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Mortgage Blog Mortgage Matters
Holden Lewis
Holden Lewis blogs about mortgages and real estate and how they are affected by the economy. Sign up for a news alert to be notified of updates.
 By Holden Lewis
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Thursday, Oct. 9
Posted 2 p.m. EDT
FLIP-FLOP: First John McCain wanted lenders to pay for their mistakes, and now he wants taxpayers to pick up the tab.

The Republican presidential candidate talked briefly about his mortgage-relief plan during Tuesday night's debate with Barack Obama. As president, McCain said in response to a question, "I would order the secretary of the Treasury to immediately buy up the bad home loan mortgages in America and renegotiate at the new value of those homes -- at the diminished value of those homes and let people be able to make those -- be able to make those payments and stay in their homes."

I was so psyched. "He's talking about bringing back the Home Owners Loan Corp.!" I told my wife. I happen to be reading the history of the Depression-era HOLC, cleverly titled "History and Policies of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation," by C. Lowell Harriss. I bought it from an online bookstore in Ireland, because that was the only copy for sale on Earth a few months ago.

On Wednesday morning, the McCain campaign posted a summary of the "Homeownership Resurgence Plan" on its Web site. That summary made it clear that the government would buy distressed mortgage loans at a loss to the investors who owned them. Seems fair. Make a bad business decision, suffer the consequences.

The McCain Web site explained that some borrowers would have to have a portion of their mortgage debt forgiven. In these cases, it said, lenders "must recognize the loss that they've already suffered."

Later in the day, McCain's economic adviser, Doug Holtz-Eakin, held a teleconference with reporters in which he described the plan. He explained that "the taxpayers' contribution would be, in some cases the difference between the values of those two loans, something which would be the necessity for taxpayer contribution." In other words, the federal government would take the loss -- not the lenders.

It's like if Uncle Sam walked onto the lot of a car dealership and pointed at a brand-new car that had been dented in a test drive, and said, "I want to pay top dollar for that one." Just so the dealership will stay in business and keep sending campaign finance checks.

After Holtz-Eakin delivered his explanation that contradicted McCain's earlier description, the campaign's Web site was changed. You know that sentence that said that lenders must recognize the loss that they've already suffered? It's gone.

I'm dismayed by the quick flip-flop. But I like the idea of the government buying distressed mortgages, just as it did with the HOLC. Obama advocated the same idea two weeks ago. I figure that if McCain, Obama and I all agree on something, one of us must be right.

As for who takes the loss, the lenders or the investors or the taxpayers: If all of us benefit from a modern-day HOLC, it doesn't matter much. The HOLC, which existed from 1933 to 1951, owned one-fifth of the nation's residential mortgages at one point, and foreclosed on about half of those. And when it was disbanded after 18 years, it yielded a slight profit to the Treasury.

Stay tuned for an avalanche of words from me in the coming weeks. I've been working intermittently on a megapost responding to patient reader Tom the Vet, who asked weeks ago if he could buy a mortgage-backed security with his mortgage in it. I'm working on a story describing the two presidential candidates' approaches to housing and mortgages, and an article about the HOLC.

Wednesday, Oct. 8
Posted 2 p.m. EDT
VOLATILITY: Jaw-dropping gyrations in rates continue. Today we got a surprise Fed rate cut. And guess what? Mortgage rates went up.

The Fed coordinated a half-point rate cut with central banks in Canada and Europe. Now the federal funds rate is 1.5 percent. But there was no corresponding drop long-term bond yields and interest rates. The 10-year Treasury yield has climbed about 27 basis points since yesterday's close. The 10-year yield finished at 3.51 percent yesterday and is 3.78 percent early this afternoon.

Yields on mortgage-backed securities went up, too, but not quite as much. This is a signal that investors are becoming more comfortable (or less uncomfortable) with holding Fannie and Freddie mortgage-backed securities. This newfound comfort is good news for borrowers because it keeps mortgage rates in check.

DEBATE: Both presidential candidates talked about mortgages at last night's debate. I'm going to write in depth about John McCain's proposal to have the government buy distressed mortgages. I disagree with those who dismiss it as irrelevant or nothing new.

Tuesday, Oct. 7
Posted 4 p.m. EDT
SEESAW: Mortgage rates were heading up -- and then Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke talked about the economy. Rates reversed course, and they stand about where they ended up yesterday.

