Posts Tagged ‘housing’
SFE blog Consectatio offers some excellent food for thought on the bailouts:
Every reaction the government has to the current “crisis” keeps leaving me with the question “How could we possibly dig ourselves any deeper?” Needless to say, I have been amazed at our ingenuity in this regard. Fr. Sirico’s observations (”Isn’t it obvious that once we concede the principle of a bail-out for those ‘too big to fail,’ we invite a queue that will wrap around the globe?”) are becoming more and more realized, with one of the latest announcements that the FDIC is now proposing to “help delinquent homeowners”.
Dictionary.com defines delinquent as: “failing in or neglectful of a duty or obligation“, and these are the folks who are getting the bailouts.
This begs the question, if you fathered two twin sons who were very, very different (one was very responsible and planned ahead, the other was reckless and failed in fulfilling or was neglectful of duties or obligations), who would you drop the big bucks to send to college? Which one is going to take care of you when you retire? Which could you trust with your money? Which investment guarantees that the money will be spent for productive purposes?
It is true that people had varying degrees of awareness about the oncoming dip in the housing market, but, as Christopher Deming pointed out:
“The banks are regulated. They have to tell you everything. They can’t make you read it, and really, why should they have to? They spend the time to write it, the least you could do is go through it.”
When you sign a mortgage agreement, you know what you are getting into. This is why, Chris says “there is a reason why you don’t see mortgage agreements written on cocktail napkins.”
I’ll wrap this up with a personal example: I am starting a new Electrical Engineering job in January. I have to move across the state, and, while I knew that I would be given no relocation fee, I knew there was a signing bonus included with the job. I was later notified that the signing bonus would be given to me in the first paycheck, which will appear about a month after I start (…and four months later than I had expected).
This means, I’m on my own for a U-Haul, securing an apartment, and all of the additional charges associated with moving to a new place. This may not seem like much, but it is quite a bit for a student to handle (I haven’t been making nearly as much as the typical starting-salaried engineer in my internship). Regardless of my smaller salary, I have managed to save enough in my bank account to allow me to get a U-Haul, secure an apartment, buy an engagement ring, and have several months of groceries or whatever else I may require.
This does mean, however, that I do not have an mp3 player (not even a cheap one). As a bass guitar-playing, electrical engineer, I do not even own a Sansa. I also do not have a cool, flashy cell phone, and my car is probably 25% rust. I rode my bike 26 miles a day last summer to work and back to avoid buying gas, and I ate two packs of oatmeal for lunch every day instead of going out to eat.
I’m not trying to make myself sound spectacular, but I know my own story the best.
There are plenty of people who have saved. There are many people who did not rule out the possibility of this “crisis” and they planned accordingly. These are the good sons that are not only going unrewarded, but paying out of their pockets for those who were reckless.
An excerpt of the newest proposal (with some more specifics) can be found on CNN here:
“The proposal would have the government share up to 50% of the losses if the homeowner re-defaulted on the modified loan.”*
Yes, it appears that the age of personal bailouts is on the horizon.
How could we possibly dig ourselves any deeper?
———————–
*Recent talk of “help” for people struggling with mortages has included the idea of offering lower rates or exemptions from payment only to those who have missed at least three payments. Talk about moral hazard.
Tags: bailout, credit, crisis, fannie, fed, financial, freddie, housing, invest, loan, mortgage, responsible, save
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An excerpt from an article at the Ayn Rand Center:
“Why then should capitalism take the blame today–when capitalism doesn’t even exist? Consider the current crisis. The causes are complex, but the driving force is clearly government intervention: the Fed keeping interest rates below the rate of inflation, thus encouraging people to borrow and providing the impetus for a housing bubble; the Community Reinvestment Act, which forces banks to lend money to low-income and poor-credit households; the creation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with government-guaranteed debt leading to artificially low mortgage rates and the illusion that the financial instruments created by bundling them are low risk; government-licensed rating agencies, which gave AAA ratings to mortgage-backed securities, creating a false sense of confidence; deposit insurance and the “too big to fail” doctrine, whose bailout promises have created huge distortions in incentives and risk-taking throughout the financial system; and so on. In the face of this long list, who can say with a straight face that the housing and financial markets were frontiers of “cowboy capitalism”?”
Tags: bailout, capitalism, crisis, fannie, fed, financial, freddie, housing, inflation, regulation
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Doug French writes for Mises.org reminding us that this is not the first time in history free-markets have been falsely blamed for government-created economic havoc:
It is often said “there are no atheists in a foxhole.” The other week, as world financial markets melted down, CNBC go-to wise man Art Cashen put a market spin on that familiar line drolly saying, “there are no libertarians in a market crash.”
