With recent talk from Senator Dodd about a bailout for the “little man”,  we’re left to ponder who a bailout would really help or hurt, who pays, and who benefits from it.

Luckily, the guys over at Wharton (which, surprisingly have more credibility than some anonymous guy with a blog) have given the media world some soundbites to play over and over again.

We began speaking of Moral Hazard once the downturn started.  When you fix someone else’s problem, you create an incentive for that person to do the thing that caused the problem… they’ll just get bailed out again.

From Wharton’s school of Business:

“I think that for the moment, they should probably leave it alone,” says Joseph Gyourko, professor of real estate and finance at Wharton, warning that bailouts can make people more reckless in the future. “We don’t want to introduce moral hazard …. We don’t understand this very well right now, so any regulation is probably going to be wrong or imprecise.”

In fact, he says, the market is already correcting the problem. Lenders have dramatically cut their offerings of the most hazardous products –such as loans that require no down payment or proof of the borrower’s income, or those which allow borrowers to decide for themselves how much to pay each month.

Ken Thomas, a lecturer on finance at Wharton, argues that people and institutions that make risky choices are usually best left to suffer the consequences. “When we had the last big financial meltdown with stocks in 2001, did we consider bailing out those who lost money in the dot-com crash?” he asks. “We try to have markets regulate, not the government. Markets do a much better job.”

What we are seeing right now is that the markets are reacting to better information than they previously had.  Like Newton’s 3rd law of motion:  For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.  In Economics, we say “There’s No Such Thing As A Free Lunch”

Besides, who would a bailout help?  Certainly not homeowners.  How could you weed out who where truly in trouble, and who were opportunists?  Wouldn’t that saving create a need that you would later need to feed?  What about my free lunch too?  Would I (as a taxpayer) need to pay for someone else’s indiscretion?  What about the money I lost in the stock market in 2001, can I get a refund there too?   For those subprime homeowners… many of them came to the table with bad credit and no cash.  So, they’re leaving with bad credit and no cash, is their life that much worse off, and is that our collective problem that they cannot manage money?

On the other hand, lenders wouldn’t lose a penny.  They were the ones who recklessly took risks and offered the loans to the higher credit risk for a higher return.  A bailout would only serve to line their pockets for taking outsized risks.  There’s a reason that it’s called risk in the first place.

Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, plans to introduce legislation to protect homeowners from foreclosure and to crack down on predatory lenders who pushed high-risk loans on unsuspecting borrowers. Clinton is pushing for a federally mandated “foreclosure timeout” that would give homeowners more time to catch up on their payments, and she wants to curtail the prepayment penalties that make it hard for troubled borrowers to refinance. The National Community Reinvestment Coalition wants the Federal Housing Administration to be given new power to refinance subprime borrowers’ loans, and it wants the federal government to set up a fund for rescuing low-income homeowners.

Senator Dodd, you are treading on thin ice.  Be careful where you step.  The next one could be the wrong one.  Nothing like a good scandal to end one’s political career.  We all know you’re in bed with the financing organizations… all it takes is one false step.

 

Not exactly in SoCal (it’s in Sacramento), but you see a trend here:

Former employees of Folsom-based Central Pacific Mortgage are angry over the lack of warning before this week’s sudden layoffs.

As News10 first reported Tuesday, Central Pacific Mortgage and its Florida-based division Ivanhoe Mortgage abruptly closed their doors Monday saying they had no money to meet Wednesday’s payroll.

An estimated 260 people in Folsom, Orlando and in branch operations centers in other parts of the country were told on Monday to clear out their desks by the end of the day.

“The moral thing to do would of been to at least give the little people a fair warning,” said one former Ivanhoe employee by email.

So much for morality… No need to get on a soap box here about bad loans, the employees can do it just fine. I guess it’s just cosmic karma when you issue bad loans.

“It’s like a freight train coming at us full bore,” said Michael McGee of Winchester-McGee Financial. “The type of risk that’s been involved in the industry is far beyond anything I’ve ever seen.”

 

Missed WMC Layoffs

So far, the pain has been felt around the world in Subprimes.

I try to catch all of them in Southern California. This is because much of our booming economy has rested on real estate and lending. SoCal is the grand central station of mortgage lending; much of the world’s transactions pass through here.

Bloomberg reported some time ago about WMC Mortgage’s subprime unit slashing its workforce.

General Electric Co.’s U.S. mortgage unit will curtail lending and fire 460 workers, or 20 percent of staff, amid a rise in defaults by people with poor credit.

