Building a Better Bailout

LINDSEY, LAWRENCE B.

Building a Better Bailout It’s time to reward virtue BY LAWRENCE B. LINDSEY The U.S. government’s efforts at containing the fi nancial crisis have to date been aimed at shoring up...

...The president went on television to tell the American people that the economy, which had been holding in the relatively fl at position for most of the summer, was about to collapse...
...A shift toward rewarding virtue would be the quickest way out of the debt morass we now fi nd ourselves in...
...Hence we hear proposals for more stimulus packages to put money into the pockets of consumers...
...On the positive side, this onetime refi nancing will not create a new bubble...
...Refi nancing is likely to provide a permanent economic boost...
...The American economy is in the midst of the fastest decline in consumer spending since 1980...
...If the home owner had two mortgages or a home equity line, they could all be rolled together into one new 30-year fi xed rate mortgage...
...Alternatively, in a market in which all houses now have newly created assumable mortgages, the equilibrium price of homes would rise by 26 percent...
...But it is also worth bearing in mind that this fi gure exaggerates the true scale of what is happening...
...Building a Better Bailout It’s time to reward virtue BY LAWRENCE B. LINDSEY The U.S...
...During the present crisis, the term “needy” has taken on new dimensions as some of the largest fi nancial institutions in the country are at risk...
...New mortgages will not get the new terms, only existing mortgages...
...Those especially concerned with budgetary cash fl ow might prefer a fi xed rate loan of 4.25 percent or might also consider putting “points” on the mortgage...
...It is quite natural for politicians to seek to target benefi ts on those that they perceive to be in need...
...As this went to press, the Dow Jones Industrial index stood 2,750 points below where it was the moment the bill fi nally passed, suggesting that Wall Street didn’t think it was a panacea either...
...The reasons are clear...
...A majority of the Republican members of the House voted against their own leadership and the president on the plan and were blamed by the media for the 778 point drop in the Dow that day...
...The result was a drop of more than half in the demand for new mortgages (including refi - nancing) as measured by the dollar volume of mortgages at a time when there was an excess supply of roughly 3 million homes...
...In essence, the government would be borrowing and lending at the same rate...
...The holder of the mortgage, i.e., the lender, bought that mortgage in search of long-term dollar denominated debt...
...With an estimated 18 percent of all mortgage holders now in homes with mortgages that are higher than current market values, providing incentives for people to stay in their current homes is the best way of stopping still more excess supply from coming on the market...
...Making a new 4 percent mortgage on an 80 percent loan-to-value mortgage assumable is equivalent to lowering the lifetime carrying cost of buying a home by 20 percent—compared to a mortgage rate of 6 percent...
...This loss lowers the amount of capital the bank has...
...Regardless of motive, the reality is that these programs and indeed the bailout’s whole approach is failing...
...Thus, not only is the uncertainty removed, but the entire fi nancial system is liquefi ed...
...It would take a sustained reduction in rates that applied to new mortgages to produce the fi nancial fuel for another housing bubble...
...It is the normal political response to the wheel that is squeaking the loudest...
...The problem is sorting out the prudent from the frivolous...
...So instead banks must shed good investments, and they are now doing so with a vengeance by refusing to make new loans and resisting the rolling over of existing loans...
...None of the $700 billion targeted for TARP will be used as originally intended...
...Indeed, a refi - nancing on this magnitude is far better targeted at those most likely to respond to improved cash fl ow than are the proposed tax rebates...
...A wave of refi nancing on this magnitude carries a price tag...
...Only the homeowner knows whether he or she will be likely to stay in the house and repay the mortgage or be forced to give it up...
...Because of the distress in the market, the value of the CDOs keeps falling, and, as banks must report the value of assets over time, the banks must take a loss...
...The key is that homeowners would have to make the choice...
...But this is offset by an equal increase in government assets...
...The big lesson of the bubbles of the last 20 years is that there is no free lunch...
...Under the current arrangements, the homeowner has no incentive or need to signal his or her intentions...
...The vast bulk of the funds are also likely to be reinvested in long-term dollar denominated debt— particularly long-dated U.S...
