People are losing their homes and many more will lose their jobs before
the mortgage meltdown works its way through the system.
To paraphrase Alan Greenspan's remarks on March 17th, 2008, “The current
financial crisis in the US is likely to be judged in retrospect as the
most wrenching since the end of the Second World War. The crisis will
leave many casualties.”
How many casualties? Experts are predicting that in the next few years,
between 15 and 20 million homeowners could have homes worth less than
what they owe. Walking away from a bad situation may actually make sense
for people who mortgages that are 'upside down' considering the fact
that refinancing is out of the question and home equity is nonexistent.
It seems quite easy to point fingers at greedy Wall Street titans for
causing the sub-prime mortgage crises. They after all, put together the
deals that allowed banks to underwrite mortgages and then offload these
liabilities to investors. What many fail to realize is that there is no
shortage of blame to go around from homeowners buying more home than
they could afford to real estate agents looking for more commission
dollars. Mortgage brokers and bankers, the banks themselves, ratings
agencies such as Moody's and Standard & Poor's, Wall Street, the Fed and
last but certainly not least, the Federal Government.
Let's start with the homeowners--the people who are now in the process
or soon to enter the process, of losing their homes. Some of these
people had never before owned a home and as such, may not have been
prepared for the costs associated with homeownership. Basic financial
literacy is sorely lacking in this country despite there being no
shortage of budgeting and tracking programs readily available such as
Quicken and Microsoft Money. The lack of financial literacy does not
absolve these buyers of their responsibility. Every borrower receives a
truth in lending disclosure statement. Here is a portion of what the act
covers:
The purpose of TILA (Truth In Lending Act) is to promote the informed
use of consumer credit by requiring disclosures about its terms and
cost. TILA also gives consumers the right to cancel certain credit
transactions that involve a lien on a consumer's principal dwelling,
regulates certain credit card practices, and provides a means for fair
and timely resolution of credit billing disputes. With the exception of
certain high-cost mortgage loans, TILA does not regulate the charges
that may be imposed for consumer credit. Rather, it requires a maximum
interest rate to be stated in variable-rate contracts secured by the
consumer's dwelling. It also imposes limitations on home equity plans
that are subject to the requirements of Sec. 226.5b and mortgages that
are subject to the requirements of Sec. 226.32. The regulation prohibits
certain acts or practices in connection with credit secured by a
consumer's principal dwelling.
Much of the subprime mortgage crisis can be traced directly back to
variable-rate mortgages. As is clearly stated above, “TILA does not
regulate the charge that may be imposed for consumer credit. Rather, it
requires a maximum interest rate to be stated in variable-rate contracts
secured by the consumers dwelling.” It also clearly states that TILA
also gives consumers the right to cancel certain credit transactions
that involve a lien on a consumer's principal dwelling. One has to
wonder whether or not these homeowners:
1. Bothered to read the truth in lending act disclosure at all.
2. Understood what the truth in lending act disclosure meant.
3. Chose to ignore the information printed clearly the truth in lending
act disclosure.
A number of months ago, just as the subprime mortgage crisis was
beginning to unfold, The New York Daily News ran an article about a
family in New York City, who had bought a home and were now faced with
the prospect of foreclosure. The article was sympathetic to this family,
highlighting the fact that they're living the American dream and that
this dream was about to come to an end. What I found to be distressing
was the fact that clearly visible in the photo that accompanied this
sympathetic article was a very expensive flat screen television hanging
on the wall. Perhaps I'm naïve, but I can assure you that if I were
faced with the prospect of losing my home and having my family put out
on the street, there is absolutely no way that I would still have that
expensive television hanging on my wall. It would have been one of the
first things to be sold and some financial relief would be found by
jettisoning what I'm sure was the expensive cable bill.
Clearly the public needs easy access to financial literacy courses. Too
bad we don't see the need to make this a mandatory course of study in
our educational system.
