Posted on 11/15/2013 1:26:44 PM PST by whitedog57
I attended an excellent panel discussion at the Heritage Foundation in Washington D.C. today on GSE (housing) reform. The speakers were Mark Calabria (Cato), Alex Pollock (AEI), Arnold Kling (former Freddie Mac employee) and Josh Rosner (Graham-Fisher).
All speakers agreed that the government guarantee should be eliminated on residential mortgages. Essentially, the US over invests in housing to the detriment of other aspects of the economy. Sure, we got a bubble in house prices and homeownership, but we also neglected building factories and the rest of the economy (choosing instead to import goods from abroad). Here is the result of over investment in housing: a bubble and burst.
homeowncs10
Where do we go from here? Perhaps it is better to take an existing model (like the savings and loans or Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac) and tweak them. To create organizations from scratch for housing regulation is daunting (look at how many mistakes regulators of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have made, and Fannie Mae has been around since President Franklin Delano Roosevelt). There must be a better solution. Given that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are in conservatorship with FHFA indicates that creating a stable enterprise for mortgage finance is harder than it sounds.
The discussion turned to Corker-Warner (aka, Porker Warning!). If Corker-Warner sticks to 10% capital (or skin-in-the-game), it would be an improvement over the current model of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But it will eventually be watered down to 5% or less. But the Corker-Warner legislation contains affordable housing goals, the same torpedo that sank Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
affordgoals (1)
The problem with Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Corker-Warner legislation is that it is reform by repeating the same mistakes. Affordable housing goals have not really helped American families (unless you think putting Americans in homes that they cant afford and then go into default is good housing policy). Corker-Warner creates a NEW government insurance agency (to replace the Federal S&L Insurance Corporation which were replaced by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac). But like the movie Idiocracy, we have had government policies promoting homeownership in the same way that Brawndo was sprayed on crops and killed them).
hrrateus1900
Honeownership in the S&L / Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac period have ranged between 61.90% in 1960 and 66.90% in 2010. That is an increase of 5% in homeownership at a staggering cost in terms of house price collapse and defaults.
If not Corker-Warner, then what? My suggestion is simple. Keep Ed DeMarco as FHFA Director and let him continue regulating and modernizing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. That includes building the uniform securitization platform and gradually lowering conforming loan limits. In the short run, that is the best solution in my humble opinion.
Josh Rosner made an excellent point that under Corker-Warner, the community banks are virtually left out in the cold and would end up being loan originators for the biggest banks. And take all the origination underwriting risk.
But as Alex Pollock of AEI pointed out, we are constrained by the Housing Triangle (Fed, Treasury and Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac). They are really one in the same. Fed prints money and purchases GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC MBS. Then they go to Treasury if they lose money. I like to call this the Bermuda Triangle when taxpayer money vanishes without a trace.
Ideally, I would recommend scrapping affordable housing mandates and government insurance of residential mortgage loans, but the Senate is in Democrat control as is the Administration. I would furthermore suggest a housing finance reform bill that is even more free-market, less crony-oriented than the Houses PATH bill which still contains guarantees.
Of course, the panelists discussed much more than the points I have highlighted. It was a tremendous event and very educational.
Brawndo_Social_Head
P.S. Speaking of Brawndo, how about the success of The Feds monetary stimulus in creating jobs?
fredgraph-2
” - - - But the Corker-Warner legislation contains affordable housing goals, the same torpedo that sank Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. - - - “
Bad Senate RINO alert!
when you consider that with interst on a 30 year mortgage, the “planners” assume a “respectable” amount of housing-bubble (price inflation) is needed, lest people realize that without it they may never recover the full cost of what they paid - principal and interest; artificially ginning up demand gins up income and revenue for mortgages, and the rate of that ginning up demand creates price-bubbles to help make it possible to sell for more than what the 30yr mortgage - principal and interest cost and thus sustains the business model of those profiting from the mortgages (without telling the buyers their inflaed dollars the Fed has helped finance the whole thing with do not buy what their dollar bought when they started the mortgage - but telling them that would only make them aware that with inflation they were still getting screwed) No?
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