Showing posts with label underwater mortgage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label underwater mortgage. Show all posts

Friday, December 27, 2013

Reverse eminent domain keeping Americans in their homes

This is something to keep an eye on. What is meant by reverse eminent domain? Basically, it's when a city makes a market-value offer on a "toxic" home loan and reissues the debt to the current homeowner at a lower rate of interest.

In 2005, Dubya's Supreme Court gave localities the right to invoke eminent domain -- and evict landowners -- solely for the purpose of local economic development, for example, to let a private developer build a strip mall. Facing a conservative uproar, Dubya limited the SCOTUS ruling with an executive order in 2006. Nevertheless, depending on state law, that SC ruling can be turned against Wall Street banks that are holding millions of underwater and delinquent homes hostage.

Leopold reminds us that there are still 10.8 million U.S. homes underwater, with a total negative equity of $805 billion. This mortgage debt crushes consumer demand, drains tax dollars from cities and states, and holds down a more robust economic recovery. It's in everybody's interest, but especially municipalities', to do something about it.


By Les Leopold
December 15, 2013 | AlterNet

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Why are both candidates silent on mortgage crisis?

President Obama has done almost nothing to help Americans restructure their mortgages.  With HAMP, Obama pledged to modify 4 million mortgages; but in fact "more than 1 million homeowners have been bounced out of the program."  

Meanwhile, about one-quarter of all U.S. houses are still underwater to the tune of about $690 billion.

So why is Romney silent on Obama's failure?

Because Romney promises to be even worse.  He has not made one proposal for re-structuring mortgages to somehow reduce mortgage principles.  Indeed, Republicans believe underwater mortgages are an issue of personal responsibility, a sacred trust between the bank and the borrower into which Big Government shouldn't intrude.

My hero, economics professor Joseph Stiglitz, finds it "shocking" that both candidates have been silent about the housing crisis.  And it has a been "a gross miscarriage of justice" that not one banker has ended up behind bars, said Stiglitz.  Then again, we shouldn't be surprised, since both candidates are in the pocket of the TBTF banks.


October 24, 2012 | Reuters TV

Monday, October 1, 2012

CA city to invoke eminent domain on underwater homes?

If the City of Sacramento, California goes through with this, it will surely drive the banks and libertards nuts, and probably reach the Supreme Court.

Let's remember it was a SCOTUS decision in 2005 that let this genie out of the bottle by giving localities the right to invoke the 5th Amendment eminent domain clause for economic development purposes.


By Peter Goodman
October 1, 2012 | Huffington Post

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Obama's ongoing failure: $26 B fraud settlement not going to borrowers

It's stories like this that make me despair of choosing between Republican (Romney) and Republican Lite (Obama) in this November's elections.  

If Obama really cared, he would have leaned on the banks, via his HAMP program, to modify at least 800,000 mortgages, keeping 800,000 families and about 2 million Americans in their homes.  

Meanwhile, states are not giving $26 billion in settlement money from banks to help distressed borrowers; they're using that money to pay for tax cuts for the rich and to plug other budget holes.  

It's outrageous and pathetic.  Yet you won't hear about it from the lamestream media.  #OWS isn't out there protesting about it.  Democrats don't mention it in their campaign speeches.  Nay, underwater borrowers-homeowners -- the biggest drag on the U.S. economy -- are completely on their own.  


By Richard Zombeck
September 14, 2012 | Huffington Post

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Underwater mortgages down, still total $690 BILLION

This report explains most if not all our current economic malaise.  I mean, if 24 percent of all homeowners are underwater on their mortgages to the sum of $691 billion (!), they're not going to feel secure enough to spend and stimulate the economy, or take the risk of opening their own business.  Their first priority is to pay off debt, and/or try to modify their mortgage with the bank -- a Kafkaesque nightmare that becomes like a second job.  

Sure, technically, many of these households are "saving," meaning they are paying down debt; however, this is not like savings invested in start-ups, stocks or bonds that drives long-term economic growth.

The Obama Administration has done almost nothing so far to help distressed borrowers.  Yet Republicans promise to do even less.  Indeed they reminded us in Tampa that they are the party of personal responsibility and hyper-individualism.  "Irresponsible" borrowers must "take their medicine" and learn a moral lesson from it -- that's what they deserve, that's what's fair, say Republicans.  Maybe so.  But it's definitely not what our country needs.  

