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Helping the housing bubble along

31 Jan 2008 04:29 pm

Regarding the housing crisis, Mr Brian Beutler asks:

Is this crisis truly devoid of any partisan responsibility? In something like a mathematical sense, I'm prepared to pin most of the blame on Greenspan. But isn't at least some of this political and cultural in origin? To me it seems very much as if the Bush administration and Congressional Republicans (and plenty of Democrats) have done everything they can--through bankruptcy legislation and various other regressive policies--to assure creditors of all species that the government stands firmly behind predatory lending, consequences to the poor and uninformed (and, of course, to the economy) be damned. That must have had some impact, yes?

In a word, no.

I wouldn't even pin most of the blame on Greenspan. It's not clear how much of an effect the money supply had on the mortgage bubble; the starring role seems to go to the river of capital pouring in from abroad, mostly courtesy of Asian central banks who were manipulating their exchange rates by buying dollars, and then parking the funds in various asset classes. If interest rates were too low, this should have staunched the flow by making US investments less attractive; they certainly didn't do that. I need to go back and re-read my Monetary History of the United States (where is that box . . . ), but my impression is that the Fed had a similar problem in the 1920s. They actually did raise interest rates quite a bit in an effort to choke off the stock market bubble, but all this did was encourage foreign capital to pour into the United States, to buy stocks and be loaned out on margin.

As for the federal government, I've been wracking my brains, and I've yet to come up with any Bush administration policy that credibly made the housing bubble worse. If anything, his biggest policy achievement should have tamped down the bubble. The Bush tax cuts, by reducing tax rates, also substantially reduced the value of the mortgage interest tax deduction. That should, in turn, have reduce the amount that people were willing to pay for a house (though this is complicated, because of course people might want to spend their extra post-tax income on more housing).

The biggest problems with mortgage lending seem to have occurred during the mortgage brokering process, and mortgage brokers are regulated at the state level. Many of the worst-hit states are controlled by Democrats.

The bankruptcy code, including the recent reform, just doesn't have much effect on mortgages. Bankruptcy is only tangentially concerned with secured debt, like mortgages; that is what the foreclosure process is for. The bankruptcy reform did (in one of its least useless provisions) put a stop to a tactic that people used to use in order to avoid eviction or foreclosure: serially declaring Chapter 13 every time the bailiffs got close. But this wasn't all that common, and at any rate, not even the consumer advocates I interviewed on the topic wanted to defend that particular stunt.

But at any rate, the level of the homestead exemption--which governs whether or not you get to keep your house in a bankruptcy--is also set at the state level. The only major change the recent bankruptcy reform made to this was a small provision aimed at OJ Simpson, which prevents people from moving to states with an unlimited homestead exemption in order to shelter income from criminal and civil recovery. (This being how OJ dodged Ron Goldman's family lawsuit.) In most states you can declare bankruptcy without losing your house, and you can certainly lose your house without declaring bankrutpcy, and neither has very much to do with the Bush administration.

Some people are criticizing the Bush administration for not doing anything about the housing bubble--setting up an agency to keep the banks from lending so profligately, say. (Though I notice very few of them noticed we needed this in, say, 2003.) But I don't think anyone credible has a very good theory whereby something the Bush administration did actually produced the housing bubble. Human beings are natural born speculators. They don't really need all that much help to lose their heads.

Comments (31)

It's not like no one noticed the bubble, either. Back in 2003 (May 29), The Economist said "This survey will conclude that the latest housing boom has inflated bubbles in several countries, notably America, Australia, Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands and Spain. Within the next year or so those bubbles are likely to burst, leading to falls in average real house prices of 15-20% in America and 30% or more elsewhere over the next few years, in line with average price declines during past housing-market busts."

Surely the Bush Administration and Congressional Republicans did not also cause the bubbles in Australia, Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands and Spain.