Mortgage bankers and brokers have in the last four or five years been
raking in cash by the bucket load in the form of commissions paid when
mortgages they've originated, close. Many of these people have not
needed to do much in the way of prospecting. Instead, their phones have
run off the hook as people have jumped on the homeownership and
refinancing and take out extra cash bandwagon, despite their ability to
pay for their home. No-document loans were readily available without the
borrower having to produce documentation that backed up their income.
Clearly this practice can and indeed has, lead to substandard loan
underwriting processes. Were some of these mortgage bankers and brokers
dishonest? Sure. Were all of them dishonest? I think not. To have a
massive nationwide conspiracy, where thousands and thousands of people
involved in the mortgage banking and mortgage brokering profession got
together to create this situation is simply not feasible. Yes, some of
the blame does belong with those in the mortgage industry, but they were
simply a small cog in the huge machine that created this mess.
Let's discuss real estate agents. In 2007, we bought a home, and also
sold a home. The agent we used to purchase our home was absolutely
fantastic. In our opinion, she went above and beyond to make our deal
happen. She answered every phone call, followed up on every concern and
was the epitome of professionalism. We consider this individual to be a
friend, and we have sent referrals her way that have resulted in her
earning additional commissions. We will continue to recommend her to all
who ask or mention that they'd like to buy or sell a home in our area.
The real estate agent, we used to sell our home, could not have been
more different. We got our old home ready to sell prior to closing on
our new home. We decided to list it as “For Sale by Owner.” In the event
that we didn't sell this home on our own, it was our intention to list
it with an agent as soon as we had closed on the purchase our new home.
Literally, from the day we put the sign in front of our home and listed
it on a “For Sale by Owner” website we were inundated with phone calls
from real estate agents. We were told many lies and were constantly
harassed; although we had already made it quite clear to every agent who
called, and there were more to 60 who did; that we were willing to pay
half the commission-the same as they would have received had they sold
another agent's listing. We also told every agent that called that we
had already lined up an agent to sell our home in the event that we
chose to no longer sell it ourselves. Our deadline was the closing date
of our new home purchase. We did have an interested buyer who shortly
after our closing date decided to keep looking so we listed our home
with a local agent so that we could concentrate on getting our new home
ready for our moving date at the end of the school year. This agent
showed our home a maximum of two times and got an offer which we
accepted. We ended up getting $1,000 less than we had wanted in a
declining Real Estate market. The agents who had called many times to
harass us called our listing agent on a number of occasions and he lied
telling them that the house was under contract when in fact it wasn't at
that time-clearly a breach of our agent's fiduciary duty. Quite frankly
an ethical agent would have continued to show our home until closing in
the event that the deal fell through.
But wait, there's more. Our agent also acted as the buyer's mortgage
broker. At the closing table, we learned that he had signed documents
from the buyer stating that he (our agent) represented them and we had
signed documents stating that he represented us. We also learned that
the buyer had effectively put down approximately 2-3% of the purchase
price when financed closing costs were factored into the equation. Their
first mortgage had what we thought was a high fixed rate and their
second mortgage came with a rate in excess of 8.5%. Because the closing
happened in August, literally in the midst of the first wave of the
meltdown, if they didn't close on the day they did (August 31st, 2007),
Citibank wasn't going to extend their rate. When my wife & I have bought
houses in the past, it had always been a very happy day. These people
looked absolutely shell-shocked at the closing table. I'm not convinced
that they knew just how much their monthly payment was going to be until
closing day. We knew down to the penny well in advance having budgeted
and planned everything on a spreadsheet. Were these people stupid or
just inexperienced and mislead by a greedy combination of real estate
agent & mortgage broker? I'm extremely confident that they are
intelligent people but inexperienced and taken advantage of by an
unscrupulous agent.