GE’s WMC Mortgage, the fifth-biggest subprime lender in the U.S., this week stopped making mortgages without down payments or to borrowers with credit scores below 600. WMC last year had $33 billion in new loan volume, according to industry newsletter Inside B&C Lending.

“We’ve realigned our resources to fit the size of the market,” said Brandie Young, a spokeswoman for Burbank, California-based WMC. The lender is adjusting underwriting policies amid a “fluid market,” she said.

Burbank is off the beaten path for mortgage lenders, but that many jobs can create problems in the short term. Longer term, migration patterns will likely happen because of it. Anyone who still thinks that our economy is booming in SoCal and we are immune to a slowdown need only look at our archives of the past 3 months and at the ml-implode.com site to see that over 40 lenders have imploded since the beginning of the year.

 

LoanCity got loaned

Former “America’s Funding Source” closed shop up today.

LoanCity is closed for business. Today March 20, 2007 is the last day we will be funding loans. To our customers, our staff and business partners – we thank you.

Their mission:

LoanCity aims to dominate the wholesale lending industry by offering a full spectrum of products, superior delivery, and innovative processes and technologies that create efficiencies in the lending process.

Not so much anymore.

While this is not headquartered in SoCal, there were substantial offices in Irvine and San Diego. Spring Smackdown again! Lending is getting choked off pretty quickly.

OC Fliptrack, for example reports that Countrywide is charging as much as 11.9% for high risk loans/customers. Escape routes are currently being blocked off, and the flames are licking higher and higher.

 

Fremont Chewing Arm Off to Escape

By now, Fremont’s subprime unit is the gift that keeps on giving. Even after announcing this last week that 5 or 6 would-be “suitors”, the company makes it clear that they may still not be able to get out.

Fremont, a major home lender to people with weak credit, disclosed last week that it planned to leave the subprime mortgage business and agreed to a cease-and-desist order with federal regulators related to improper lending practices.

“No agreement has yet been reached regarding the sale of this business and there is no assurance that the company will be able to enter into any transaction,” Fremont General said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Friday.

Faced with not being able to get out, the residential lending unit would be shut down permanently. Just how many employees this impacts is currently unavailable. If you know, email me, as it will be interesting to have some statistics to go along with it. If you recall, employees were sent home this last week on Monday; kinda sounds like the “temporary furlough” Mortgage Lenders Network sent their employees on in January.

On related News, FMF Capital has decided to execute an “orderly wind-down of business” which is business code for fold like a house of cards.

ML Implode-o-Meter gives the juicy details:

Fly by night, much?

And we are left wondering… who’s next?

 

Twisted ARMs

Ever explained to someone that the housing bubble in California is just a blowoff of speculative demand, only to be rebuffed by some pseudo edumuhcashun truthiness about how so many people want to live here, blah blah blah, great weather, blah blah blah, people make a lot of money here, blah blah blah, construction costs, blah blah blah, land use restrictions, blah blah blah and so on blather?

Would you just love to stick something in their face that breaks it down scientifically and proves them all wrong?  Something that shows exactly how much these variables changed the cost of living here?  Wouldn’t you love to get your hands on exactly that piece of information?  Wouldn’t you love to prove in graphs and numbers that the variables they just mentioned had little to no effect on prices, while it was exactly the proliferation of ARMs that did it?

Wouldn’t you love that piece of work to include formulas such as this:

Function of home price appreciation variables

And written by a professor of finance at a California university? 

What if I told you that exactly such a paper exists that delves into California’s history of home prices discussion that includes a detailed explanation of what caused the home price explosion?  It does exist.

Here’s a rundown of the conclusions:

California’s Housing Bubble Explained

Well, have I whetted your appetite enough to sit through 30 minutes of mind-tearing edumuhcashun to get to the data behind the pretty little graph I pounded out?

Here it is.

 

Lawmakers - Founding FathersAnyone wondering when California was going to adopt the guidance for non traditional mortgages?  Not too long from now would be my assertion.

The California Senate bill SB385 has been submitted on the 21st.  We’ll see if it hits any snags… although I doubt it.

According to the Federal Reserve, the guidelines are intended to:
1.  Ensure that loan terms and underwriting standards are consistent with prudent lending practices, including consideration of a borrower’s repayment capacity;
2.  Recognize that many nontraditional mortgage loans, particularly when they have risk-layering features, are untested in a stressed environment. These products warrant strong risk management standards, capital levels commensurate with the risk, and an allowance for loan and lease losses that reflects the collectibility of the portfolio; and
3.  Ensure that consumers have sufficient information to clearly understand loan terms and associated risks prior to making a product or payment choice.

