antishock8 wrote:Analytics,
I think you made some fair points. I wish you would get a little more pointed regarding who created the policy that forced or induced institutions into lending to unqualified buyers. I also would like you to lay out a timeline of warnings by various institutional voices, such as the Federal Reserve Chairman, who did what, and who blatatanly ignored or killed any bills brought to Congress and why.
I think that would give a clearer picture to the framework you've provided.
-AS8
Here is the timeline as I see it. I'm not aware of anybody warning that escalating home prices and investment banks and their "private label" CMOs were going to bring down the economy. If you know of any, I'd like to hear about it.
Timeline1970: GNMA (Ginnie Mae) issues world’s first pass-through security.
1971: Freddie Mac begins issuing pass-throughs. The ownership of mortgages begins to seriously shift from savings institutions to the owners of pass-through securities, thus helping savings institutions become safer by making them better able to match the duration of their assets and liabilities.
1981: Fannie Mae begins issuing pass-throughs.
1983: Freddie Mac issues first collateralized-mortgage obligation (CMO). The CMOs are designed to rearrange the cashflows from the underlying pass-throughs to get new duration and pre-payment risk patterns and thus expand the amount of capital available in the mortgage market. The market for CMOs grows rapidly in size and complexity.
[Up to this point, things are going rosy. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had strict underwriting requirements—people needed to have good credit, a big down payment (or otherwise a good LTV ratio), and a good payment-to-income ratio. Further, Fannie and Freddie only accepted relatively modest-sized mortgages]
1990:
Non-agency mortgage companies and investment banks that have absolutely nothing to do with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac begin issuing “whole-loan” or “private label” or
non-agency CMOs. These CMOs are based upon “non-conforming” mortgages, meaning mortgages that don’t meet the size and underwriting requirements that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac require, and thus can’t be purchased by them.
Entirely private companies known “rating agencies” (e.g. Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s) begin giving credit ratings to the nonagency CMOs. The issuers of the non-agency CMOs devise “credit enhancements” so that securities based on non-conforming mortgages get AAA ratings. The credit enhancements include things like over-collateralization, tranches with different payment priorities, and credit insurance. The rating agencies give the top tranches their highest ratings (e.g. AAA, Aaa). This is purely their personal opinion of the risk.
1999: The non-agency CMOs steadily grow to $280 billion in outstanding debt.
1999: Under pressure from the Clinton administration, Fannie Mae slightly relaxes the credit requirements for the loans it underwrites. This expands the number of people who qualify for Fannie Mae mortgages. However, the nonagency CMOs market share continues to increase, and the sub-prime piece of Fannie’s book remains a tiny fraction of their book.
2001: 9/11 attacks. Economy goes into recession.
2002: Interest rates drop. House prices go way up. 30-year fixed-rate mortgages under 6.25%, 15-year fixed under 5.5%, ARMs under 4.25%. Everybody refinances their mortgages and take out second mortgages on new equity.
2002: Fannie and Freddie’s market share peeks at 40% of loans outstanding.
2002: Issuers of
non agency CMOs get very aggressive with their securities. They offer Alt-A mortgages to people with good credit who can’t verify their income. Sup-prime mortgages to people with poor credit. Mortgages for 125% of the property’s value. Interest-only mortgages. Adjustable rate mortgages. Negative amortization mortgages. Mortgage brokers make a ton of money off of the re-financing boom, and they advertise heavily.
Nobody is forcing them to do this, because they immediately make money from closing the deal, and the risk goes straight from the mortgage brokers to the investment bankers to the holders of the CMOs. With low interest rates and increasing home prices, people realize that the way to make money is to borrow as much as possible against their homes. People move into nicer homes or take out home improvement loans. This desire to be long on the housing market drives up the home prices.
2004:
New issues of nonagency CMOs is greater than the mortgage-backed securities of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae combined. About 75% of the mortgages supporting these nonagency CMOs are ARMs.. There is a tectonic shift in the market away from the GSEs. In order to remain players, the GSEs purchase credit-enhanced, AAA-rated non-agency CMOs for their portfolios.
2005-2006: Issuers of non-agency CMOs continue to gain bigger and bigger shares of the market. House prices continue to go up and people continue to refinance, purchase bigger homes, max out second mortgages, and do whatever it takes to remain as leveraged as possible in the housing market to take advantage of increasing house prices and low interest rates.
2007: Because of their immersion in the highly profitable non-agency CMO business, from September of 1999 to February of 2007
share price of Lehman Brothers increases 1000%. Share price of Fannie Mae stays flat over the same time period.
2007: House prices stop going up. People default on their mortgages. This severely hurts the nonagency CMOs, and the nonagency CMO market dried up.
2007: Moody’s and S&P begin downgrading the nonagency CMOs. AIG begins to get strained on the credit enhancements it sold.
2008: Armageddon.