The crusty Cashen is certainly right for the most part. Plenty of financial talking heads who argue for free markets and smaller government on a daily basis suddenly screamed that government must intervene to “save capitalism.” Of course, the idea that government must print multiple blizzards worth of money to save a system where individuals and businesses trade with each other unfettered makes as much sense as presidents who claim that war must be waged to “protect the peace.”
The fact is that what we’ve been enjoying since the Federal Reserve was created is anything but free-market capitalism. The value of the dollar has been pushed down 99 percent and the economy has been a series of booms, followed by busts, ad nauseam since J.P. Morgan partner Harry Davidson and other big bank chieftains secretly took a train to go duck hunting on Jekyll Island in 1910. Of course, the ducks were safe, but Americans since have paid the price for the Federal Reserve–system idea that was hatched that weekend.
Tags: bailout, banking, capitalism, crisis, fannie, fed, federal reserve, financial, freddie, history, housing, money
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From Chris’s Color Commentary:
“Little did I know, until a recent exposure to this concept at certain gala event, that banks really are villainous monstrosities. I was not aware that banks gave loans. I was always under the naive assumption that people asked for them. Silly me.”
From Consectatio:
“…let me get this straight. We are going to seize people’s private savings and force them to deposit a percentage of their earned income into a “guaranteed retirement account”. That sounds roughly like Social Security to me… I suppose that is why it makes sense to have this new account be managed by the Social Security Administration…
…This sounds strikingly similar to the definition of the “guaranteed retirement account”, so why is this proposal gaining any ground whatsoever? Is it because we don’t currently have a “guaranteed” social security?”
Tags: 410(k), banks, blog, bloggers, chris, consectatio, credit, crisis, financial, housing, loan, sfeblog, social security
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An excellent post from SFE blogger Nathan Biller on this whole credit crunch, market crisis, housing bubble, recession or whatever you want to call it.
Here’s an excerpt:
So is there a credit crunch? Absolutely! If you define a credit crunch as a situation where more people want loans than can obtain them. What about all the other crunches? Don’t you have a vacation crunch? A nicer car crunch? As a child I experienced many candy crunches (and not the good kind from Nestle). My parents knew, though that if I was given everything I wanted, I would never learn to appreciate those things. People definitely want credit, and it would sure make things easier if everyone were able to get everything they wanted: unfortunately, as one will learn in Econ 101, economics is about how limited resources get distributed to individuals with unlimited wants. If another business or individual is unwilling to loan you money, that’s really the end of the story. You’re not entitled to loan just as a child is not entitled to candy.
Now go read the whole thing!
Tags: Biller, bubble, credit, crisis, crunch, economy, fannie, fed, financial, freddie, housing, inflation, monetaryl, recession
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Great article from Mises.org on how absolutely stupid it is to claim that laissez faire caused the credit crisis.
A fundemental rule of sound argument is to define your premises. In this statement, “laissez faire caused the crisis”, one of the premises is that we currently live under a system of laissez faire. This requires a definition of laissez faire, which is seldom given by those making the claim, yet the phrase gets defined de facto in the context of the article in which the statement appears. And it ussually comes to mean completely unleashed free-market capitalism - a definition which would destroy the original statement, since we do not live under such a system.
Read the article.
Tags: bailout, bubble, capitalism, credit, crisis, fannie, fed, financial, freddie, free-market, housing, inflation, laissez faire, regulation
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Tags: bailout, crisis, economy, fannie, fed, financial, freddie, housing, inflation, lender, loan, mortgage, recession, russel roberts, Video
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Economist Richard Vedder doesn’t mince words:
"In a sense, calling on the government to solve the resulting problem is a bit like putting Charlie Manson in charge of Children Protective Services, or making Lorena Bobbitt the Surgeon General."
Read the whole post here .
Tags: bailout, crisis, financial, housing, market, Vedder
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Tom Brokaw writes in the Wall Street Journal’s opinion pages :
Barney "Big Un" Baumgartner of Windblown, Wyo., invited the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury Department to take over his business, The Big Un 24 Hour Tow Service and Trophy Taxidermy.
In a handwritten press release, Mr. Baumgartner explained that with winter and hunting season coming on, the good citizens of Windblown would be without his vital services unless he found a way to deal with his escalating debts, fast.