Indeed. The only legislation that could really be thought to "assure creditors of all species that the government stands firmly behind predatory lending, consequences to the poor and uninformed (and, of course, to the economy) be damned," would be various fair housing lending and anti-redlining and community reinvestment laws meant to combat racism in lending practices. Any of those regulations, taken to an extreme, can lead to lenders being forced to lend to the poor and uninformed when the loan might fail rather than rejecting them. However, this current crisis does not seem to be a problem of loaning too much to the poor and minorities in distressed areas (though there is a ring of truth in the statement that any problem falls hardest on the poor, because being poor means having fewer resources to deal with problems). Rather, many of the largest problems seem to have been in fast-growing areas, with people with decent incomes if not a lot of built-up wealth.

Can a housing bubble be caused by inane grinning and silly facial gestures? The logic is, I think, that Bush is a bit of a hick. Then, as the Latinists say, "post hick, propter hick".

Furthermore, the bankruptcy bill passed with sizable bipartisan support, making it pretty difficult to tag as the fault of the Bush administration. If the dems had wanted to, they were perfectly capable of blocking it in the Senate.

The situation we find ourselves in may not have been caused by Greenspan, but he certainly didn't help. Higher rates and a stronger dollar since 2002 probably would not have prevented the real estate bubble or the subprime meltdown. On the other hand, we would be in a much better position to mitigate the negative consequences today if we were cutting from a higher baseline and the dollar was in better shape. If the numbers I'm reading regarding the enormous leap in foreclosed residential real estate held in inventory by lending institutions are correct, then we are not even close to out of the woods yet. I'm looking for a cascade effect as banks try to get anything they can for the real estate assets that they are now stuck with, and drive the residential real estate markets even lower, eliminating more equity, causing more foreclosures, etc......
So here's my question - why not bail out the banks by taking the real estate off the market? I hate government intervention in markets on principle, but it makes more sense than writing everybody a $300 check or freezing mortgage rates. Rather than devaluing the currency to prop up banks with piles of overvalued real estate assets and shaky paper, just have the United States government buy out every foreclosed property on the books as of 1/1/08 at say 80% of face. I realize that I'm being overly simplistic here, and that there would be all kinds of unintended consequences to something like this, but I believe the basic premise of directly injecting cash into the banking system while moving the supply curve by lessening the supply of residential property for sale is an "out of the box" idea worth exploring.

As someone who has been in the thick of housing finance since the 80's, I vividly recall the late 1990s as a "share the wealth" populist orgy from the Clintons and their cronies at Fannie Mae that would have made old Huey Long blush.

Everyone was supposed to get a mortgage. If your credit was crap, Mr Franklin Roosevelt Raines and his computers at Fannie Mae could underwrite you on the strength of your timely cableTV payments (forget those darned predatory credit card bills you haven't been paying).

Oh yes, and the banking regulators - Dem appointees that is - were whuppin' those bankers that didn't want to lend to the "underserved". Miss Hillary herself was pushin' for Community Development Banks and "micro-finance" right here in the USA!

No reason nobody couldn't get a loan, no siree Bob!

Yes indeed, that's when subprime and 120% loan-to-value loans got hopping. These newfangled computers (Mr. Gore invented that internet) could separate the wheat from the chaff (and aren't we all wheat) and if your credit wasn't so good (through no fault of your own, mind) maybe we could raise the interest rate by 2, 3 4%.

I remember it all very clearly but somehow not many other poeple seem do these days. Life is like a box of cherries... or something like that

Monetary policy osn't everything, and neither is bankruptcy law, although these and other factors no doubt matter. The rhinoceros in the corner of the room is land. The real estate bubble was largely a land bubble. Land is especially susceptible to bubbles, because they aren't making any more of it in response to increased prices. So prices can rise and rise, and rise further when more money is lent based on inflated land prices, and rise yet further until prices are so high people *need* exotic mortgages to buy land, so there's more lending and more high prices, until something has to give. People can't afford land for new homes, and they realize that land prices can't rise by double digits every year forever. Then the bubble bursts.

