|
March 9, 2008
Bernanke
on the Mortgage Market House of Cards
by Gary North, Ph.D.
The
worst is not behind us. The worst is yet to come. I
have this on the highest authority -- from the man
who has openly admitted that his organization has
no solutions to offer except month-old data on the
extent of the housing crisis.
When the public at last figures this out, there
will be financial blood in the streets.
When I first read Ben Bernanke's March 4 speech,
I was amazed at how gloomy he was in full public
view. He concealed this gloominess with academic
bloviation, which is his version of Greenspan's
FedSpeak. But if you pay attention to what he says,
you can find out much of what he is thinking. This
was not true with Greenspan.
Bernanke spoke on the need for banks to reduce
interest rates for busted home owners. This
indicates just how scared he is. To argue for a
rewriting of millions of contracts to favor debtors
is one more example of the asymmetric nature of
mortgages. Lenders lose; debtors win.
His long, tedious, and thoroughly academic
speech revealed an academic economist whose career
has not yet hit the inevitable brick wall: the
unforgiving realities of capital markets,
contracts, and an economic crisis. He may still
believe that footnotes will save his reputation.
They won't.
He is presiding over a stock market decline that
threatens to turn into a collapse. Yet he pretends
that being a boring professor in public will
somehow calm international stock markets. It
won't.
Greenspan was incoherent. Bernanke is boring.
His rhetorical strategy in his speeches is to drone
on and on about what is now obvious to all of his
listeners. He thereby avoids concentrating on
looming disasters that are not yet obvious to his
listeners. But, unlike Greenspan, he eventually
does hint at what is not yet obvious. I slog
through his speeches in search of those hints.
Bernanke's public strategy for the last six
months has been to offer a series of detailed
analyses of how the horses got out of the barn. He
has no clue as to how to get them back in.
REDUCING PREVENTABLE MORTGAGE
FORECLOSURES
The mortgage market, as we all know, is the
heart of the current problem. It is a gigantic
carry trade market, and it always has been.
Mortgage lenders are borrowed short and lent long,
which is the essence of the carry trade. Now this
trade has been disrupted because what should have
been obvious in 2005: the inability of subprime
borrowers to pay off their loans. This has become
public knowledge. The mortgage lenders cannot raise
the short-term capital necessary for the game to go
on as before. Here is what is obvious to most
investors at this point.
- Over the past year and a half, mortgage
delinquencies have increased sharply, especially
among riskier loans. This development has
triggered a substantial and broad-based
reassessment of risk in financial markets, and
it has exacerbated the contraction in the
housing sector. In my remarks today, I will
discuss the causes of the distress in the
mortgage sector and then turn to the key
question of what can be done in this environment
to reduce preventable foreclosures.
This newly reassessed risk is based on a
discovery, namely, that Greenspan's ludicrously
loose monetary policies, 2000-2003, have led to a
housing bubble crisis. But Bernanke will never
admit this in public.
He is now in search of new suppliers of pools of
capital who are willing to rush in and bail out the
mortgage-lending market. Who wants to be first?
Nobody. But the crisis will get much worse if
lenders don't enter this market to provide loans
for visible deadbeat borrowers. This must be done
very soon.
If the deadbeats walk away from their homes, and
if new lenders are not found to fund replacement
owners, America will experience hundreds of
billions of dollars of property equity decline by
the end of 2009. He will not say this directly, but
this is the problem. Squatters and the weather will
take over occupancy.
Who, then, should rush in where angels fear to
tread? Local banks, says Bernanke. They did not
create the crisis, but they must solve it.
- Although I am aware, as you are, that
community banks originated few subprime
mortgages, community bankers are keenly
interested in these issues; foreclosures not
only create personal and financial distress for
individual homeowners but also can significantly
hurt neighborhoods where foreclosures cluster.
Efforts by both government and private-sector
entities to reduce unnecessary foreclosures are
helping, but more can, and should, be done.
Community bankers are well positioned to
contribute to these efforts, given the strong
relationships you have built with your customers
and your communities.
Local banks got out of the mortgage market two
decades ago, after the savings & loan debacle
took its toll. Government-guaranteed mortgage
lenders entered, pooling trillions of dollars of
mortgages based on a broad geographical base of
loans from around the country. This was done in the
name of asset diversification. It also cut costs of
local monitoring. The statisticians assessed the
risk, and nobody was hired locally to monitor the
loans and collect monthly payments. So, local banks
took commissions for originating loans locally and
then passed the loans on to Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac.
