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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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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.

Posted 11 a.m. EDT
COUNTRYWIDE PACT: The owner of Countrywide promises to modify hundreds of thousands of mortgages to settle a lawsuit.

Bank of America, which acquired Countrywide in July, says up to 400,000 people will get reductions in interest rate or principal. The settlement affects borrowers in 11 states: Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and Washington.

A lot of borrowers got pay-option ARMs and made the minimum payments -- payments that didn't even cover each month's interest. Their loan balances went up each month, even after making payments. This freed up money that they spent on vacations and cars. Meanwhile, the values of their homes went down. Under this settlement, their loan balances will be reduced so they won't owe more than their houses are worth.

Some borrowers who behaved responsibly, but whose home values went down, will have principal balances reduced, too.

Bank of America says mortgages will be modified so that customers' monthly payments won't exceed 34 percent of gross income. Prepayment and loan modification fees will be waived.

But there's a fly in the ointment. This settlement is for mortgages that Countrywide services. But Countrywide and Bank of America don't necessarily own these mortgages or the securities based upon them. In some instances, modifications will require approval from investors. Approval won't necessarily be forthcoming.

Friday, Oct. 3
Posted 4 p.m. EDT
ANOTHER STEP: Now that the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street and the wooden arrow industry has passed, some say the federal government needs to save the banks.

What? You thought this bailout was supposed to save the banks? It's not. Not really. The bailout is intended to get money moving among banks by restoring confidence. But soon it will become clear that the banks need injections of money so they'll have money to lend.

I'm trying to think of an analogy here. You know me -- big on analogies. Congress just replaced the oil pump. Now the car needs oil.

At least, that's the thinking of Dick Lepre, a sage mortgage broker in San Francisco. "The thing that has to be addressed, apart from liquidity, is capital," he says. "I think there needs to be an injection of capital in the banking system."

The government can do that, he says, by investing money in financial institutions in exchange for preferred stock. After (and if) the banks recover a few years hence, the government can sell the preferred shares on the open market. The government could possibly make capital gains on these deals.

Brad DeLong, economist at the University of California at Berkeley, advocates a form of this idea, which he calls the Swedish Plan. He explains it as a process "by which the government invests in the major banks of New York and elsewhere and essentially takes them over and runs them for a few years, and then when they become profitable again sells off its stake to private investors," and adds that it "would be much more effective and a much better use of the public's money."

The bailout bill that passed the House today fixes a different problem. Financial institutions own distressed mortgage-backed (and other asset-backed) securities of undetermined worth. "Nobody knows what they're worth because nobody knows what the default rates will be and nobody knows what the loss severity will be," Lepre says. As a consequence, banks are reluctant to lend to one another.

The government will buy some of these securities of unknown worth. When a bank gets these securities off its balance sheet, other banks will be willing to lend money to it. That's how the thinking goes. But will the bank have money to lend?

Lepre doesn't think there's enough capital in the U.S. banking system for the healthy institutions to buy all the moribund ones. He thinks the next administration will have to tackle this issue by pumping money into banks in exchange for preferred shares.

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