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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (145653)9/9/2014 5:39:44 PM
From: pcstel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
<stunt like they did in the aught years is their own self governance [prompted by the Great Recession] coupled with close gov't oversight.<

You have to be joking. The "Stunt" they pulled was urged on by the Government, and prodded by the Government on many lenders with a carrot and stick....

forbes.com
There is very little doubt that the underlying cause of the current credit crisis was a housing bubble. But the collapse of the bubble would not have led to a worldwide recession and credit crisis if almost 40% of all U.S. mortgages–25 million loans–were not of the low quality known as subprime or Alt-A.

These loans were made to borrowers with blemished credit, or involved low or no down payments, negative amortization and limited documentation of income. The loans’ unprecedentedly high rates of default are what is driving down housing prices and weakening the financial system.

The low interest rates of the early 2000s may explain the growth of the housing bubble, but they don’t explain the poor quality of these mortgages. For that we have to look to the government’s distortion of the mortgage finance system through the Community Reinvestment Act and the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac .

In a recent meeting with the Council on Foreign Relations, Barney Frank–the chair of the House Financial Services Committee and a longtime supporter of Fannie and Freddie–admitted that it had been a mistake to force homeownership on people who could not afford it. Renting, he said, would have been preferable. Now he tells us.

Long-term pressure from Frank and his colleagues to expand home ownership connects government housing policies to both the housing bubble and the poor quality of the mortgages on which it is based. In 1992, Congress gave a new affordable housing “mission” to Fannie and Freddie, and authorized the Department of Housing and Urban Development to define its scope through regulations.

Shortly thereafter, Fannie Mae, under Chairman Jim Johnson, made its first “trillion-dollar commitment” to increase financing for affordable housing. What this meant for the quality of the mortgages that Fannie–and later Freddie–would buy has not become clear until now.

On a parallel track was the Community Reinvestment Act. New CRA regulations in 1995 required banks to demonstrate that they were making mortgage loans to underserved communities, which inevitably included borrowers whose credit standing did not qualify them for a conventional mortgage loan.

To meet this new requirement, insured banks–like the GSEs–had to reduce the quality of the mortgages they would make or acquire. As the enforcers of CRA, the regulators themselves were co-opted into this process, approving lending practices that they would otherwise have scorned. The erosion of traditional mortgage standards had begun.

Shortly after these new mandates went into effect, the nation’s homeownership rate–which had remained at about 64% since 1982–began to rise, increasing 3.3% from 64.2% in 1994 to 67.5% in 2000 under President Clinton, and an additional 1.7% during the Bush administration, before declining in 2007 to 67.8%. There is no reasonable explanation for this sudden spurt, other than a major change in the standards for granting a mortgage or a large increase in the amount of low-cost funding available for mortgages. The data suggest that it was both.

As might be expected, the market for subprime and Alt-A loans grew along with the rise in homeownership. Some have argued that unregulated groups such as mortgage brokers and bankers, working with subprime lenders such as Countrywide Financial, supplied both the easier credit and the lower loan standards, but the facts belie this.

From 1995 until 2004, subprime loans by the traditional subprime lenders like Countrywide averaged slightly more than 5% of all mortgages, far too few to account for the growth in either homeownership or the housing bubble. CRA loans, totaling 3% of originations, were also too few. Where, then, did all the low-quality loans come from?

From 1994 to 2003, Fannie and Freddie’s purchases of mortgages, as a percentage of all mortgage originations, increased from 37% to an all-time high of 57%, effectively cornering the conventional conforming market. With leverage ratios that averaged 75-to-1, and funds raised with implicit government backing, the GSEs were pouring money into the housing market. This in itself would have driven the housing bubble.

But it also appears that, perhaps as early as 1993, Fannie Mae began to offer easy financing terms and lowered its loan standards in order to meet congressionally mandated affordable housing goals and fulfill the company’s trillion-dollar commitment. For example, in each of the years 2000 and 2001, the first years for which data are available, 18% of Fannie’s originations–totaling $157 billion–were loans with FICO scores of less than 660 (the federal regulators’ cut-off point for defining subprime loans). There is no equivalent data available for Freddie, but it is likely that its purchases were proportionately the same, amounting to an estimated $120 billion.