Local banks went into commercial real estate
instead. Their banks are now at risk. The
Comptroller of the Currency, John Dugan, on January
31 gave a
speech to the Florida Bankers Association. He
made this unsettling observation.
- Over a third of the nation's community banks
have commercial real estate concentrations
exceeding 300 percent of their capital, and
almost 30 percent have construction and
development loans exceeding 100 percent of
capital.
-
- Here in Florida, as in other states where
housing is so important to local economic
growth, the concentration levels are more
pronounced.
-
- Over 60 percent of Florida banks have CRE
loans exceeding 300 percent of capital, and more
than half have C&D loans exceeding 100
percent of capital.
When the commercial real estate market begins to
fall in the recession, as it will, local banks will
have their hands full. Where will they get the
capital to head off foreclosures in the residential
estate market?
So, no one is available locally to monitor the
empty houses or screen replacement home owners. The
cost of monitoring is rising. The number of people
locally to do the job has declined.
Bernanke now thinks that local banks are ready,
willing, and able to take over their old tasks. But
how? No one has been trained to do this for 20
years. The people with these skills have retired.
The local banks got cut out of the mortgage market
except as loan originators, which economic idiots
could do, and did.
Why would any local bank step in now? Not to get
rich, surely. Only to keep from getting poorer in a
national banking crisis. Here is Bernanke's
message: "Heads, you lost; tails, you will lose
even more. Step right up! This way to the
guillotine!"
Then he went into his now-famous "Let me give
you a history of the foul-up instead of offering a
solution" routine. Or, as I have often described
it, blah, blah, blah.
MORTGAGE DELINQUENCIES AND
FORECLOSURES
Here is what we all know. So, he calls it to our
attention.
- Mortgage delinquencies began to rise in
mid-2005 after several years at remarkably low
levels. The worst payment problems have been
among subprime adjustable-rate mortgages
(subprime ARMs); more than one-fifth of the 3.6
million loans outstanding were seriously
delinquent at the end of 2007. Delinquency rates
have also risen for other types of mortgages,
reaching 8 percent for subprime fixed-rate loans
and 6 percent on adjustable-rate loans
securitized in alt-A pools. . . .
Boring. Useless. Irrelevant. In other words, a
Ph.D. academic economist's career strategy. "Bore
them into submission." It won't work.
It's going to get worse, he says. Yes, he says
this in a boring way. Pay attention anyway. Watch
for key phrases, such as this one: "some further
declines in house prices are likely." They surely
are!
- Delinquencies and foreclosures likely will
continue to rise for a while longer, for several
reasons. First, supply-demand imbalances in many
housing markets suggest that some further
declines in house prices are likely, implying
additional reductions in borrowers' equity.
Second, many subprime borrowers are facing
imminent resets of the interest rates on their
mortgages.
Ed McMahon used to ask Johnny Carson, "How bad
is it?" Bernanke plays the role of Carson, but
without the humor.
- In 2008, about 1-1/2 million loans,
representing more than 40 percent of the
outstanding stock of subprime ARMs, are
scheduled to reset. We estimate that the
interest rate on a typical subprime ARM
scheduled to reset in the current quarter will
increase from just above 8 percent to about
9-1/4 percent, raising the monthly payment by
more than 10 percent, to $1,500 on average.
Declines in short-term interest rates and
initiatives involving rate freezes will reduce
the impact somewhat, but interest rate resets
will nevertheless impose stress on many
households.
In other words, we have not yet begun to see the
carnage in the subprime market. The problem is
refinancing. No one wants to lend strapped,
stressed debtors any more money.
- In the past, subprime borrowers were often
able to avoid resets by refinancing, but
currently that avenue is largely closed.
Borrowers are hampered not only by their lack of
equity but also by the tighter credit conditions
in mortgage markets. New securitizations of
nonprime mortgages have virtually halted, and
commercial banks have tightened their standards,
especially for riskier mortgages. Indeed, the
available evidence suggests that private lenders
are originating few nonprime loans at any
terms.
-
- This situation calls for a vigorous
response.
Ah, yes, the ever-popular "vigorous response."
And what has the FED's response been? To deflate.
The financial press has not yet caught on.