"This is not just about me or my neighbors in Windblown. Heck, we get three or four tourists and out-of-state hunters here every 10 days or so. What if they need a tow or a trophy mount? The consequences are too great to contemplate," Mr. Baumgartner explained.
He’d be willing to let the government have 80% of his business for a quick cash infusion. He thought something in the neighborhood of $1.8 million should do the trick. That would be enough to gas up his two tow trucks, get some new taxidermy stuffing and clean up that overdue account at the Number 10 Saloon and Casino over in Deadwood, S.D.
Treasury Department officials had no comment on Mr. Baumgartner’s request, but a source familiar with the response to the bailout of American International Group said Treasury has been inundated with similar requests.
- A pawn shop in Reno, Nev., has an excess supply of eight-track cassette players, flower print shirts, broad white belts and Wayne Newton tapes, having gambled that the ’70s would come roaring back. The owner pleaded for a Treasury take-over, arguing, "How can the government stand by and let such a rich part of our American culture simply fade away?"
- The owner of an NFL poster shop in Green Bay, Wis., reports that he has given up on divine intervention and is now asking for Treasury to take over his business in a last-ditch effort to preserve the notion that whatever our differences, we’re all Americans.
Asked how his business got into trouble, Karl Andursen of Muledeer, Minn., said he met a man who specialized in printing Minnesota Viking and Chicago Bears posters. Mr. Andursen said the man was willing to bundle his posters and sell them at a discounted rate to anyone who would take over the Green Bay territory.
Mr. Andurson said in the back of his mind he knew that could be risky since Green Bay is sacred ground for Packer fans who wouldn’t cheer for the Vikes or the Bears if they were promised a fleet of new snowmobiles and lifetime hunting rights on Brett Favre’s farm.
But, as he said, everyone was in the NFL merchandise game and he figured he’d take the territory and after 30 days flip the franchise for a big profit. A year later and he’s not made a sale, not one, but who knew?
He’s offered his complete inventory of Go Bears! and Vikings Rock! posters for 20 cents on the dollar or $500,000 in 30-year Treasury bonds.
- Darlene Dalrymple owner of the Shear Joy Hairstyling and Tattoo Salon in Rockhard, Vt., wrote Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, inviting him and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to her shop for a free trim and tat if they’d also help with her balance sheet.
Ms. Dalrymple said she’s very busy, but her expenses somehow always exceed her income. She suspects her boyfriend, who likes to use a lot of Wall Street lingo he picks up watching business channels on TV, is shorting her cash register.
Ms. Dalrymple said her boyfriend also called her a moral hazard, and she’d like Secretary Paulson and Chairman Bernanke to explain exactly what that means.
Tags: bailout, bernanke, bubble, crisis, economy, federal reserve, financial, housing, loans, paulson, real-estate, Risk, satire, treasury
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By the Mackinac Center’s own David Littman in today’s Detroit News:
Reject bailout rush to socialism
Fix government ventures, rules that got nation into trouble, not market
David Littmann
Prudent workers, taxpayers and firms are getting the bum’s rush on a massive proposed bailout from panicked politicians who are weeks away from a national election of extraordinary significance.
In this case, a bipartisan group is forcibly trying to eject this country from a market-based, decentralized economic and financial system. Washington, its politicians and armies of regulatory employees are touting another elixir of taxpayer dollars to fix yet another of their colossal fiascos. The proposed federal intervention (up to a $1 trillion bailout of distressed assets and bonus-paying firms) is the antithesis of what the competitive markets of capitalism would permit.
The problem is not the fundamental well-being of our economic system. At midyear, the U.S. economy was still running at growth between 2-3 percent above 2007 levels, even discounting inflation. The national unemployment rate was 6.1 percent, not the 35 percent of the Depression era. The stock market remained higher than the levels of four years earlier.
No, the problem lies with the bursting of the residential housing bubble that developed an irrational price exuberance (except in Michigan) in the wake of the Federal Reserve’s exceptionally easy monetary policies from 2003 to 2006. Economics students understand this axiom: “Loose money policies create tight credit conditions.”
In this case, the tight credit situation — where banks fear lending, and markets no longer supply bonds or equity capital — emerged because of the collapse of the housing bubble and the suicidal regulatory mandates that politicians and their special-interest campaign fund-raisers legislated. And Wall Street’s pursuit of opaque financial derivatives and the credit rating agencies’ complicity in subprime mortgages played a role.
Yet, to cover their corrupting decisions and past complaisance, Washington’s major mouthpieces — from former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd — now say that unless we trust them with a new round of our scarce resources, the U.S. economic system will collapse. This rhetoric is meant to panic us into accepting a new federal steward of our hard-earned dollars.
