By Robert Romano
Formerly unknown
congressional candidate Dave Brat has been in the headlines ever since he
ousted soon-to-be former House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Cantor for Virginia’s
7th Congressional District Republican nomination.
Now, Brat faces an
even greater challenge in the general election. First up is taking on the
left-wing political intelligentsia, which is attempting to eviscerate his
election chances.
For example, writing
for Mother Jones, Molly Redden and
David Corn try to discredit Brat’s critique of government policies that led to
the financial crisis.
“An economics
professor at Randolph-Macon College in central Virginia, Brat frequently has
repeated the conservative canard that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae brought down
the housing market by handling the vast majority of subprime mortgages,” write
Redden and Corn, adding, “That is, he absolves Big Finance and the banks of
responsibility for the financial crisis that triggered the recession.”
Redden and Corn are
referring to Brat’s
frequent refrain on the campaign trail that “Fannie and Freddie made two-thirds of all subprime
mortgages.”
At this point, it is
probably best to defer to American Enterprise Institute resident fellow Edward
Pinto, former Fannie Mae executive vice president and chief credit officer, on
this count. After all, he
literally wrote the book
on how Government Sponsored Enterprise (GSE), congressional, and Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) policies were among the primary causes in
the build-up of hundreds of billions of dollars non-traditional mortgages that
nearly crashed the global economy.
Now, even if one takes
a broad
view of “subprime” as
“residential mortgages issued to high-risk borrowers, such as those with a
history of late payments or bankruptcy,” as the Financial Times does, or
simply, mortgages that are not prime, a better term would be Pinto’s
non-traditional mortgages.
Also, it would be more
accurate to say more than two-thirds of the crappy loans were Fannie, Freddie,
the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), Federal Home Loan Bank, and Community
Reinvestment Act (CRA) required loans.
Per Pinto’s forensic
study: “As of June 30, 2008 over 70 percent of the 26.7 million NTMs with weak
or high risk characteristics — 19.25 million loans – were owned or guaranteed
by (a) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (11.9 million), (b) the Federal Housing
Administration and other federal agencies (4.8 million); (c) Federal Home Loan
Bank (FHLB) investments in Alt-A and Subprime Private MBS (0.3 million) or (d)
banks and other lenders originating loans pursuant to CRA requirements and
HUD‘s Best Practices program (2.2 million, net of CRA loans already accounted
for in (a) and (b). These numbers suggest that government policies and requirements
were the source of the loans with weak or high risk characteristics, and thus
the cause of the financial crisis.”
Those quibbles aside,
Brat is pretty much right. The federal government was responsible for more than
two-thirds of the risky mortgages that were made in the bubble.
Adding to the trouble,
the GSEs were undercapitalized as a matter of policy, and enabling them to lead
the market in low-income borrowing, according to Pinto: “The GSEs only needed
$900 in capital behind a $200,000 mortgage they guaranteed — many of which by
2004-2007 had no borrower downpayment. In order for the private sector to
compete with Fannie and Freddie, it needed to find ways to increase leverage.”
When Americans for
Limited Government reached out to Pinto in 2010 about a draft version of his
forensic study, he told us that the GSEs were driving the market for
non-traditional mortgages and that the “market response was: if it’s okay with
Fannie and Freddie (the de facto standards setters) it must be okay for us.”
The build up by Fannie
and Freddie was deadly, would have never been possible without HUD
mismanagement, and had unquestionably negative feedback throughout mortgage
markets, Pinto notes: “HUD’s policy of continually and disproportionately
increasing the GSEs’ goals for low- and very-low income borrowers led to
further loosening of lending standards causing most industry participants to
reach further down the demand curve and originate even more NTMs. As prices
rose at a faster pace, an affordability gap developed, leading to further
increases in leverage and home prices. Once the price boom slowed, loan
defaults on NTMs quickly increased leading to a freeze-up of the private MBS
market. A broad collapse of home prices followed.”
Together with the HUD
and the FHA, Fannie and Freddie helped to cause the crisis by weakening
underwriting standards, lowering down payments, and generally degrading the
quality of credit in both government and private backed loans. Also,
because of the implicit backing of taxpayers, the GSE-issued securities were
automatically granted AAA bond ratings, and
the Fannie and Freddie were even able to misrepresent the quality of mortgages
that underlined those securities.