There was an interesting N+1 interview with an anonymous hedge fund manager a while back. His explanation for the housing bubble is interesting:

But there wasn’t a lot of human judgment going on. In reality those guys were so far from the true collateral that underlay the paper—they have no idea. It’s like they’re buying CP of a conduit, the conduit’s buying triple-A paper of a CDO, the CDO is set up by a hedge fund that’s bought mortgage pools from a mortgage originator, and the mortgage originator is the one who realizes that they lent half a million dollars on a house in Stockton, California, to... someone who makes 50,000 dollars a year. That’s where the specific knowledge about the risk resides, but the ultimate risk-taker is very very far away from that.


So what happened is this machine—let’s call it, it’s a big machine that wanted to gobble up, you know, rated paper—needed to be fed. So there were people who could make a lot of money feeding the machine, and they were like, you know, “We need to keep originating mortgages, and feeding them to the machine,” and if you have a robot bid, you tend to get a bubble. Someone is hungry for paper, paper will be created.

And that’s almost never a good thing that lending decisions are being driven by the fact that many, many steps down the chain there’s just someone who wants to buy paper.

I thought it was interesting for him to assert that the demand for paper drove the mortgage originations, not the other way around.

Ok. But the point I was trying to get at with my question was more cultural than policy oriented. I did not mean to suggest that some nefarious provision of law actually fed the beast, but that everything coming out of Washington--the policies, the rhetoric, the gift baskets, whatever--all sent a clear message to the speculators. And that message was that no banker or hedge funder need worry; the federal government is here to make sure you guys can get away with whatever you want.

(Also, contrary to your post, there were plenty of people warning about this for quite some time. None of them were working for the government, though, and if they had been, they would have been unceremoniously fired.)

"Lenin was surely right. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose." -- John Maynard Keynes

http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data

"Human beings are natural born speculators."--MM

nice theory, MM, as good as many others..

One thing I hear nobody talking about in the current mortgage 'crisis' is the long-term effects/efficacy of the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997. This was the change that allowed single and married homeowners to pay no tax on capital gains of $250,000 and $500,000, respectively, from the sale of their primary residence (loosely defined as having lived in the home 2 of the previous 5 years). The "old law" only allowed a one-time gain of $125,000 to persons over 55.

To me, this created an incentive (or call it a bias) to view houses as mere investments for quick profit, not as "homes" in the traditional sense. Why invest in stocks when you can buy a home, move in for a couple of years, and profit handsomely?

I know a few people of very modest means who took advantage of this law and easy credit to buy a house, live in it 2 years, sell it, trade up, and repeat. Over and over.

They key, though, is that by about the third time the jig is up. Because housing prices are (were) rising -- the very basis of the profits -- each successive home purchase required a larger mortgage. I.e., the profit from the sale of house one is the down payment on the purchase of home two and so on. You have more 'equity' in dollars with each successive home, but you also have more debt. Further, if you were foolish enough to extract some of that equity for other purposes (the ATM analogy), you've only added to that debt.

I could go on and on, but I think everyone realizes that at some price point there simply won't be any buyers. First time buyers who aren't already part of this game simply can't get into it. Reminds me of a pyramid scheme quite frankly.

The biggest problems with mortgage lending seem to have occurred during the mortgage brokering process, and mortgage brokers are regulated at the state level. Many of the worst-hit states are controlled by Democrats

So actually the Democrats are responsible for the housing mess. Meet the new villains, same as the old villains. Methinks your bias is showing.

I don't buy your theory either. Asian banks (notably China) were managing their currencies to export more “products” to the U.S., not to earn income on U.S. assets. The trade deficit is as much our fault as those bad Asians. You act as if our government and private industry has no role whatsoever in creating the massive current account deficit. Also the housing bubble developed when the dollar was appreciating (or overvalued) primarily because of the Asian banks demand for dollars. Most of these were parked in government bonds etc., not in real estate. So as I understand it lax monetary policy has a big role to play in the housing bubble.