But when you dissect the palaver, what you see is a bare-knuckled proposal to further centralize federal control over the marketplace of investments and savings. Such a revolutionary move is socialism. It will not simply be a matter of taxing the rich or those with some ability to pay for the purpose of redistributing shelter to the poor. It will represent an institutionalization of financing immoral behavior. Why?
If I take an interest-only loan with the hope and bet that my new mortgage will pay for itself as home prices escalate, it leaves me free to spend, not save, on other things. I have little reason to defer purchases. When housing prices go south, however, I can walk away as if my payments were just rentals and the lender gets back a depreciated asset. Why reward this kind of behavior by either the lender or the borrower?
Considering the incentives that were in place, we now know why so many fellow citizens chose these reckless options. And clearly, Washington does not want you to remember the four ways it has brought us to this unfortunate moment. Let’s review:
• The Community Reinvestment Act (approved in 1977 during the Carter administration) compelled banks and other lenders to loan money and grant mortgages in areas where they would have never dreamed of making such loans because of the exceptional risks of default. Banks were denied charters for growth and geographical expansion if regulators found them to be out of compliance with these politically correct regulations, enforced by the Federal Reserve and others.
• Government-sponsored enterprises (such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) received taxpayer subsidies to provide mortgages and are favored by politicians and regulators with the privilege of maintaining very thin capital reserves as buffers against losses that result from defaulting on delinquent mortgages.
• Insane accounting rules, the Sarbanes-Oxley regulatory regime and Securities and Exchange Commission rules have contributed to the mess, especially the devastating “mark-to-market” requirement. The financial reports of firms and financial organizations must carry assets on their ledgers as though they were forced to sell them immediately into distressed markets, rather than at book value.
This is like requiring people to send wedding or graduation photos of themselves to newspapers while sick with the 24-hour flu rather than pictures of themselves when they are healthy the rest of the year. No wonder the market seized up.
Regulators require that firms go to the market and raise capital when their assets fall below book value, even if it is a paper value, rather than a real loss, that is registered. When hundreds of large and small firms all seek scarce capital at once, the market can’t meet their needs.
• And the Federal Reserve spurred subprime lending by pursuing inflationary money policies that dropped bank-borrowing rates to 1 percent.
To avoid greater government involvement and messes in the future (think Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security), Washington must extricate itself from the market. As real estate prices become more affordable, credit-worthy firms and individuals throughout the nation and world are ready to pounce on bargains that will appreciate.
The government got America into this situation. The solution is simple: Government, get out.
Tags: bailout, crisis, economy, fannie, financial, freddie, housing, lender, loan, market, regulation
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From the New York Times. We reap what we sow…
Fannie Mae Eases Credit To Aid Mortgage Lending
By STEVEN A. HOLMES - Published: September 30, 1999
In a move that could help increase home ownership rates among minorities and low-income consumers, the Fannie Mae Corporation is easing the credit requirements on loans that it will purchase from banks and other lenders.
The action, which will begin as a pilot program involving 24 banks in 15 markets — including the New York metropolitan region — will encourage those banks to extend home mortgages to individuals whose credit is generally not good enough to qualify for conventional loans. Fannie Mae officials say they hope to make it a nationwide program by next spring.
Entire article here.
Tags: crisis, economy, fannie, financial, freddie, housing, loans
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Nothing, says Russell Roberts in an article for Forbes magazine :
The turmoil in the housing market and the resulting financial crisis is just the latest example of political failure. Politicians wanted more home ownership than the market produces on its own, especially among low-income families. To encourage this politically popular goal, Fannie Mae (nyse: FNM - news - people ) and Freddie Mac (nyse: FRE - news - people ) were allowed to privatize their profits and socialize their losses. At the same time, Housing and Urban Development (HUD) required them to expand their commitment to affordable housing. Freddie and Fannie achieved this goal by buying bundles of subprime mortgages.
Now taxpayers are on the hook for at least $200 billion, and the dominoes are still falling. The real cost of this failure is that the return to housing was artificially inflated, funneling billions of dollars of capital into housing instead of more productive assets.
Politicians and policy makers ignored the essentially organic nature of market forces and assumed that one piece of the market could be altered while everything else remained unchanged. But politicians always think they can design a market from the top down as long as just the right regulations are put in place.
And they will tell us that the right regulations can be put into place to patch things up. Color me skeptical.
Tags: AIG, bailouts, economics, fannie, financial, freddie, housing, market
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