So with Obama or with Romney, it won't make much difference, this thing is going to take years, if not a decade, to work itself out on its own without government intervention.  


By Mamta Badkar 
July 12, 2012 | Business Insider

11.4 million or 23.7 percent of all residential properties with a mortgage were in negative equity – when borrowers owe more on their mortgages than their property is worth – according to a new report by Corelogic.

This is down from 25.2 percent of all residential properties in the fourth quarter of last year. And lower than 24.7 percent in Q1 2011.

The negative equity share is at its lowest in nearly three years.

Here are some details from the report:
  • Negative equity declined to $691 billion in the first quarter, from $742 billion in the fourth quarter.
  • Over 700,000 households returned to positive equity in the first quarter.
  • 2.3 million borrowers had less than 5 percent equity i.e. were in near-negative equity in the first quarter.
  • Negative equity and near-negative equity mortgages accounted for 28.5 percent of all residential properties in Q1. This is down from 30.1 percent in Q4.
  • Nevada had the highest negative equity percentage with 61 percent of all mortgaged properties underwater.
  • The bulk of negative equity is focused on the low-end of the market. The negative equity for low-to-mid value homes (under $200,000) is at 31 percent of borrowers, nearly double the 15.9 percent for borrowers with home values over $200,000.
Decline in home values or an increase in mortgage debt cause an increase in negative equity. Negative equity improved in large part because of an improvement in home price levels.

"In the first quarter of 2012, rebounding home prices, a healthier balance of real estate supply and demand, and a slowing share of distressed sales activity helped to reduce the negative equity share," said Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic. "This is a meaningful improvement that is driven by quickly improving outlooks in some of the hardest hit markets."

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Stiglitz: 'Deficit fetishism is killing our economy'

If you take away anything from this, remember these words from favorite bearded liberal Nobel economist, Joe Stiglitz:  

The fundamental problem is not government debt.  Over the past few years, the budget deficit has been caused by low growth.  If we focus on growth, then we get growth, and our deficit will go down.  If we just focus on the deficit, we're not going to get anywhere.  [...] If we go into austerity, that will lead to higher unemployment and will increase inequality.  Wages go down, aggregate demand goes down, wealth goes down.


August 9, 2012 | Associated Press

What's wrong with the U.S. economy?

Growth comes in fits and starts. Unemployment has been over 8 percent for three and a half years. Cutting taxes and interest rates hasn't worked, at least not enough.

To Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, the economy's strange behavior can be traced to the growing gap between wealthy Americans and everyone else.

In his new book, "The Price of Inequality," he connects surging student loan debt, the real-estate bubble and many of the country's other problems to greater inequality.

When the rich keep getting richer, he says, the costs pile up. For instance, it's easier to climb up from poverty in Britain and Canada than in the U.S.

"People at the bottom are less likely to live up to their potential," he says.

Stiglitz has taught at Yale, Oxford and MIT. He served on President Bill Clinton's council of economic advisers, then left the White House for the World Bank, where he was the chief economist. He's now a professor at Columbia University.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Stiglitz singled out the investment bank Goldman Sachs, warned about worrying over government debt and argued that a wider income gap leads to a weaker economy.

Below are excerpts, edited for clarity.
___

Q: The Occupy Wall Street demonstrations are no longer in the news, but you make the case that income inequality is more important than ever. How so?

A: Because it's getting worse. Look at the recent Federal Reserve numbers. Median wealth fell 40 percent from 2007 to 2010, bringing it back to where it was in the early '90s. For two decades, all the increase in the country's wealth, which was enormous, went to the people at the very top.

It may have been a prosperous two decades. But it wasn't like we all shared in this prosperity.

The financial crisis really made this easy to understand. Inequality has always been justified on the grounds that those at the top contributed more to the economy — "the job creators."

Then came 2008 and 2009, and you saw these guys who brought the economy to the brink of ruin walking off with hundreds of millions of dollars.  And you couldn't justify that in terms of contribution to society.

The myth had been sold to people, and all of a sudden it was apparent to everybody that it was a lie.

Mitt Romney has called concerns about inequality the "politics of envy." Well, that's wrong. Envy would be saying, "He's doing so much better than me. I'm jealous." This is: "Why is he getting so much money, and he brought us to the brink of ruin?" And those who worked hard are the ones ruined. It's a question of fairness.

