The Downside of Falling Mortgage Rates 3 comments
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I'm scared by the latest uptick in mortgage financing. Mortgage rates fell sharply Tuesday, which is good news for people with good credit. But it might also be good news for people with bad credit -- and very bad news for the US taxpayer.
Go read BusinessWeek's excellent investigation of subprime lenders who are now originating FHA-guaranteed loans, and you'll see what I'm talking about. The only obstacle standing between these lenders and massive government-guaranteed riches, until now, was that mortgage spreads were still high, and that therefore mortgage rates weren't following risk-free rates south. If that's now changing, the US taxpayer might be funding -- and, worse, guaranteeing -- a brand-new subprime bubble.
The rise of the originate-to-distribute model destroyed enormous amounts of institutional knowledge on the subject of responsible underwriting, as bad lenders drove out good ones. And while there's an inchoate impression out there that underwriting standards have tightened up sharply, I suspect that in reality they haven't, and that what we thought was higher underwriting standards was in fact simply a lack of money to lend.
If the Fed's latest liquidity facility does in fact manage to get the mortgage market lending again, I fear that the new loans will be doled out just as indiscriminately as the old ones were -- more so, in fact, given those FHA guarantees. Good loan officers willing and able to say no to people wanting to borrow too much money simply don't exist in sufficient numbers -- and in any case there's no shortage of bad loan officers who will say yes, given funding availability.
In the first half of 2007, after subprime default rates had already started soaring, I was shocked by how underwriting standards were failing to tighten. Loan officers haven't changed since then. The last thing we want is to reward the same irresponsible lenders who caused the last bubble -- but that seems to be exactly what we're doing.
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- jepittman:
- Comments (396)
Anyone who thinks the banks are going back to the same old lending standards that existed before this meltdown happened is seeing the world through a totally different filter than me. The problem now is SCARED loan officers not wildly overconfident ones. The fed is doing the right things to thaw out credit markets and jumpstart lending again which is necessary to prevent a ever deepening recession. There will be a lag but these policies will work.2008 Nov 26 12:51 PM | Link | Reply -
- rhodope:
- Comments (27)
Scared Loan officers, you mean like scared of maintaining employment...?2008 Nov 26 12:56 PM | Link | Reply -
- Smarty_Pants:
- Comments (1300)
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- lewrockwell.com
If it is a gub'mint program, it will cause bigger problems than it solves.2008 Nov 28 09:23 PM | Link | Reply




