...This consumes capital...
...First, a family with a $200,000 mortgage at 6 percent (typically a family with an income in the $40,000 to $50,000 range) would receive an improvement in their annual cash fl ow of $3,000, four times as much as the proposed Obama stimulus payment...
...It contained unworkable logistical hurdles...
...2) stabilizing home prices...
...There would be no debt-to-income or loan-tovalue thresholds to qualify for the new loan...
...The new mortgages should have a substantially lower interest rate than existing mortgages...
...Therefore, the net pressure on the fi nancial markets will be fairly small even though the volume of transactions will be quite large...
...The refinancing would also mean a permanent improvement in household fi nancial conditions while a typical onetime stimulus package would not...
...But there are no free bailouts, either...
...Lawrence B. Lindsey, a former governor of the Federal Reserve, was special assistant to President Bush for economic policy and director of the National Economic Council at the White House...
...Second, the housing market continues to fall—prices are down 22 percent from their peak and dropping roughly 1 percent per month...
...For example, anyone with a 6 percent mortgage would see a 200 basis point drop in the cost of carrying a home...
...As noted in an earlier article in THE WEEKLY STANDARD (“High Anxiety,” September 29, 2008), the underlying problem in the mortgage market is that the credit terms for home mortgages shifted abruptly from the most generous in history to more-restrictive-than-normal between mid2006 and late 2007...
...Under this plan, virtuous homeowners who actually know they will stay in their home determine the price, and determine it with certainty, rather than relying on some computer model that, frankly, has no idea...
...If they planned to live there for many years, there would be no problem...
...Homeowners facing some economic distress but who otherwise would like to stay in their homes, even though the price was below the mortgage, might still fi nd it attractive to take the new fi nancing deal...
...The effects of the 4 percent mortgage plan on the housing market would be indirect, but quite real...
...The rest will be spent on other distressed fi rms and troubled markets...
...Yet the Democrats in Congress clamor for more relief, such as bankruptcy “cramdowns,” which unilaterally reduce the mortgage payments for people who can’t afford them...
...The world is divided into two sets of homeowners: those who think they will repay and those who don’t...
...Credit is now being cut back drastically...
...Think of it as the IRS providing the loan on the same collection terms as it does on taxes, or perhaps using the powers the government now has to collect on student loans...
...This substantially lowers the cost of acquisition and makes the house a far more liquid asset than it other wise would be...
...It is true that the Obama tax cut would also go to people without mortgages...
...Homeowners would have to think very carefully about taking the new loan...
...During the campaign, Presidentelect Obama called for giving an average of $700 to middleincome families, making up the cost by raising taxes on upper income households...
...There is a reason that government efforts have so far been focused on helping out those who have failed rather than those who have behaved virtuously...
...Under this plan, a buyer of a home with a new 4 percent mortgage gets to take over that mortgage as a part of the purchase...
...Third, with unemployment rising and consumer credit tight, household cash fl ow is in desperate shape...
...Funds have to be raised to issue the new mortgages, but each time a new mortgage is issued an existing mortgage of an equal amount is redeemed...
...Instead most of it will prop up the capital position of the troubled fi nancial institutions, allowing them to hold existing portfolios of questionable loans on their books...
...The plan was rushed out to meet a perceived need to “build confi dence,” but the self-imposed political deadline and the need to survive the political log rolling with congressional Democrats meant that the time needed to think it through was not taken...
...As long as the rate remained substantially below current mortgage rates and homeowners were able to roll any points into the principal of their new mortgage, the impact on the incentives to take up the new program would be minimal...
...Given the risk-averse nature of current markets and the lack of any real information, it is likely that the market price of the mortgage pool is well below the actual likely outcome...
...Several hundred billion dollars have been injected into troubled fi nancial institutions, with more on the way, and a whole array of negotiated schemes have been created to keep people in homes for which they cannot pay the mortgage...
...Less capital means that banks must shrink the size of their portfolio...
...First, the troubled housing-related fi nancial assets that TARP was supposed to move onto the government’s books are still in the private sector, while the nation’s banks rush to pare down their balance sheets in the only way they can—by recouping existing loans and not making any new ones...