Besides everyone knew there was a housing bubble on for the longest possible time. The government had adequate knowledge about is. But they did nothing. It happened during the Bush administration’s watch and I’m really surprised that somehow they always end up blameless. Contrast that with the opprobrium on the Clinton administration about the 90s stock market bubble.

The housing bubble happened primarily because of lax lending standards, greed, and cheap monetary policy (as we borrowed the heck from China and others to run our amazing deficits). It is amazing that you overlook its role so casually. That is both poor analysis and irresponsible. Maybe reflects your bias that the Fed, the Republicans, and the almighty market can do no wrong. If something bad happened, it must somehow be the fault of those damn socialist Democrats.

What about the 2003 American Dream Downpayment Initiative that Bush signed into law under a Republican House and Senate? It guaranteed a downpayment and loan to people who would otherwise be considered too risky by banks.

They want have it both ways. They try to increase home ownership (because someone did their research and found out that homeowners vote) and get credit for making these people homeowners. But when it turns out that lenders had a pretty good system for handling risk to begin with and the new system causes havok, they want to blame the lenders for it. As I say, government is the only place where you can fail and then call for more of what failed.

Appropos of this thread, there was a fascinating article in the Financial Times yesterday:

The issue at stake revolves around so-called delinquency rates, the proportion of people who fall behind on their debt repayments. When American households have faced hard times in previous decades, they tended to default on unsecured loans such as credit cards and car loans first – and stopped paying their mortgage only as a last resort. However, in the last couple of years households have become delinquent on their mortgages much faster than trends in the wider economy might suggest. That is particularly true of the less creditworthy subprime borrowers. More­over, consumers have stopped paying mortgages before they halt payments on their credit cards or automotive loans – turning the traditional delinquency pattern on its head. As a result, mortgage lenders have started to face losses at a much earlier stage than in the past.

It goes on to note that one of the main reasons for default is that loan-to-value is so out of whack that walking away from a house that's underwater is very easy.

Crazy_Idea: That's actually not that crazy of an idea. Keep in mind, the Fed already does exactly that, except at a smaller discount, and with bonds instead of of houses. That is, part of the Fed's job is to maintain liquidity, and it does that buy buying up insufficiently liquid assets at a slight discount, knowing that it will be able to ride out the liquidity problems.

So, right now, the Fed could add homes to its portfolio and it would be implementing your idea. Now, how good is the Fed at appraising real estate? ;-)

Someone should write a skit about that too: i.e. the plot is that some ivory-tower Fed bankers are out house-shopping, and they realize they don't have the slightest clue how much any of the featuures the real estate agent is showing them are worth, so they have to call their wives (who do all that kind of stuff) and what follows is a long whiny call about what's important in a home.

Great idea :-)

I don't think a single cause makes complete sense. But if you want one, try: History, Economic, Teaching, Failure to.

Every bubble repeats the same pattern. And every time, people repeat the same mistake. And act astonished when they get burned.

Rum Raisin: I believe the point was not that "the Democrats are to blame", but "anyone trying to blame it on the Republicans has a huge problem at the State level".

My impression of Megan's posts on the subject is that the doesn't think any party is to blame, or really anything but too much money chasing housing, and too many banks willing to make risky loans (and others willing to buy packages of loans that included same).

Sometimes (usually, in fact, with problems like this) there aren't any villains as such.

The biggest problems with mortgage lending seem to have occurred during the mortgage brokering process, and mortgage brokers are regulated at the state level. Many of the worst-hit states are controlled by Democrats.

I don't think this quite tells the whole story. In particular, the Bush Administration, via the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, moved aggressively to preempt state regulation of subprime mortgage lending by national banks before the subprime crisis broke out. (Here, for example, are remarks by the Comptroller before the Federalist Society in 2003 explaining what the OCC was doing to stop such regulation by state governments.)

