run.
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A longer mortgage term might make monthly payments a bit cheaper, but it won’t address housing supply.
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It could actually backfire by pushing up home prices over time, housing experts say.
Donald Trump has a new idea to boost the US housing market: a 50-year fixed-rate mortgage.
The president floated a new, longer-term mortgage in a post on Truth Social over the weekend. Bill Pulte, the Federal Housing Finance Agency director, confirmed that the FHFA was working on the new borrowing plan in a separate social post.
“Thanks to President Trump, we are indeed working on The 50 year Mortgage – a complete game changer,” Pulte wrote on X.
The problem? It might not do much to fix America’s housing affordability crisis, according to Daryl Fairweather, the chief economist at Redfin. In fact, it could even backfire in the long run.
“I think what the government is trying to achieve is increasing access to the housing market, especially for younger home buyers who have been priced out by high interest rates and high home prices. But it does come with some drawbacks,” Fairweather told Business Insider in an interview.
It’s unclear how the administration would allow borrowers to get a 50-year mortgage. If the FHFA steps in to expand the credit criteria of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, it would open the door for the government-sponsored enterprises to buy the mortgages from lenders and package them into mortgage bonds, providing liquidity for lenders.
Here are some of the problems housing experts see with Trump’s idea.
For starters, it’s unclear whether creating such a mortgage product is realistic, Fairweather said.
That’s because longer mortgages tend to be riskier, as borrowers could are more likely to encounter trouble over a longer time horizon, Fairweather said.
Trump’s idea may be to have the government-sponsored mortgage buyers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, back 50-year mortgages, she speculated. Yet, that means taxpayers are exposed to any problems that arise with the new mortgages.
“I’m not even sure if it makes sense for this to be something that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are insuring, or if it’s something that they’re floating as a non-qualified mortgage product,” Fairweather said.
It would also require approval beyond the presidential level, she said, given that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau limits qualified mortgages to loan terms that are 30 years or under.

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