Q: Markets aren't meant to be fair. As long as we have markets, there are going to be winners and losers. What's wrong with that?

A: I'm not arguing for the elimination of inequality. But the extreme that we've reached is really bad. Particularly the way it's created. We could have a more equal society and a more efficient, stable, higher-growing economy. That's really the "so what."  Even if you don't have any moral values and you just want to maximize GDP growth, this level of inequality is bad.

It's not just the unfairness. The point is that we're paying a high price. The story we were told was that inequality was good for our economy. I'm telling a different story, that this level of inequality is bad for our economy.

Q: You argue that it's making our economy grow more slowly and connect it to "rent- seeking." That's an economist's term. Can you explain it in layman's terms?

A: Some people get an income from working, and some people get an income just because they own a resource. Their income isn't the result of effort. They're getting a larger share of the pie instead of making the pie bigger. In fact, they're making it smaller.

Q: So, for example, I put a toll booth at a busy intersection and keep all the money for myself.

A: That's right. You just collect the money. You're not adding anything. It's often used when we talk about oil-rich countries. The oil is there, and everybody fights over the spoils. The result is that those societies tend to do very badly because they spend all their energy fighting over the pile of dollars rather than making the pile of dollars bigger. They're trying to get a larger share of the rent.

Q: Where do you see this in the U.S.? Can you point to some specific examples?

A: You see it with oil and natural resources companies and their mineral leases and timber leases. Banks engaged in predatory lending. Visa and MasterCard just settled for $7 billion for anticompetitive behavior. They were charging merchants more money because they have monopoly power.

One good example was Goldman Sachs creating a security that's designed to fail.  That's just taking money from some fool who trusted them. Our society functions well when people trust each other. It's particularly important for people to trust their banks. Goldman basically said, "You can't trust us."

Q: Economic growth is slowing again. Unemployment seems to be stuck above 8 percent. Is that the result of high debts or slower spending?

A: The fundamental problem is not government debt. Over the past few years, the budget deficit has been caused by low growth. If we focus on growth, then we get growth, and our deficit will go down. If we just focus on the deficit, we're not going to get anywhere.

This deficit fetishism is killing our economy. And you know what? This is linked to inequality. If we go into austerity, that will lead to higher unemployment and will increase inequality. Wages go down, aggregate demand goes down, wealth goes down.

All the homeowners who are underwater, they can't consume.  We gave money to bail out the banking system, but we didn't give money to the people who were underwater on their mortgages.  They can't spend.  That's what's driving us down. It's household spending.

Q: And those with money to spend, you point out, spend less of every dollar. Those at the top of the income scale save nearly a quarter of their income. Those at the bottom spend every penny. Is that why tax cuts seem to have little effect on spending?

A: Exactly. When you redistribute money from the bottom to the top, the economy gets weaker. And all this stuff about the top investing in the country is (nonsense). No, they don't. They're asking where they can get the highest returns, and they're looking all over the globe. So they're investing in China and Brazil and Latin America, emerging markets, not America.

If the U.S. is a good place to invest, we'll get money from all over the world. If we have an economy that's not growing, we won't get investment. That's exactly what's happening. The Federal Reserve stimulates the economy by buying bonds. Where's the money go? Abroad.

Q: What's the answer, then? Raising taxes on wealthy people can't possibly solve all the problems you mention.

A: No, there's no magic bullet. But there are other ways of doing things. Just to pick one, look at how we finance higher education. Right now, we have this predatory lending system by our banks with no relief from bankruptcy. In some fundamental ways, it's really evil and oppressive. Parents that co-sign student loans now find out they can't discharge those loans, even in bankruptcy.

Education is so important, but there are so many barriers. Just 8 percent of those students in the most selective colleges come from the bottom half of the income scale. Eight percent! They can't get in because they don't get as good an education in elementary and high schools. Education is the vehicle for social mobility. It's how we restore the American dream.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Obama's greatest failure as POTUS?

One of Obama's greatest, tragic failures as President has been his willful neglect of mortgage borrowers in distress.

By contrast, when the Too Big To Fail (TBTF) banks were in trouble, starting in 2007, help from Congress, Treasury and the Fed was overwhelming (in the $ trillions, not $ billions) and above all FAST, with so little oversight that to this day we don't know who got loans why and under what terms and conditions.