These sums would have swamped originations by the traditional subprime lenders, which probably totaled $119 billion in these two years. Data for Alt-A loans before 2005 are unavailable, but the fact that that Fannie and Freddie now hold 60% of all outstanding Alt-A loans provides a strong indication of the purchases they were making for many earlier years.

The GSE’s purchases of all mortgages slowed in 2004, as they worked to overcome their accounting scandals, but in late 2004 they returned to the market with a vengeance. Late that year, their chairmen were telling meetings of mortgage originators that the GSEs were eager to purchase subprime and other nonprime loans.

This set off a frenzy of subprime and Alt-A mortgage origination, in which–as incredible as it seems–Fannie and Freddie were competing with Wall Street and one another for low-quality loans. Even when they were not the purchasers, the GSEs were Wall Street’s biggest customers, often buying the AAA tranches of subprime and Alt-A pools that Wall Street put together. By 2007 they held $227 billion (one in six loans) in these nonprime pools, and approximately $1.6 trillion in low-quality loans altogether.

From 2005 through 2007, the GSEs purchased over $1 trillion in subprime and Alt-A loans, driving up the housing bubble and driving down mortgage quality. During these years, HUD’s regulations required that 55% of all GSE purchases be affordable, including 25% made to low- and very low-income borrowers. Housing bubbles are nothing new. We and other countries have had them before. The reason that the most recent bubble created a worldwide financial crisis is that it was inflated with low-quality loans required by government mandate. The fact that the same government must now come to the rescue is no reason for gratitude.

Just like today. We have the same Government prodding lenders supplied with Govt. ultra-cheap money to lend to "sub-prime borrowers" with the lure of high-risk returns.



To: tejek who wrote (145653)9/9/2014 8:08:57 PM
From: ChinuSFO  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
My Post of the Day.



To: tejek who wrote (145653)9/9/2014 9:06:13 PM
From: koan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
<<
I am sorry..........but few criminals are deterred by a time spent in jail. I believe what will prevent banks for pulling another stunt like they did in the aught years is their own self governance [prompted by the Great Recession] coupled with close gov't oversight.>.

Self governance? How does that work? That was what they had in 08 and why 08 happened. There was no SEC oversight by bush. Banks will do nothing if not threatened with jail. and in fact they are more exposed today than they were in 08. They have done nothing.

Of course they will be deterred by possible jail time.

Those fines mean nothing to them. they laugh at them.

How many top bank CEO's have you seen leave or even had their pay cut by the fraud they were involved in? Like none. In fact any CEO who doesn't engage in the type of behavior we saw in 08 will be out on their ear for not pushing the envelope.

If all they face is fines, they will commit fraud on a regular basis and just consider is a part of doing business. Many corporations do that already.

Last what about the rule of law? Can everyone engage in fraud and just get a fine. the rich would sure love that.



To: tejek who wrote (145653)9/9/2014 9:57:43 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
" I believe what will prevent banks for pulling another stunt like they did in the aught years is their own self governance"

Alan Greenspan used to think like that.

"I made a mistake in presuming that the self-interests of organizations, specifically banks and others, were such as that they were best capable of protecting their own shareholders and their equity in the firms."

commondreams.org

I think they will try to get away with whatever they can get away with. The only thing that will stop them is (fear of) getting caught.



To: tejek who wrote (145653)9/10/2014 1:27:12 PM
From: koan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
<<I am sorry..........but few criminals are deterred by a time spent in jail. I believe what will prevent banks for pulling another stunt like they did in the aught years is their own self governance [prompted by the Great Recession] coupled with close gov't oversight.>>

Tejek, I cannot follow your logic.

If jail time doesn't work as well as fines for bankers then what about murders, robbers, rapists, robbers, mortgage loan officers who engage in blatant fraud, killing people when drunk, etc.

Should we just fine these people as well instead of putting them in jail.

And if not, what is the difference?