The
FED has not inflated. It has deflated.
What additional vigorous response does Bernanke
have in mind? Administered how? How fast? With who
in charge? Using what for money? At whose
expense?
Here comes neighborhood blight, like a thief in
the night. Here comes the collapse of collateral
for millions of bonehead loans.
- At the level of the individual community,
increases in foreclosed-upon and vacant
properties tend to reduce house prices in the
local area, affecting other homeowners and
municipal tax bases. At the national level, the
rise in expected foreclosures could add
significantly to the inventory of vacant unsold
homes -- already at more than 2 million units at
the end of 2007 -- putting further pressure on
house prices and housing construction.
He said steps are underway to solve this
problem. He gives no proof of how these steps can
work or if they are working now. He said:
"Policymakers and stakeholders have been working to
find effective responses to the increases in
delinquencies and foreclosures." Oh, yeah? So
what?
There is a big and growing problem. This problem
was created by loose money policies under Greenspan
and by national mortgage lending agencies (GSE's).
But the economic hit will be taken locally.
"Troubled borrowers will always require individual
attention, and the most immediate impacts of
foreclosures are on local communities. Thus, the
support of counselors, lenders, and organizations
with local ties is critical." But where are these
local agencies? What incentives do they have to
step in?
In short, forget about the busted borrowers.
What about the troubled lenders? Busted and
troubled lenders? Who is going to finance borrowers
who have no credit, no extra money, and no jobs in
a recession?
"O course, care must be taken in designing
solutions." Spoken like a true academic. What care?
Administered by whom? "Solutions should also be
prudent and consistent with the safety and
soundness of the lender." Like what, for
instance?
Bernanke then droned on and on about the Federal
Housing Administration's plans, as if the FHA had
money to solve the problem, as if the FHA were
involved in this massive pile of bad mortgage
loans. The FHA is a peripheral player, yet this is
the main government agency in the housing loan
market. So, he talked about the toothless FHA. This
indicates that the government has no tools or plans
to intervene. But what else could he have done? He
dared not admit that the government has
insufficient money and leverage to solve this
crisis.
He then called for a vague "loss-mitigation
arrangements." Like what? Administered by whom
locally? At whose expense? With losses to be borne
by whom?
- In cases where refinancing is not possible,
the next-best solution may often be some type of
loss-mitigation arrangement between the lender
and the distressed borrower. Indeed, the Federal
Reserve and other regulators have issued
guidance urging lenders and servicers to pursue
such arrangements as an alternative to
foreclosure when feasible and prudent.
Guidelines? That was what the mortgage industry
needed ten years ago.
The response system is running out of time, yet
foreclosure costs are high -- thousands of dollars
per home -- and the courts are jammed. Meanwhile,
an empty house falls in value within weeks, as
crackheads or weather take their toll.
You want to know what is coming? This: gigantic
equity losses. Yes, Bernanke is boring. Read him
anyway. The financial media are not reporting on
this.
- Loss mitigation is made more attractive by
the fact that foreclosure costs are often
substantial. Historically, the foreclosure
process has usually taken from a few months up
to a year and a half, depending on state law and
whether the borrower files for bankruptcy. The
losses to the lender include the missed mortgage
payments during that period, taxes, legal and
administrative fees, real estate owned (REO)
sales commissions, and maintenance expenses.
Additional losses arise from the reduction in
value associated with repossessed properties,
particularly if they are unoccupied for some
period.
He was talking about abandoned homes and equity
losses. This is happening already. This is not a
maybe. This is a sure thing. The loss of equity
will undermine the loans. Look at his estimate: 50%
of principal balance.
- A recent estimate based on subprime
mortgages foreclosed in the fourth quarter of
2007 indicated that total losses exceeded 50
percent of the principal balance, with legal,
sales, and maintenance expenses alone amounting
to more than 10 percent of principal. With the
time period between the last mortgage payment
and REO liquidation lengthening in recent
months, this loss rate will likely grow even
larger. Moreover, as the time to liquidation
increases, the uncertainty about the losses
increases as well.
Who is going to write new loans at anything like
today's home prices? Nobody who is not already
stuck with the bad loan. But these lenders are
running short of capital.
I love the man's use of language. Consider the
words "limited" and "considerable." He seeks to
convey calm. The reality of what he is describing
does not point to calm in the mortgage markets
anytime soon.