But help for distressed homeowners has been almost nil, ostensibly because of poor administration and contradicting directives, but in fact because of Obama's lack of interest and political will.

It just goes to show that Obama is Wall Street's boy, not Main Street's.


By Loren Berlin
December 9, 2012 | Huffington Post

Monday, October 17, 2011

For the last time: Fannie did NOT cause financial disaster

Gee, I'm sure this well-researched article will put an end to the false belief that the FMs caused the financial crisis, which has become an article of faith among many, especially on the Right.

I'm doubly sure that those who refute this article will come back with statistics or studies or something checkable to support their false claim that the FMs/GSEs caused the financial crisis.

Yep, I'm absolutely sure, because we're all reasonable, fact-based thinkers.


By Jeff Madrick and Frank Partnoy
October 27, 2011 | New York Review of Books

Amid the current financial turmoil, the causes of the crisis that just preceded it—the bursting of the housing bubble—are being badly distorted. Some analysts, including the authors of the book under review [Reckless Endangerment: How Outsized Ambition, Greed, and Corruption Led to Economic Armageddon, by Gretchen Morgenson and Joshua Rosner], are arguing that the housing and financial crises of 2007 and 2008 were the direct result of federal guarantees of mortgages, a program first created in the 1930s, and therefore less so the result of the aggressive creation of mortgages by private business than has been widely reported.

In particular, the authors accuse two quasi-public but profit-making companies, Fannie Mae (the Federal National Mortgage Association) and Freddie Mac (the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation), of adding risks to the mortgage markets that resulted in disaster. Much the same criticism has been made by Peter Wallison, a fellow of the American Enterprise Institute, who wrote an angry dissent to the findings of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC), which was appointed by Congress to investigate the causes of the crash. Contrary to Wallison, the nine other members of the commission, including three others appointed by Republicans, concluded that Fannie and Freddie were not the main causes of the crisis.

Along with many other experts, the nine members pointed to considerable evidence that, despite large losses, these government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), as they are known, bought or guaranteed too few highly risky loans, and did so too late in the 2000s, to cause the crisis. But in their new book, Reckless Endangerment, the New York Times reporter Gretchen Morgenson and mortgage securities analyst Joshua Rosner try to revive the issue of their responsibility.

The book boldly and passionately asserts that the risk-taking of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was a major element in causing the housing bubble. In particular, the authors blame the crisis on the goals set by the Clinton administration in the early 1990s to make lending "affordable" to more middle- and low-income home buyers. These goals were raised several times over the next dozen years so as to include more people, with the result that loans became cheaper. The authors write, "The homeownership drive helped to plunge the nation into the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression." They add, "How Clinton's calamitous Homeownership Strategy was born, nurtured, and finally came to blow up the American economy is a story of greed and good intentions, corporate corruption and government support."

This bold claim, however, is not substantiated by persuasive analysis or by any hard evidence in the book. The GSEs did generate large losses, but their bad investments in housing loans followed rather than led the crisis; most of those investments involved purchases or guarantees made well after the subprime and housing bubbles had been expanded by private loans and were almost about to burst.

Even then, the GSEs' overall purchases and guarantees were much less risky than Wall Street's: their default rates were one fourth to one fifth those of Wall Street and other private financial firms, a fact not made clear by the authors. A further review of other literature shows that Clinton's goals to increase "affordable lending" had little to do with the risks the GSEs took. The FCIC, for example, argued that in several years these goals were largely met by the GSEs' standard loans with traditional down payments.

Although they were set up originally by the federal government, the GSEs have been private companies for roughly the last forty years. They are traded on the stock market and were on a hunt for profits like much of Wall Street, in part because their executives' bonuses were linked to earnings per share. Even so, by comparison with other companies they restrained their risk. Private firms on Wall Street and mortgage companies across the nation, uncontrolled by adequate federal regulation, unambiguously caused the crisis as they expanded in the 2000s. They were the ones who "came to blow up the American economy."

This is not to say that the GSEs' way of doing business was sensible or that their losses—up to $230 billion—can be justified. The hybrid business model of a quasi-public but profit-making company, whose bonds were treated in the financial markets as if they were guaranteed by the federal government, was likely to lead to abuse and careless investment. Financial markets assumed that the GSEs were relatively safe partly because they were regulated by a federal agency, the Office of the Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) and were subject to a web of rules. They also had a long record of backing safe mortgages. The authors describe well how, beginning in the 1990s, Fannie in particular betrayed its responsibilities. It aggressively minimized federal regulation of its activities and it fought off attempts to tax its profits, partly through extravagant favors to influential lawmakers. This is a story that needed telling. Reform of the GSEs should be an urgent part of a new federal housing agenda.