As if that was not bad
enough, Fannie and Freddie crafted a marketing plan that promised a higher rate
of return than treasuries, but with the same risk associated with a taxpayer
guarantee.
It was that implicit
guarantee that enabled the GSEs to sell some $4.7 trillion of mortgage-backed
securities, $1.5
trillion of which were sold overseas to investors, as reported by the New York Times. As more
securities were sold, Fannie and Freddie bought more mortgages and bundled them
into securities. As a direct result, Fannie
and Freddie were able to acquire about half of all mortgages as of July 2008.
By 2008, Fannie and
Freddie held $1.835 trillion in higher-risk mortgages and mortgage-backed
securities: $1.646 trillion, were GSE-issued mortgage-backed securities, and
$189 billion of subprime and Alt-A private mortgage-backed securities.
Brat is correct to lay
the crisis largely at the feet of Fannie and Freddie. They, along with HUD,
FHA, and Congress were the ones that loosened the underwriting standards.
Private sector leverage was largely a response to what Fannie and Freddie were
doing in the market.
To see which
institutions had the larger role to play, just look at the size of the
bailouts. To date, the Federal Reserve has bought back more than $1.6
trillion of mortgage backed securities (MBS) that were issued by the GSEs, including Fannie, Freddie,
and also Ginnie Mae (which guarantees FHA and VA loans), according
to the 2010 Federal Reserve audit of the MBS purchase program. In addition, the GSEs received $187 billion
directly from taxpayers.
Therefore, the GSEs
were responsible for approximately $1.8 trillion of the crisis. Comparatively,
AIG needed an infusion of $182 billion of loans from the Federal Reserve and
TARP for its role in insuring subprime and other risky loans against default.
The Bear Stearns deal was $25 billion. Another
$289 billion in TARP loans were made to affected institutions, too. So, on a bailout scale, $1.8 trillion
was spent on GSEs in direct bailouts and about $500 billion was lent to the
private sector. More than 3 to 1.
The difference is the
private sector paid back their emergency loans. The $1.8 trillion spent on
Fannie and Freddie was a direct subsidy from the Fed and from Congress. How it
will be recouped, for example, if the Fed will simply hold the mortgages to
maturity, transmitting interest earned to the Treasury, or the securities are
sold to private sector actors, remains to be seen.
But on Brat’s primary
contention, yes, government policies, including the GSEs, were responsible for
72 percent of the risky lending. Private institutions on their own accounted
for 28 percent.
Brat was not absolving
anyone, but he could be more specific — perhaps just include Ginnie in the
statement “Fannie and Freddie made two-thirds of all subprime mortgages” — but
the general idea that the government was responsible for the vast majority of
the risky lending is spot on accurate.
Robert Romano is the
senior editor of Americans for Limited Government.
Source: http://netrightdaily.com/2014/06/mother-jones-shoots-misses-dave-brat-fannie-freddie/?utm_source=WhatCounts+Publicaster+Edition&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Liberals+Wrong+about+Dave+Brat+on+Fannie%2c+Freddie&utm_content=Mother+Jones+shoots+and+misses+at+Dave+Brat+on+Fannie%2c+Freddie%0d+
Read more at NetRightDaily.com: http://netrightdaily.com/2014/06/mother-jones-shoots-misses-dave-brat-fannie-freddie/#ixzz34WdMIvXQ
Read more at NetRightDaily.com: http://netrightdaily.com/2014/06/mother-jones-shoots-misses-dave-brat-fannie-freddie/#ixzz34WdMIvXQ
Comments
This still isn’t fixed.
Dodd-Frank codified bailouts into “wind-downs” (same thing), the
Community Reinvestment Act was not repealed and HUD rules were not
removed. These legislative action should
be taken, otherwise, we have the same extortion-ridden bad laws and regulations
in force.
Liberals will want us to forget about this, but we can’t. Unless we rip this crap out of the
regulations, it will happen again, except the Fed will end up buying all the
toxic assets, again. Congress needs to get the government out of the lending
business for good.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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