...All of this then gets built into the price of a given mortgagebacked fi nancial asset...
...I estimate the extra revenue from this feature at between $15 billion and $20 billion...
...In fact, they are handed a series of checks for the bulk of the true value of the security as the wave of refi nancing works its way through the system...
...The right seeks to minimize government involvement and therefore compromises, agreeing to help only the needy...
...The new mortgage would have one very signifi cant difference: It would be a full recourse loan...
...Currently the government can borrow for 10 years at about 3.25 percent and under 4 percent for 30 years...
...The old mortgage is repaid...
...To begin with, roughly $5 trillion of the mortgages to be refi nanced are already on the government’s books because of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac...
...In addition, the monthly payment would likely go down even more on loans that have been in place several years since the principal repayment period would once again become 30 years...
...But no one knows for sure...
...Housing starts are at a 17-year low, and homebuilder confi dence is the lowest ever recorded...
...it is just a matter of timing and prioritization...
...Even Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has now thrown in the towel on his original proposal to buy bad assets from the troubled fi nancial fi rms: the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP...
...That means not only foreclosing on the house (as under current mortgages) but also collecting any remaining unpaid sums after the house was foreclosed on by garnishing the wages, bank accounts, and other assets of the borrower...
...Banks and the fi nancial markets know with a good deal of precision what each security is worth...
...Individuals whose homes had market values way below the amount of the mortgage would have to be particularly careful...
...That is, if the borrower fell behind in the payments, the government could use any means necessary to get repaid...
...The country faces three major economic problems: (1) making liquid the troubled housing debt that is clogging up the books...
...It is the swapping of $9 trillion of one type of mortgage for $9 trillion of another type of mortgage...
...If it doesn’t stabilize, the odds are high that the current recession will wind up being as bad as, or possibly even worse than, the deep recessions of 1974-75 and 1980-82...
...government’s efforts at containing the fi nancial crisis have to date been aimed at shoring up institutions and households that are in trouble...
...As lower income homeowners tend not to itemize and higher income homeowners face an increased tax rate, the distributional consequences of this feature would mean that most of the extra revenue would be collected from higher income homeowners...
...So the help for homebuilders in this plan is still there...
...So while the plan will stabilize and possibly even increase the price of existing homes with mortgages, the effect is fi nite...
...If the amount of repayment exceeded the amount that the bank had marked down its mortgage portfolio, moreover, bank capital would expand rather than contract...
...When they are repaid, they will have to do something with the money...
...Under the refi nancing option, this problem goes away...
...Under my 4 percent mortgage plan, any bank that had to shrink its balance sheet would have a very easy way of doing so as loads of loan repayments would make the bank cash rich...
...On the other hand, the prepayment wave would reduce the interest income on the mortgage portfolio held by the GSEs...
...The government should offer the option of a new mortgage to everyone now holding one, be it from a Government Sponsored Enterprise like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, a bank, or a mortgage broker...
...The failure of the original plan was predictable...
...All of the MBS and CDOs in the system therefore face immediate full-dollar repayment of all the “good” loans in the mortgage pool...
...Done the way it is described here, roughly $9 trillion of mortgages would be refi nanced...
...Targeting relief on the frivolous induces people on the margin to behave frivolously...
...The monthly income of that homeowner is usually in the $3,000 to $4,000 range, so this is a signifi cant saving...
...It is also far from clear that those who were overextended on their homes, needy by one defi nition, are also worthy of aid...
...Recall that it was the efforts to sell TARP and the bailout that caused so much political and economic angst a few months ago...
...Encouraging the building of new ones at this point would only delay the recovery of the housing market and the relief that is needed for the fi nancial system...
...But it is those with mortgages that are the most impacted by current credit conditions...
...There is an increase in government debt...
...Households are greatly overextended, having taken advantage of many years of very easy consumer credit conditions...
...This starves the economy of credit...
...Refi nancing on the new terms would be entirely at the discretion of the borrower...
...In addition, rising unemployment is putting a crimp on incomes and creating caution among those with jobs...
...The lesson from the 2008 stimulus package, and indeed from all other temporary tax cuts, is that the great majority does not enter the spending stream...