But the book's unjustified thesis that Fannie and Freddie were major causes of the financial crisis is being used by politicians and pundits to soften criticism of private business and by lobbyists and others who would water down the new regulations passed by Congress under the Dodd-Frank Act. The book is also being exploited by those who believe the federal government should have little if anything to do with support for the mortgage market, a view we find unfounded.

Reviving the housing market was a high priority for Franklin Delano Roosevelt when he took office in 1933. In 1934, he created the Federal Housing Administration, which guaranteed mortgage payments, and provided insurance for savers' deposits in the thrift institutions that then were the nation's leading mortgage writers. He had also created a government bank, the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, to make new loans to distressed home owners and buy bad mortgages from failing financial institutions. Finally, in 1938, he established Fannie Mae to guarantee mortgages that met adequate standards or buy them outright from private financial institutions; it issued its own debt to major investors to support its practices. The goal was to maintain a stable mortgage market with reasonable borrowing rates in all regions of the country.

For roughly fifty years, Fannie Mae did its job. Home ownership rates rose from about 40 percent in the 1920s to about 60 percent and, in contrast to earlier, far more volatile history, the mortgage market was mostly stable. Freddie Mac was created in 1970 as a private company to package mortgages into securities that could be sold to institutional investors like pension funds.

That the GSEs were private began to draw increasing criticism as they grew larger. The implied federal guarantee of the debt of these private, profit-making companies, which lowered their borrowing rates, made it easier for them to grow and make new and riskier loans. Some urged that the GSEs be fully privatized and stripped of any advantage they might have because of federal regulation. Wall Street and mortgage firms wanted for themselves the business Fannie and Freddie were doing, including the packaging of mortgages into securities.

In the early 1990s, Congress recognized that Fannie and Freddie, which were growing rapidly, required closer regulation. President Clinton and Congress also were eager to channel more loans to lower-income Americans. Congress passed the Federal Housing Enterprises Financial Safety and Soundness Act of 1992, which established a new agency to oversee the GSEs and set affordable lending goals.

From the beginning, the new oversight agency—OFHEO—was weak. And this is essentially where Reckless Endangerment begins, with sordid details about how James Johnson, Fannie's chief executive and an influential Democratic insider, fended off control by OFHEO during its first seven years. Johnson established an expensive twelve-person lobbying office, gave campaign money to powerful politicians, and made contributions to the favorite charities of influential congressmen. He opened local development offices in congressional districts as a public relations campaign to show how congressmen were helping their local constituents get mortgages.

By means of such measures, Johnson won congressional support and repeatedly resisted attempts by a handful in Congress to rein Fannie in, as did his successor in 1999, Franklin Raines, President Clinton's former budget director. Perhaps most important, Johnson tied his own CEO bonuses and those of other executives to the earnings of the company.

Morgenson and Rosner make a strong if one-sided case against Johnson. We never hear from any of his defenders, and he refused, the authors write, to be interviewed. But as they make clear, Johnson, partly by his egregious self-promotion, made Fannie virtually untouchable politically. Above all, he exploited the Fannie mandate to lend to lower-income Americans in order to expand the company's reach, and in the process increase both its earnings and his personal wealth.

They also note that Democrats ranging from Congressman Barney Frank, who got his partner a job with Fannie, to former Clinton adviser Lanny Davis were strong supporters of Fannie Mae. William Daley, a high-level adviser to President Obama, was on Fannie's board. They cite Republicans who were Fannie supporters or executives as well, including Newt Gingrich, Senator Christopher Bond, and Robert Zoellick, legal counsel of Fannie and currently head of the World Bank.

The authors make no serious charges of outright fraudulent corruption on the part of these people, however. The one potential exception is Angelo Mozilo, the flamboyant head of Countrywide Financial, the nation's largest mortgage originator, who offered beneficial mortgage rates to some influential politicians. But the authors add nothing new here. The "friends of Mozilo," who got cut-rate VIP loans, included Johnson, Senators Chris Dodd and Kent Conrad, and the late Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, among others. But while Mozilo did favors for them, Morgenson and Rosner cite no specific favors returned to Mozilo by Dodd, Conrad, Holbrooke, or the others mentioned.