(more…)

 

The Credit Conundrum

It has been John Doe’s premise when starting this blog that the housing bubble is borne out of the global credit bubble created by the Yen carry trade, developing countries’ savings increases, and our own Fed’s lowering rates causing returns chasing — Lending money at low margins to people who won’t be able to repay the loans. There has also been a great deal of talk this last week on substantial changes in lending, both in terms of tightened credit and larger spreads (risk premiums).

I don’t see it yet.

I still hear pitches on the radio about lending you money with FICO scores in the low 500′s, and there’s the ubiquitous Fernando Perez (Best Funding) spots that you shouldn’t have to pay more just because you don’t have good credit.

I’m starting my first stick-at-the-top article for discussion. Do you see anything in your area or if you work in the lending industry, at work that would change my opinion?

 

After San Diego’s last year’s shocking negative 6.3% real estate deflation; the real estate equivalent of a royal trouncing after the jet propelled years prior to that, we’re glad to hear that the Pollyana Pundits of Persistent Poundings have graced us once again with their giardia of the mouth. (“Pouting Pundits of Pessimism” was brought to us by San Diego’s own Brian Wesbury on December 2nd 2005)

One of our all-time favorites, Alan Nevin has once again graced the pages of the San Diego Business Journal.

This is the same one who told us September 15th 2005:

The bubble is not going to happen.

I beg to differ. It has happened. Not surprisingly, he made this announcement nearly to the day of the highest sale prices in San Diego since. With all this egg on his face, how is he still able to speak?

Alan Nevin is the Chief Economist with MarketPoint Realty Advisors, a consultancy providing real estate and demographic statistics, feasibility studies and litigation support to the California land use industry and legal professions. He is a senior advisor for real estate programs at the UC San Diego Extension program, and is a founding member of the UCSD Economics Roundtable.

Ah Ha! Does that tell you enough?

“There’s no doubt that housing has been the story in the latest decline,” said James Hamilton, a University of California, San Diego economics professor, speaking at the panel discussion Jan. 26 held at the University of San Diego.

Hamilton cited an 11 percent drop in home sales in 2006, and a 25 percent decline in new home starts to support his forecast that the current year will be “disappointing, but not a disaster.”

Really? Well then, I guess it would all depend on how you define the words “disappointing” and “disaster”.

I suppose if it’s your neighbor who can’t pay their mortgage and loses their house it’s a disappointment. If you lose your house, it’s a disaster.

The North County Times told us on Sept. 15th 2005:

Waiting for San Diego County’s supposed housing bubble to burst? You will wait forever, said Alan Nevin, a longtime local real estate specialist.

Alan Gin, a USD professor of economics, agreed with his colleague that this year’s economy isn’t likely to return to the boom days of the late 1990s.

Gin cited an index of leading economic indicators he compiles that showed 10 months of consecutive decreases, including the last two. The index, consisting of six components, showed above average declines in December in the number of new residential housing permits issued and in the volume of help wanted advertising.
The number of housing permits issued last year was off by more than 40 percent from the number issued in 2005, Gin said.
“Developers see the market is slowing, and therefore they are not going ahead with construction plans,” he said.
Hamilton said a housing rebound hinges a lot on what the Federal Reserve Board of Governors does in the coming months with short-term interest rates.

I call B.S.

The bubble was debt-propelled, and while if the FED does choose to raise rates in the coming months (which I think it will not), it will have little effect compared to a subprime and prime lending meltdown if it is indeed happening as reported. Risk premia are severely depressed in the current rate environment, and the lending standards frighteningly lax. If the MBS holders and buyers start poking around the files too much, they’re likely to find that they have no more money to lend to such spendthrifts as our local mortgage brokers who have all but handed money out to criminals and deadbeats. If lending standards were any more lax, they’d be stuffing dollar bills down mortgage fraudsters throats personally. The real story (and I’m not surprised they missed this considering who pays their checks) is about the lending environment.

In equally believable words, Hamilton told us:

Our reading of the Fed’s philosophy is that it will do everything short of inducing a recession to try to keep inflation under control.

The real question is not whether they would voluntarily avoid a recession to avert higher inflation, but rather would then knowingly allow a recession in order to keep inflation under control? That’s the $64,000 question I’d like the SDU professors to answer.