...That is roughly 15 percent of total personal wealth in the country, clearly a huge undertaking...
...Homes yet to be built do not have mortgages, and so there is no existing mortgage to roll over under the new terms...
...This is not a $9 trillion increase in the nation’s indebtedness...
...If the homeowner is about to face a balloon repayment on a home equity line or an interestrate readjustment under a variable rate mortgage, the new mortgage terms might make the difference between being able to stay in the home and facing foreclosure...
...The fi rst effect would be to leave more people in their homes than would otherwise be the case...
...Each can be more easily achieved by rewarding virtue than by continuing down the current path...
...Everything that is left can pretty much be written down to pennies on the dollar...
...This is unlikely to make the plan popular at the National Association of Homebuilders, but we still have a hangover of at least 3 million empty homes...
...Those who think they will repay take the new government mortgage...
...If they went for the lower rate, the obligation to repay would become very real...
...Instead, computerdriven models make a probabilistic estimate of how many home owners in a given mortgage pool will choose foreclosure and what the loss rate will be on the foreclosed house...
...On a $200,000 mortgage, that would be a saving in principal and interest of $244 per month...
...The principal amount would be the same as the existing mortgage...
...In such a situation, prices drop...
...A refi nancing of home mortgages along the lines I am describing would be a much more dramatic stimulus...
...Stabilizing existing home prices and providing for fi nancial recovery are, of course, the preconditions for a return to a vibrant home construction industry...
...treasuries...
...The typical American household, for example, has 1.9 vehicles and 1.75 drivers...
...TARP could only be run through some market mechanism, in which those who needed the relief the least would get the largest share leaving the most desperate institutions adrift, or through direct governmental targeting of those institutions most in need, which would have made a mockery of the market mechanism...
...We are now paying the price of both the dot-com bubble and the housing bubble...
...Mortgages are typically priced off the 10-year bond...
...This in turn will unfreeze the banking system...
...As a consequence, Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) and Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) are clogging up the fi nancial system...
...Hundreds of billions of dollars later, we are left with the same three underlying economic problems the economy faced when the bailout was proposed...
...The left professes a belief in helping the needy...
...With regard to real estate, hard-working families can behave prudently while trust fund babies can behave frivolously, and vice versa...
...And still more institutions are lining up for bailouts, most notably the auto companies...
...If they did not plan to live there or bought houses as a speculation, they defi nitely should not take the new fi nancing terms...
...Much of this is the inevitable reaction to excess...
...Retail sales began plunging immediately after the president’s speech...
...and (3) improving household cash fl ow...
...There is right now no market for the CDOs, and they remain on the bank’s books...
...But the government could easily magnify this effect by adding one more change in the mortgage terms: Allow the new mortgage on the house to be assumable...
...His most recent book is What a President Should Know . . . but Most Learn Too Late (Rowman and Littlefi eld...
...Government would receive one further benefi t. As mortgage payments dropped, so would the revenue loss from the mortgage-interest deduction...
...It would no longer have to sell good assets and shrink its loan portfolio...
...The homeowner would not have to get a credit check, or have the house appraised, or go through the titling process again...
...There is no net increase in the nation’s debt...
...If they sell the house for less than the mortgage, they would have to come up with the difference from other sources...
...The uncertainty regarding securities pricing is gone...
...But it is also widely accepted that government has a role in making sure the adjustment process does not happen too fast or the cuts become too deep...
...The refi nancing is designed to be roughly budget neutral for the government...
...I suggest 4 percent, but the rate could be slightly higher without affecting the program...
...The bank could then expand its portfolio and make even more loans if it chose to do so...
...By contrast, targeting relief on those willing to assume full responsibility for their debts in return for a lower interest rate induces people to behave virtuously...
...TARP was supposed to do just this, but it didn’t as the only information on pricing securities came from those same computer-generated models that misestimated the size of the mortgage problem from the start...
...But, the bad stuff can’t be sold...
...The fl ip side is that a refi nancing of existing mortgages is unlikely to revive the home construction industry...

Vol. 14 • December 2008 • No. 11


 
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