In these and other cases, the authors tar with a broad brush. They write that they conducted interviews over more than a decade and amassed a "mountain of notes," but many sources quoted are anonymous and the book does not cite references in footnotes so there is no way to assess many of their assertions. They almost never deal with counterarguments to their many claims, if only to show them wrong.

They make some odd errors as well, such as stating that Walter Mondale was "sitting out" the 1980 presidential election, when as vice president he ran again as Jimmy Carter's running mate. Their scathing criticism of a Federal Reserve Bank of Boston study published in 1992, which demonstrated prejudice against minorities in the distribution of mortgages in the Boston area, is an especially disturbing example of their one-sided reporting. They assert that this study, which they say influenced Congress's adoption of affordable lending goals, was deeply flawed. They mock the primary author of the study, the economist Alicia Munnell, and state that the Boston Fed made "a fool of itself."

But they don't point out that the Boston Fed's study was later subject to a stringent peer-review process and was published in 1996 in the respected American Economic Review. Indeed, few research papers have been as closely scrutinized. The published results, which corrected some methodological errors, showed persuasively that there was in fact a bias in the mortgage markets. In 1998, another peer-reviewed paper—also ignored by the authors—analyzed the criticisms of the Boston Fed study, as well as other research on mortgage bias, and concluded that the study was fundamentally correct. "The bottom line is that the results related to race are extremely robust," wrote the author.

The one claim that Morgenson and Rosner depend upon most for their extreme conclusions about Fannie and Freddie is especially poorly documented. Fannie, they write, started influencing the private sector in damaging ways beginning in the 1990s, when the GSEs reduced the down payments required for mortgages in order to help poorer Americans acquire housing loans. Fannie's lower standards "set the tone for private-sector lenders across the nation." In support, they cite two quotes from one unidentified former Fannie executive. They offer no empirical evidence, or even telling illustrations or anecdotes. A more recent paper by economist Edward Pinto offers more supposedly illustrative anecdotes about reduced down payments but remains unpersuasive. In fact, the loans guaranteed by Fannie in those years were always privately insured.

But the key point—which is largely missing from Reckless Endangerment —is that private lenders made far riskier loans than GSEs bought or guaranteed, especially during the 1990s, when subprimes issued to borrowers with low income and poor credit were relatively new. You will not read in Reckless Endangerment that the GSEs bought very few subprimes in these years. Rather than leading the way, Fannie's market share of the low-income home buyers fell behind private industry's far riskier lending to poorer home owners and others.

The increased risk-taking of the GSEs during the 1990s, far more modest than what was to come in the 2000s in the private sector, had no bearing on the financial crisis of 2007 and 2008. The authors make it seem as if it did, however. They write:

Clinton's public-private partnership was ramping up…. To meet the goals Fannie and Freddie had to buy riskier mortgages, such as those defined as subprime….

Some $160 billion in subprime mortgages would be underwritten in 1999, up from $40 billion five years earlier. And in another four years, that figure would jump to $332 billion.

Many of those loans wound up in Fannie's and Freddie's portfolios. By 2008, some $1.6 trillion of toxic mortgages, or almost half of those that were written, were purchased or guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie.

As noted, the GSEs bought very few subprimes in the 1990s. But it might especially surprise the inexpert reader to know that the GSEs did not own almost half of the "toxic mortgages" written by private companies, a remarkable exaggeration on the part of the authors. As usual, no source for the estimate is given, but it is likely based on the analysis of Pinto, who was a former Fannie official and is a colleague of Wallison's at the American Enterprise Institute. To make the claim, Pinto radically redefined what qualified a mortgage to be subprime or an Alt-A, for which mortgage-holders were often not required to document their income, rejecting the conventional and widely accepted definitions. In his analysis, almost any mortgage held by Fannie and Freddie with modest above-average risk was categorized, to use Morgenson and Rosner's term, as "toxic."

