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Ben Stein How Not to Ruin Your Life

Ben Stein, How Not to Ruin Your Life

Irrational Times Call for Rational Measures

by Ben Stein

Very Good (1111 Ratings)
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Posted on Friday, March 14, 2008, 12:00AM

This is going to be a bit controversial. Bear in mind that I often make mistakes and could be wrong about some of this, but it's all food for thought.

Irrational Pessimism

First of all, markets are made up of human beings, and human beings can be irrational. They can be irrational on the upside, they can be irrational on the downside.

We saw "irrational exuberance" in the late 1990s, and it led to a crash. I believe we're now seeing highly irrational pessimism in the markets, especially the credit markets. The gloom comes from the bad results that banks and other lenders got when they loaned money on mortgage obligations in the form of collateralized mortgage obligations. These instruments were never meant to be as safe as AAA bonds, but they were thought to be much safer than they turned out to be.

Beware of Cold Stoves

There have indeed been major defaults in mortgages. Just as important, there's been wild speculation on indexes tied to mortgages, and this speculation by itself has led to immense losses in mortgage-linked investments. To a large extent, these losses will be recovered when the subject properties are sold and when speculation goes to the long side. But for now, national and local banks are sitting on big losses.

This has scared them about lending on anything at all. It shouldn't, but it does. It's sort of like the old saw about the cat: Forever after jumping on a hot stove, it'll be scared of hot stoves. But it'll also be scared of cold stoves.

Fear Working Overtime

So, lenders are terrified of loans even to very sound borrowers. Just to give an example, banks are scared of lending even on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds -- even though these bonds are backed by the federal government and can't default by any likely standard.

This reluctance to lend is causing a credit crunch, and this is terrifying markets and newspapers everywhere. This fear has knocked down the Dow by over 2,000 points from its October high. It's led to strong fears of a recession and to a slowdown in hiring and investment as businesses cut back their borrowing and spending.

By this point, the banks and bankers are terrified that they'll be fired if they make bad loans, and that if by some lightning strike of improbability their loans to good borrowers fail, they'll see their banks fail altogether. Again, that's irrational human fear at work.

The problem is that even irrational fear can have real consequences, and can indeed cause a serious recession -- even if the actual losses in mortgages aren't large enough to cause one by themselves. In fact, that's what's happening right now.

Let the Healing Begin

So what to do? First, bear in mind that irrational markets eventually get a taste of reason. Also bear in mind that, as Warren Buffett says, markets are at first a voting machine, but always eventually become a weighing machine. Reality will triumph, and the credit markets will get their act together, loans will start to be made, and credit will begin to flow.

But why not get the healing process started today instead of waiting for a bad recession? Why doesn't Mr. Bernanke call in the big bankers and tell them he'll make sure none of them fails? Why not tell them the Fed will always be there to bail them out and recapitalize them if need be? Why not stop solvency-risk fears today? Why wait until another day? Why wait until a million or 2 million more people lose their jobs or homes or both?

Further, why not tell the banks that a condition for recapitalizing them is much stricter regulation about lending policies -- not lending against bad collateral, not lending to borrowers with no credit history? Why not also impose rules about executive compensation to keep top brass from looting their own stockholders even as they kill their own companies?

Regulation to the Rescue

It's a myth that all regulation is bad. In banking, regulation saves greedy, foolish people from killing their own banks and the economy in general. Let's save the banks, save the economy, and lay the foundation for a smarter tomorrow -- starting today.

And then let's investigate what role speculation by hedge funds against the credit markets has played in our current problems. Some killers have made a bundle out of our troubles; let's find out exactly what they did. It's going to be a scary story, but that's fear for another day.

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321 Comments

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  • Qniform - Wednesday, June 11, 2008, 12:43PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Terrible idea about having the government publically state that banks won't be allowed to fail - even in exchange for tighter regulation. How about letting real consequences police the marketplace? And how about prosecuting borrowers, brokers & lenders who committed fraud in the contractual process?

  • Tanya Marie - Sunday, March 23, 2008, 8:40PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    I do believe more regulation in reguards to the economic markets and business reporting is nessissary, but also better credit protection to consumers applying for credit and recieving the kinds of credit one might deserve. It seems banks do not want to take responsiblity for sending well qualified consumers to susidieries of the bank to be preyed upon. One a bank pulls your credit and sees a consumer is suseptable to sub prime, although they may have a excellent credit rating, they still find a reason to send them along to a higher intrest rate and fees, it's not negotiations it's immoral and unethical, and they all should take heed to those deeds.

  • unknowndanex - Saturday, March 22, 2008, 11:17PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I do believe that further regulation could affect the moral hazard problem. It will always be there, but the extent of regulation will determine this. All we have gotten from deregulation policies of the Bush administrations and conservatism have been the S&L crisis (Keating 5), and this Sub-prime crisis (don't feel like pointing out others). Allowing investors and firms to act with too much freedom has led to much corruption. The alphabetical regulation departments/firms are just performing based on their own benefit meaning even less regulation if the price is right. The Fed has stepped in to bail a lot of these firms out and if thats the case, then they should input more regulation on these firms as well. They can't just benefit form the "lender of last resort", they should be monitored closely like the banks. Also a higher reserve requirement can help reduce bailouts and bankruptcies if implemented correctly.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, March 22, 2008, 9:08PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    STOP with the stories. Someone do something for the little guy. Bail out Bear, bail out Countrywide. But don't give any mortgage company employee 13 extra weeks of UE. just help out Mr. Big. We little people aren't worth anything don't help us. We can all just go claim Bk. and get welfare and food stamps.

  • William B - Saturday, March 22, 2008, 1:44PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Seriously Ben, I thought you were smarter than that and knew something about economics. First, go look up the economic term moral hazard. If banks and their employees know that if they make bad loans they will still get their bonuses and their bank will be saved by the government, the bailout will never end. Banks here in California were lending out money for over 10x income and often never verified income. Just like little kids, they need to learn the consequences of their action or their behavior will never change. Second, why should I, a prudent renter who moved to Socal in 2003 and decided to sit out the bubble be punished? Not only would I be punished by higher taxes to pay for the bailout, but with less foreclosures and more risky banks (see "moral hazard"), prices will remain artificially high and I'll end up paying considerably more when I decide to buy. Prices need to come down to meet economic fundamentals before the problem is fixed. Third, and I see this mentioned frequently in comments, why stop at bailing out banks. You could bail out homeowners, those who default on their credit cards, etc. Allowing bad loans to fail CLEANSES the market of these loans. Once they are gone, the market is stronger in the long term. Go look up Japan in the 1980s and 1990s to see what happens when bad loans are allowed to sit on the books for over a decade. Geez Ben!!

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