- The low prices offered for subprime-related
securities in secondary markets support the
impression that the potential for recovery
through foreclosure is limited. The magnitude
of, and uncertainty about, expected losses in a
foreclosure suggest considerable scope for
negotiating a mutually beneficial outcome if the
borrower wants to stay in the home.
Can any of this actually work? He used the
phrase "less likely." I agree entirely.
- Unfortunately, even though workouts may
often be the best economic alternative, mortgage
securitization and the constraints faced by
servicers may make such workouts less
likely.
So, how bad is it? Very bad and getting worse.
The default rate is rising.
- Despite this progress, delinquency and
default rates have risen quickly, and servicers
report that they are struggling to keep up with
the increased volumes. Of course, not all
delinquent subprime loans can be successfully
worked out; for example, borrowers who purchased
homes as speculative investments may not be
interested in retaining the home, and some
borrowers may not be able to sustain even a
reduced stream of payments. Nevertheless, scope
remains to prevent unnecessary
foreclosures.
Scope remains. I see. Scope. When I hear
"scope," I think of a mouthwash that covers bad
breath.
He made it plain: borrowers will be allowed to
escape their debts. Once again, the asymmetry of
the mortgage market becomes visible. Borrowers win.
Lenders lose.
- Lenders and servicers historically have
relied on repayment plans as their preferred
loss-mitigation technique. Under these plans,
borrowers typically repay the mortgage arrears
over a few months in addition to making their
regularly scheduled mortgage payments. . .
.
-
- Loan modifications, which involve any
permanent change to the terms of the mortgage
contract, may be preferred when the borrower
cannot cope with the higher payments associated
with a repayment plan.
Lenders are balking at writing down principal.
Surprise! Surprise! If they write it down, they
have to record this in their books as a loss. They
don't want to do this. They prefer to conceal the
loss with negotiated rates.
- Lenders tell us that they are reluctant to
write down principal. They say that if they were
to write down the principal and house prices
were to fall further, they could feel pressured
to write down principal again. Moreover, were
house prices instead to rise subsequently, the
lender would not share in the gains.
Then what can be done? Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac must come to the rescue. But with what? They
are under siege. Their credit ratings are held up
in the same way Wile E. Coyote was held up when he
overshot the ledge of a cliff. He has looked down,
but he is still hanging in mid-air. We await the
inevitable fall.
- The government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs),
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, likewise could do a
great deal to address the current problems in
housing and the mortgage market. New
capital-raising by the GSEs, together with
congressional action to strengthen the
supervision of these companies, would allow
Fannie and Freddie to expand significantly the
number of new mortgages that they securitize.
With few alternative mortgage channels available
today, such action would be highly beneficial to
the economy. I urge the Congress and the GSEs to
take the steps necessary to allow more potential
homebuyers access to mortgage credit at
reasonable terms.
CONCLUSION
The man droned on for another four pages of
text. All of it boiled down to this: the FED has no
solution. All that the FED can do is share data. As
a professor, Bernanke believes in data. As the head
of the FED, he has no answers, but he has lots and
lots of data to share.
- I would like to comment briefly on Federal
Reserve System efforts to reduce preventable
foreclosures and their costs on borrowers and
communities. The Federal Reserve can help by
leveraging three important strengths: our
analytical and data resources; our national
presence; and our history of working closely
with lenders, community groups, and other local
stakeholders. A major thrust of our efforts is
sharing relevant and timely data analysis of
mortgage delinquencies with community groups and
policymakers to efficiently target resources to
areas most in need.
If you think the FED can solve the mortgage
crisis, it's time to re-think your understanding of
the FED. Bernanke has confirmed Franklin Sanders'
aphorism: "The Federal Reserve has only two policy
tools: inflation and blarney."
Bernanke is running low on blarney.
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
To
subscribe to Gary North's Reality Check go to
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/sub/GetReality.cfm
If
you enjoyed this essay and would like to read more
of Gary's writing please visit his website at
http://www.garynorth.com
or http://www.freebooks.com
Because
The Radical Academy publishes essays and articles
on its website does not imply acceptance or
approval of the comments or opinions expressed by
the author of the material. Nor is the Academy
responsible for any misrepresentation of the facts
included. It is your job to be a critical
reader.
Enrich
Your Life With A Business Or Finance
Book
Enrich
Your Life With A Business Or Finance
Magazine
|