The banks are also culpable. Prior to bank deregulation, Savings and
Loans provided mortgages to home buyers and kept these loans on their
books. Non-performing loans had a negative effect on the S&L's
profitability which of course caused tighter lending guidelines such as
job stability and decent down payments in order for prospective home
buyers to be approved for a mortgage. Way back then, a home buyer had to
actually save up enough money for a down payment 10 or even 20% before a
bank would ever consider underwriting a mortgage. The checks & balances
kept banks solvent and borrowers responsible. Although this approach
worked, some cried foul stating that the regulated system was racist and
discriminatory-and there certainly was some truth to this. Skipping
forward to the present, banks made a bundle on mortgages over the past
five or six years. For the most part, they allowed their underwriting
criteria to be stretched so far out of alignment that almost anyone
could and indeed did, qualify for a mortgage despite their ability to
pay. Some folks even applied for and received mortgages for more than
the property was worth. Sometimes for as much as 25% more than their
property was worth!
Under the prior system, 125% mortgages would not have been possible
because of course these loans were held on the banks' books and could
have led to losses that would have had to have been absorbed directly by
the bank.
So what went wrong? Under the current system, these loans were sold to
the big Wall Street investment firms who repackaged them as
collateralized mortgage obligations (CMO's), Mortgage Backed Securities
(MBS's) and other similar acronyms. These instruments were then sent to
the ratings agencies for their blessing and more importantly a letter
rating. Many of these structured finance deals receive AAA ratings-the
highest ratings available meaning that in theory, these instruments were
least likely to default. How does one create a 'triple A' or AAA rated
financial instrument out of sub-prime mortgages? Herein lies the magic.
These Asset Backed Securities (ABS) are made up of different tranches or
slices, each carrying a different risk and reward level. The first
dollar of principle and interest is applied to the securities with the
highest rating, and the first dollar of loss is applied to the tranche
with the lowest ratings. The lower slices are designed to provide a
security blanket that in theory protects the higher-rated securities.
The investment banks that package or 'structure' these securities in
order to earn fat fees when they sell them to investors are the same
entities that pay the ratings agencies to rate these instruments.
Clearly the possibility for conflict of interest is present. If
investors and not the investment banks that stand to rake in millions in
fees were to pay for the rating, the potential for this conflict of
interest would be negated. Furthermore, the investment banks have a
vested interest in convincing the ratings agencies of the credit
worthiness of these securities.
So we've already pointed fingers at homeowners, some greedy, many more I
suspect, naïve or uninformed, real estate agents-one out of more than 60
in my experience was a gem, mortgage brokers & bankers, banks, Wall
Street and ratings agencies so who's left? The Federal Reserve and the
Government of course.
The Fed as its known is responsible of the country's monetary policy and
for supervision and regulation of banks. This is the definition of the
Fed's roles in their own words:
Monetary Policy
The Fed is best known for its role in making and carrying out the
country's monetary policy-that is, for influencing money and credit
conditions in the economy in order to promote the goals of high
employment, sustainable growth, and stable prices.
The long-term goal of the Fed's monetary policy is to ensure that money
and credit grow sufficiently to encourage non-inflationary economic
expansion.
The Fed cannot guarantee that our economy will grow at a healthy pace,
or that everyone will have a job. The attainment of these goals depends
on the decisions of millions of people around the country. Decisions
regarding how much to spend and how much to save, how much to invest in
acquiring skills and education, how much to spend on new plant and
equipment, or how many hours a week to work may be some of them.
What the Fed can do, is create an environment that is conducive to
healthy economic growth. It does so by pursuing a goal of price
stability-that is, by trying to prevent inflation from becoming a
problem.
Inflation is defined as a sustained increase in prices over a period of
time.
A stable level of prices is most conducive to maximum sustained output
and employment. Also, stable prices encourage saving and, indirectly,
capital formation because it prevents the erosion of asset values by
unanticipated inflation.
Inflation causes many distortions in the market. Inflation:
· hurts people with fixed income-when prices rise consumers cannot buy
as much as they could previously
· discourages savings
· reduces economic growth because the economy needs a certain level of
savings to finance investments that boost economic growth
· makes it harder for businesses to plan-it is difficult to decide how
much to produce, because businesses can't predict the demand for their
product at the higher prices they will have to charge in order to cover
their costs
Bank Regulation & Supervision
The Fed is one of the several Government agencies that share
responsibility for ensuring the safety and soundness of our banking
system. The Fed has primary responsibility for supervising bank holding
companies, financial holding companies, state-chartered banks that are
members of the Federal Reserve System, and the Edge Act and agreement
corporations, through which U.S. banking organizations operate abroad.
