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Jack M. Guttentag The Mortgage Professor

Jack M. Guttentag, The Mortgage Professor

Subprime Crisis, Part IV: What Should the Government Do?

by Jack M. Guttentag

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Posted on Tuesday, June 5, 2007, 12:00AM

The federal government is presently under enormous pressure to "do something" about the subprime crisis. The various proposals that have emerged appear to reflect concern for abused borrowers in or heading toward foreclosure, a desire to punish those responsible for their plight, and the usual urge to score political points.

This is not a brew likely to generate thoughtful reforms that look to long-term consequences. Doing nothing is also an option, and in my opinion, a better one than most of the proposals that have emerged.

Here are some principles that reform advocates ought to observe.

The Subprime Market Is Open, So Let's Shut It Down

As I noted last week, the subprime market has undergone a significant bloodletting, yet for all that, it has stayed open for business. Borrowers with poor credit who can't document their income can't get 100 percent loans anymore, but that's a good thing. And other borrowers with better credentials, though not good enough for the mainstream market, are still being served.

We should always keep in mind that, for every foreclosure of a subprime borrower, there are at least 10 others who have become successful homeowners who might not have made it otherwise. We don't yet have a substitute for the subprime market; that possibility is the topic of next week's article. Meanwhile, draconian penalties that could cripple the subprime market should be avoided.

Borrowers Who Gambled and Lost Should Not Be Bailed Out

It would be a travesty if home buyers can enjoy an increase in their wealth when house prices increase, while shifting losses to someone else when prices decrease. There is no more reason to do that in the house market than in the stock market.

The Lien-Enforcement System Should Not Be Weakened

Lawmakers should be ever-mindful that a core requirement of an effective housing finance system is the pledge of property as collateral for loans, and the ability of lenders to enforce their liens on the collateral. An enforceable lien is what makes possible the $500,000 loan at 6 percent for 30 years to a borrower who, without the house to pledge as collateral, might be able to borrow $25,000 at 10 percent. While the laws of the various states require lenders to observe due process, these are not serious impediments to lien enforcement. Let's keep it that way.

Some Ill-Advised Proposals

These include a moratorium on foreclosures, which would benefit all borrowers in trouble, whether they deserved it or not, seriously weaken the lien-enforcement system, and possibly shut down the subprime market, depending on how long the moratorium lasted and how it was implemented. Another bad idea is making loan purchasers and investors legally liable for the misdeeds of loan originators. This would shut the subprime market without any question.

A More Targeted and Modest Proposal

My proposal focuses on the major black cloud on the horizon: the large number of subprime ARMs (adjustable-rate mortgages) with interest rates that will reset to much higher levels over the next two years. Many of the borrowers will be unable to make the higher payments and won't have enough equity in their homes to refinance.

I would mandate a three-year extension of the initial rate period of all ARMs that met the following conditions:

1. The first rate reset is scheduled to occur (or did occur) during the period of Jan. 1, 2007 - Jan. 1, 2009.

2. The loan is secured by the borrower's primary residence -- no vacation homes or investment properties.

3. The loan had an original balance no more than twice as large as the current FHA (Federal Housing Administration) maximum in the county in which the property is located. The maximums would thus vary by county from $400,320 to $725,580.

4. The loan had a margin of 4 percent or higher, and a prepayment penalty that extends past the initial rate-reset date.

Conditions 2 and 3 are crude ways to limit the benefit to the most deserving. Condition 4 is designed to narrow eligibility to the borrowers most likely to need the extension, who are also the borrowers most likely to have been overcharged.

Note: The margin is the number that is added to the interest-rate index to determine the new rate at reset. The higher the margin, the higher the new rate.

Condition 4 also means that the extensions of the initial rate periods, and the costs associated with the extensions, will be concentrated in the subprime market. Almost all subprime mortgages have margins exceeding 4 percent.

Most of the mortgages affected by extension of the initial rate period will be in trouble without the extension. Hence, any additional loss to investors and any effect on new lending should be very small.

Next week: Can the subprime market be replaced?

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10 Comments

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  • HCSKnight - Tuesday, June 26, 2007, 2:11PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    These ideas arent a bail out and Mr. Bush's bill for illegal-aliens isnt amnesty.... The ONLY consideraton I think should be given is to put in place some mechanism such that the primary home/residence borrower's who go under, bankrupt, can avoid having their credit rating destroyed. Other than that, the $ ledger goes to bankrupt/zero. As Mr. Guttentag mentioned in an earlier commentary, the # of subprime forclosures on primary residences is in reality, on the macro scale, small. As for Wall Street, let them eat their greed. A LOT of good, hard working, patient, not reckless people are standing on the sidelines waiting to buy these properties once they go into foreclosure; these are the RESPONSIBE & intelligent people who ARE deserving of buying at the bottom...specifically because they werent childish and selfish. But of course, the left/Democrat/socialists dont see them as such.....

  • John - Thursday, June 21, 2007, 7:40PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I'm telling you guys- the answer to the sub prime crisis is the MONEY MERGE ACCOUNT through United FIrst Financial!! It really made a difference to us is by gettingon their program.. We just got on it and we have all our credit card debts paid off and are now set to pay our 30 year mortgage off in half the time! This actually is an interest cancellation program that is helping us save almost $200,000 off our mortgage & basically USE THE BANK'S MONEY INSTEAD OF THEM USING OUR MONEY!! We build up equity each month and we don't have any lifestyle changes- no extra payments out of our pocket or anything like that. It really works! We watched the video on this website www.u1stfinancial.net/johnfechik and filled out the financial analysis on the website to see if we fit the criteria- not everyone does- you should have a credit score of at least 620- but our financial future looks great now & I can finally sleep at night NOT worrying about how we will ever get out of debt!! If the President made it a law for all homeowners to get on this program, we could have America on the road to recovery soon with all the debt we have burdening us!

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, June 17, 2007, 2:49PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    The only reason these subprime borrowers made it was rising house prices. Let's wait for 10 years in a flat market, and see how many of them make it. It's only because they "won" the lotto that they made it. Just like most lotto winners, give them enough time and they will screw it up.

  • Joe S - Tuesday, June 12, 2007, 3:48PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Guttentag's proposals are more restrained than many, and I give him points for at least acknowledging that doing nothing is an option. I say though that doing nothing is really the BEST option. Any other way will force responsible borrowers and lenders to subsidize the irresponsible.

  • rkisanidi0t - Friday, June 8, 2007, 11:42PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    For the most part this author is right on. He states that the government needs to stay out of this. Unfortunatly, this includes is proposal also. The capital market will ultimately prevail and put things back into equalibrium. All forms of bailout (including Mr. Guttentag's) have positive and negative effects. On the plus side, ARM borrowers may sidestep foreclosure (or at least postpone it). On the negative side, there are people that purchased a smaller/less expensive house and got a fixed rate and more expensive mortgage they, in a sense, are being penalized. There are others that were waiting for a correction to purchase a house, his plan may postpone it or eliminate it. Also, a negative, businesses should not be forced to do any type of bailout. They should do it only if it makes sense for their business and shareholders.

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