That's good news, because rates have fallen quite a bit since last week. Bankrate conducts its weekly mortgage rate survey every Wednesday, so I don't know exactly where rates are today. But judging by what's happening to bond yields, it looks like the 30-year fixed has fallen three-eighths to half a percentage point since last Wednesday. Back then, the 30-year fixed averaged 6.41 percent. Today, it's probably around 6 percent or a little lower.

Now, if only more people were able to qualify for loans.

In a speech today, Bernanke said that the outlook for economic growth has worsened and that the Fed needs to consider whether it should reduce the target for the federal funds rate. Don't be surprised if the Fed cuts the target for the overnight rate at its next scheduled meeting Oct. 28 and Oct. 29. It might even drop the rate before then.

Monday, Oct. 6
Posted 4 p.m. EDT
HISTORY LESSON: During the housing boom, state and local governments sought to restrict the types of mortgages that ended up at the core of this $700 billion bailout. But the Bush administration, congressional Republicans, and the rating agencies quashed those efforts.

We'll pick up the story in late 2002 in Georgia, although we could look further back in North Carolina.

Six years ago, Georgia enacted the Georgia Fair Lending Act, which made lenders and mortgage investors legally liable for any predatory loans that they underwrote or bought. The law didn't ban any type of loan, but it allowed borrowers to sue if they believed they had been taken advantage of.

In reaction, Standard & Poor's -- yes, one of the bond-rating agencies that has been blamed for this whole mess -- decreed that it would not rate any mortgage-backed securities that included loans covered by the Georgia law. Standard & Poor's announcement threatened to shut down the state's entire mortgage industry.

I wrote back then: "A few (Georgia) mortgage brokers and lenders say they will stop lending altogether, or restrict the types of loans they offer, in reaction to Standard & Poor's announcement. They make subprime, loans -- mortgages for people with flawed credit histories -- as well as low-documentation and interest-only mortgages to people with excellent credit. None of the lenders are household names. They include EquiFirst Corp., AmeriQuest and BancMortgage Financial Group."

Subprime, low-doc, interest-only. Those are the loans that got us into this mess, and those are the loans that Georgia's legislature restricted. But Standard & Poor's wielded more power than the legislature, and had the ability to virtually shut down Georgia's mortgage industry. It threatened to use that power.

What happened to those lenders I mentioned in that story? EquiFirst survived by selling itself to Barclays Bank, and now EquiFirst does no subprime lending. It concentrates on FHA-insured mortgages. AmeriQuest was sued by attorneys general of 30 states and settled for $325 million before closing shop for good in 2007. I'm not sure what happened to BancMortgage Financial.

As I wrote back then, Standard & Poor's objected because investors "could lose the value of all the Georgia loans in (a) mortgage-backed security, and also could be liable for punitive damages. With each Georgia loan carrying the possibility of unlimited punitive damages, it is impossible to calculate the risk of having Georgia loans in a mortgage-backed security, says Frank Raiter, managing director of Standard & Poor's residential mortgage ratings group."

Ironically, Standard & Poor's never got the hang of calculating the risk of any mortgage-backed security -- not just for loans covered under Georgia's anti-predatory lending law. They rated subprime and Alt-A mortgage-backed securities as investment quality, when they were anything but.

Georgia backed down and watered down the law. Meanwhile, Rep. Bob Ney, R-Ohio, introduced a bill that he dubbed the "Responsible Lending Act of 2003," which would have invalidated all state and local laws that sought to curb predatory lending. Ney later was convicted of accepting gifts in exchange for doing the bribers' bidding in Congress.

That law wasn't passed, but the Comptroller of the Currency pre-empted the Georgia law, invalidating the portions of the law that the Bush administration disagreed with. So much for federalism and states' rights.

Standard & Poor's never got its comeuppance for sticking its nose into a state's legislative business. On April 17, 2007, an S&P executive testified before Congress that "as long as interest rates and unemployment remain at historical lows, and income growth continues to be positive, there is sufficient protection for the majority of investment grade bonds."

She couldn't have been more wrong about that, and it appears that her company couldn't have been more wrong about the dangers of subprime lending. Georgia's legislature had better judgment, but S&P had more power -- and misused it.

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