If so, one would presume the delinquency rates suffered by the GSEs during the crisis would have been very high. But David Min, an analyst with the Center for American Progress, shows that the after-crisis delinquency rates on the large additional portion of GSE mortgages that Pinto claimed were high risk, and that was termed "toxic" by Morgenson and Rosner, was roughly 10 percent, far lower than the 25 to 30 percent default rate of true subprimes. In fact, the rate of delinquencies for all GSE securities in 2004 was 4.3 percent, compared to a delinquency rate in private industry of 15.1 percent of mortgages. In 2005, the GSE rate was 7.8 percent compared to 28.7 percent, and in 2006 and 2007, the rates reached 13.2 and 14.9 percent in the GSEs and 45.1 and 42.3 percent in the private market. None of these figures are cited in Reckless Endangerment. In fact, losses as a proportion of mortgages guaranteed or bought by the GSEs were far lower than in private industry.

When Wall Street was taking more and more risk in the 2000s, as the housing bubble expanded, the GSEs were, relatively speaking, sitting it out. Johnson had left Fannie at the end of 1998 with a $21 million pay package, joining the board of Goldman Sachs and eventually running the Brookings Institution and becoming a key adviser to Senator John Kerry in his run for the presidency. But serious accounting irregularities under Raines, perhaps initiated under Johnson, left Fannie subject to immense pressure years later to get its books straightened out. Overall mortgage debt grew by 11.9 percent a year from 2003 to 2007, but the amount funded by the GSEs grew by only 7.6 percent a year. The GSE market share fell from over 50 percent to 40 percent.6

The GSEs did buy subprime mortgages in the 2000s, but contrary to the impression given by Morgenson and Rosner, their purchases were always a distinct minority of those sold by Wall Street. As Jason Thomas and Robert Van Order of George Washington University further point out, the subprimes the GSEs bought in these years were from the safer triple-A tranches of basic mortgage-backed securities, i.e., the highest quality of groups of mortgages rated by their risk of default. The GSEs never bought the far riskier collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) that were also rated triple-A and were the main source of the financial crisis. (The triple-A classifications of some of those CDOs were conferred on them very dubiously by the credit-rating agencies, Standard & Poor's and Moody's.) It turned out that subprimes accounted for only 5 percent of the GSEs' ultimate losses, according to Thomas and Van Order.

Some, like Alan Greenspan, argued that the GSEs' purchases of subprimes, nevertheless, helped hold down mortgage rates and therefore pushed up demand for housing and housing prices. But Thomas and Van Order strongly dispute that as well, showing that there was so much demand for the healthier triple-A tranches the GSEs bought that the purchases of subprimes made virtually no difference.

What then caused the losses of up to $230 billion by the GSEs that required the Treasury to put them into conservatorship in September 2008—they are now run by the Federal Housing Finance Agency—and a federal bailout of up to $150 billion in capital? It had little to do with pursuit of the original goals of "affordable lending." The GSEs were far more concerned to maximize their profits than to meet these goals; they were borrowing at low rates to buy high-paying mortgage securities once their accounting irregularities were behind them. For example, they started aggressively buying Alt-A loans that did not generally meet affordable lending goals because they were made to higher-income individuals. This was irresponsible. Most disturbing about the GSEs, they refused to maintain adequate capital as a cushion against losses, despite demands from their own regulators that they do so.

The GSEs never took nearly the risks that the private market took. Still, when housing prices collapsed so sharply, even modestly risky and traditionally safe mortgages produced losses. The risky lending was not driven by the affordable lending goals; nor did it cause the crisis. Thomas and Van Order write convincingly that the downfall of the GSEs "was quick, primarily due to mortgages originated in 2006 and 2007. It…was mostly associated with purchases of risky-but-not-subprime mortgages and insufficient capital to cover the decline in property values."

After devoting roughly two thirds of their book to Johnson and the GSEs, Morgenson and Rosner comment, "Of all the partners in the homeownership push, no industry contributed more to the corruption of the lending process than Wall Street." The assertion is jarring, coming so late in the book and after so much blame has been leveled at the GSEs. The authors do not really try to prove their point. They do not seriously address the derivatives market—the highly leveraged securities based on other securities that were at the core of excessive risk-taking. They mostly present a random collection of examples of wrongdoing, and their points have largely been made elsewhere.

But they add some useful details. Earlier in the book, they tell very well the story of NovaStar Financial, a mortgage originator that began doing business in the 1990s and exploited home owners still more in the 2000s. The company's history can serve as a quintessential example of regulatory failure. Respected Wall Street firms fed NovaStar and other dubious mortgage-writing companies with more money than they could wisely use. The authors also show how Goldman Sachs supplied mortgage money to Fremont, which they call "one of the nation's most wanton mortgage originators." Goldman, however, was only one of the pack, and many Wall Street investment banks owned their own aggressive mortgage originators.