The Fed and other agencies share the responsibility of overseeing the
operation of foreign banking organizations in the United States. To
insure that the banking system remains competitive and operates in the
public interest, the Fed considers applications by banks for mergers or
to open new branches.
The passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley (GLB) Act in November 1999, was
the culmination of a multi-decade effort to eliminate many of the
restrictions on the activities of banking organizations.
Some of the main provisions of the GLB are:
· Repeals the existing limitations on the ability of banks to affiliate
with securities and insurance firms
· Creates a new organizational form that allows banking organizations to
carry new powers. This new entity called a "financial holding company,"
(FHC) and its non-banking subsidiaries are allowed to engage in
financial activities such as insurance and securities underwriting
The Fed's enlarged role as an umbrella supervisor of FHCs is similar to
its role in supervising bank holding companies. The Federal Reserve
Banks will supervise and regulate the FHCs while each affiliate is still
overseen by its traditional functional regulator.
The Fed has to delineate the financial relationship between a bank and
other FHC affiliates. Its primary goal is to establish barriers
protecting depository institutions from the problems of a failing
affiliate. To do this efficiently the Fed has to ensure increased
communication, cooperation, and coordination with the many supervisors
of the more diversified FHCs.
The Fed has access to data on risks across the entire organization, as
well as information on the firm's management of those risks. Regulators
will be in a position to evaluate and presumably act on risks that
threaten the safety and soundness of the insured banks.
It would appear that the Fed has failed to curb housing inflation which
played a role in this entire debacle then made matters worse and in
their efforts or lack there of, to properly supervise banking
institutions.
Finally the government, a.k.a. Uncle Sam, the big Kahuna 10,000 pound
elephant etc. Where do we begin? How about with: 'Where were they?'
It now appears that after millions of horses are out of the barn (some
horses ran, others were foreclosed upon) the government wants to step in
with a bailout to save the rest. While nobody wants to see people lose
their homes, the question that must be raised is this: What about all
those of us who were responsible? Those of us, who scrimped and saved up
a decent down payment, bought less-house than we could afford and who
live below our means? Many of us drive older cars and keep them longer.
We don't run out and buy the latest and greatest at inflated prices, we
watch, wait and budget.
When the World Trade Center was attacked, families who decided not to
sue received government payouts and we certainly don't begrudge them as
I'm sure that given the choice, they'd prefer to still have their
loved-ones over the money. The problem, in typical government fashion is
that those who were responsible and had insurance policies in place
received less than those who were irresponsible and didn't plan ahead.
I'm not talking about dishwashers at Windows on the World and blue
collar workers; I'm talking about executives, traders and people who
should have known better.
Now our government, the same government that sat by idly watching as
this bubble got bigger and bigger despite many warnings, wants to step
in and bailout people who are in danger of losing their homes. There has
been no talk about educating people, let's not teach people to fish,
rather, let's give them a fish and bail them out once again at the
expense of those who are responsible.
Clearly, by keeping the majority of the population financially ignorant,
there is a lot of money to be made by the poverty industry.
About The Author
Richard Gandon is the Managing Director of The Financial Learning
Network, dedicated low-cost online to financial literacy seminars. His
'Understanding the Stock Market" course was made into a CD-ROM and is in
use in more that 50,000 classrooms nationwide. Every year since 1998,
Richard has teamed up with a fifth grade class in Georgia to teach them
about the stock market online. Richard has more than 20 years of
financial services industry experience including as a broker, trader,
licensing trainer and managed both a sales group and Central Inquiry, a
Historical Equity & Index Research group at Standard & Poor's.
http://financiallearningnetwork.com/