This is certainly not to say that the Bush Administration is responsible for the current crisis (for one thing, lots of subprime lenders were not national banks). That said, I don't think the Administration exactly covered itself in glory on this issue.

Megan,

There's one obvious federal policy that was pushed by both Clinton and Bush. The federal government for at least 15 years has been pushing lenders hard to lend more to minorities, suing lenders for discrimination who don't meet ethnic quotas in their loans.

Before this push began in the early 1990s, blacks and whites had equal default rates. Today, blacks and Hispanics have higher default rates than whites. Surprise, surprise!

I doubt the the Community Reinvestment Act, enacted in 1977, is the cause of our present difficulties (regardless of whether it is or isn't a good idea for other reasons).

What about the 2003 American Dream Downpayment Initiative that Bush signed into law under a Republican House and Senate? It guaranteed a downpayment and loan to people who would otherwise be considered too risky by banks.

If the government had gauranteed these loans, there wouldn't be a crisis, would there? Or are you saying that government gauranteed that certain people could get loans but didn't gaurantee the loan itself?

If banks are forced to make bad loans by the government, then that's presumably bad for the banks. But why under those circumstance would anyone buy a package of these presumably bad loans from a bank? Isn't that a bad decision? If the government isn't making you do that, why would you do it?

I may be wrong, but my understanding was that a lot of risky loans were bundled together and sold as lower risk instruments. While it's true that, in theory, a bunch of higher risks that are independent can be aggregated to give you a lower net risk, if a bunch of your high risks fail at the same time, you're still screwed.

The other problem, I believe, is that the actual, underlying risk wasn't known to the buyers of the bundles. How, exactly, this happened, I'm not sure.

"Human beings are natural born speculators. They don't really need all that much help to lose their heads."-MM

I just want to note once again that this is totally incompatible with the Efficient Markets Hypothesis.

"The efficient markets hypothesis assumes that the people buying and selling stock rationally process the information they have about the stock's underlying value. But is the stock market really rational? Or do stock prices sometimes deviate from reasonable expectations of their true value?"-Greg Mankiw, Essentials of Economics, 4th ed., Ch 19

I couldn't resist one more chance to point out the glaring contradiction in McArdle's commentary about market efficiency and investor behavior. It's fun, I admit, but I think it also helps clarify things for those who haven't studied these issues in depth... She won't respond of course.

Re: I believe, is that the actual, underlying risk wasn't known to the buyers of the bundles. How, exactly, this happened, I'm not sure.

Because mortgages are failing in ways that were rare and unusual in times past. The securities and their underlying mortgages were being analyzed according to historical trends. Unfortunately we live in interesting times and the past has turned out not to be a good predictor of the future.

Well, the bankruptcy bill did make it harder to get rid of credit card debt when you go bankrupt. One side effect of that is people are paying off their high interest credit card debt instead of paying their mortgage. Before people would pay off their mortgage, keep their house when they went bankrupt, and get most or all of their credit card debt forgiven.

On net this is probably a bad thing since the foreclosure process is very costly, whereas forgiving credit card debt is basically costless (it's just a transfer payment). Writing off debt has some general moral hazard problems, but it seems to apply to both about equally.

Mortgage banking isn't really regulated by the states. Some license, but no one regulates. Greenspan was given authority to regulate the industry, and in true Randian fashion, he didn't.

I'd just append the notion of federal pre-emption to this posting. While it is true, as the author notes, that much regulation of state chartered banks is at the state level, the federal OCC has sweeping authority over nationally chartered banks, and does not hesitate to use it. accordingly, a handful of state regulations that might've restricted predatory lending/subprime lending (let's eschew a discussion of those definitions, shall we?), were beaten down by the OCC in the early 2000s. The effect of which, I'll leave to the econometricians and the ideologues. Not to suggest that the OCC has partisan motivations, but is more concerned about providing a level national playing field, as well as possibly protecting its own raison d'etre.

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