The authors, moreover, explain clearly how the prices of collateralized debt obligations were driven up by credit-rating agencies. They show how some banks used off-balance-sheet accounting that permitted them to stuff risky assets into hidden "Special Purpose Vehicles," or SPVs. But here they mix up SPVs with more complex "Structured Investment Vehicles," or SIVs, which resemble CDOs but have shorter-term debt. Both the book and its index mislabel SIVs as "Special Investment Vehicles." They incorrectly write that Citigroup's large losses were due to problems in their SIVs. The big bank's losses actually came from the highly rated parts of CDOs they retained as well tens of billions of dollars of guarantees they made to those who bought the CDOs they underwrote, known as liquidity puts.

Clearly, the GSEs must be reformed and, if they are allowed to have the advantage of a presumed government guarantee, their practices and profits must be controlled and limited. A federal presence in the mortgage market is required to maintain liquidity and adequate access for home buyers. As for poorer families, a system of mortgages based on affordable lending goals is not necessarily the most efficient way to enable them to purchase homes. Direct vouchers might be a better alternative. Finally, there is the larger and more controversial question of whether many people, and the financial system itself, might be better off if more homes were rented, not bought.

But these are different debates than the one this book has provoked. Contrary to many commentators on Reckless Endangerment, and to its chief claims, it was Wall Street, not the GSEs, that fundamentally caused the 2007–2008 crisis, which was driven not merely by a headlong pursuit of easy profit but also by ethically dubious practices. Morgenson and Rosner discuss a handful of these practices and raise appropriate questions about why Wall Street participants were not criminally prosecuted. We will turn our attention to this important issue in a second article.

—This is the first of two articles.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Army Times: 'Ethical' troops fight & die to pay underwater mortgages

Gee, I guess we can call this "supporting our troops" ... with financial advice.

But wouldn't it be more supportive to give our troops assistance in meeting their mortgage payments? After all, we bailed out the bankers -- who risk nothing except a papercut at work -- holding their mortgages with more than $9 trillion.

Instead of lecturing our troops about the "ethical" and financial hazards of walking away from their underwater mortgages -- not to mention threatening to revoke their security clearance for unpaid debts! -- why can't Uncle Sam find some cash under Wall Street's couch cushions to help our men & women in uniform?

What indeed our are troops fighting for? Not for a rigged financial system like this, I hope.


Consumer Watch: Walking away from your mortgage
By Karen Jowers
December 6, 2010 Army Times

URL: http://www.armytimes.com/money/financial_advice/offduty-walking-away-from-your-mortgage-120610w/?source=patrick.net

Friday, July 9, 2010

Rich defaulters: They're 'strategic;' you're still 'irresponsible'

The rich are America's biggest mortgage defaulters. They're sure as hell not falling for Freddie Mac's moralizing. See, they're not being "irresponsible" and "damaging their communities" like you peons are when you sadly walk away from the biggest investment in your life, they're being "strategic" and "ruthless." See the difference? No? Well, maybe that's why you're poor and they're rich.

Hey, if America's rich supermen think it's morally OK to do, then you can too. Think like a tycoon and walk away from your underwater home!


Biggest Defaulters on Mortgages Are the Rich
By David Streitfeld
July 8, 2010 | New York Times


URL: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/09/business/economy/09rich.html?pagewanted=1&source=patrick.net&_r=2

Friday, June 25, 2010

Ratigan: Walking away from an underwater mortgage is 'pure capitalism'

Dylan Ratigan knows Wall Street and he knows capitalism. So listen up when he says walking away from your underwater mortgage is the capitalistic thing to do.

Forget all this sentimental, do-the-right-thing B.S. A mortgage is a contract, and many borrowers even pay a premium % for the right to walk away from that contract.

But now Wall Street has successfully lobbied Congress to go beyond that contract, to go beyond that capitalistic agreement between two parties, and go after borrowers beyond the value of the home which they have forfeited.

Don't look for Obama, the GOP or the Tea Parties to stand up for capitalism. They'll be silent as Congress once again goes after the Little Guy's last dollar while giving the super rich and TBTF banks every advantage.


By Dylan Ratigan
June 24, 2010 | Huffington Post