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Tuesday,
Aug. 25
Posted
11 a.m. Eastern
Obama to Reappoint
Bernanke
President Obama
has decided to nominate Ben
Bernanke to a second four-year
term as Chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board. Regardless of
whether you believe Bernanke
deserves another term or not,
resolving the uncertainty as
to who will be at the helm of
the Fed is a good thing and
especially when done early,
like in this case. (Bernanke's
term doesn't expire until Jan.
31.)
The economy is
still in a critical phase with
the recession coming to an end
but weak recovery prospects
due to rising unemployment and
anemic growth in household income.
The Fed is also going to become
increasingly relevant to the
path of long-term interest rates
as they wind down $300 billion
in Treasury purchases and decide
whether their 2010 purchases
of Fannie and Freddie mortgage-backed
securities will come anywhere
close to the $1.25 trillion
done this year.
Bernanke is still
subject to Senate confirmation.
Keeping Bernanke
as Fed Chairman will allow the
Fed to focus on the actual work
of unwinding liquidity programs.
Eventually the Fed will begin
to raise short-term interest
rates but we are still a long-way
from that. Whether or not they
will ultimately have the fortitude
to do so in the face of political
pressure to keep rates low is
a topic for another day.
Wednesday,
Aug. 12
Posted
4 p.m. Eastern
Fed to wean
markets from Treasury buybacks
As expected, the
Federal Open Market Committee
left short-term interest rates
unchanged and used the same
exact language to indicate it
will be quite a while before
it raise rates. There were,
however, two notable remarks
in today's Fed meeting statement.
The first pertains
to the broad economy, with the
Fed saying that "economic
activity is leveling out."
The significance of the switch
represents a shift from things-are-getting-bad-at-a-slower-pace
to we've-hit-bottom.
Secondly, the
Fed did address the $300 billion
Treasury buyback program slated
to expire in September. The
Fed appears to have found some
middle ground between continuing
the program and adhering to
the original timetable. The
Fed will slow the pace of the
purchases so that the buybacks
cease by the end of October
rather than in September.
Is this good news?
Well, it is better than quitting
cold turkey in another month,
but it won't do much to rein
in interest rates if economic
data continues to improve or
inflation concerns ignite.
Let me put this
in a bit of context. The Fed
has already purchased $250 billion
out of the $300 billion slated
for the program. They didn't
increase the amount -- they'll
still buy the remaining $50
billion but take an extra month
to do so. But it will be of
limited help in reining in interest
rates because the Treasury continues
to increase the amount being
issued. Just today, the Treasury
issued $23 billion, on top of
the $37 billion yesterday and
will do another $15 billion
tomorrow. So the Treasury issued
more debt in the past day and
a half than the Fed will buy
back in the next two and half
months.
The Fed also deferred
any mention about mortgage-backed
securities buybacks, which total
$1.25 trillion out of $2 trillion
in expected total mortgage originations
this year. That is the big kahuna
in terms of impact on mortgage
rates -- but we'll wait until
September, November or December
to get any details.
Saturday,
Aug. 8
Posted
8 a.m. Eastern
Fed's Game
Plan Needs to Take Form
The Federal Open
Market Committee meets Tuesday
and Wednesday, Aug. 11-12, with an announcement
expected Wednesday around 2:15
p.m. ET. But an announcement
of what? The Fed remains eons
away from raising short-term
interest rates, but the time
has come for the Fed to be more
specific about what they intend
to do as the economic recovery
continues.
Economic output,
as measured by Gross Domestic
Product, appears to have bottomed
in the second quarter and a
resumption of economic growth
is now underway. After a long
and deep recession, a great
deal of economic growth must
be seen in the next siz to eight quarters
in order to claw back what has
disappeared since the fourth
quarter of 2007. The unemployment
rate will keep rising, notwithstanding
the slight decrease in July,
but it is definitely a marker
of progress that employers are
cutting jobs at a much slower
pace than what was seen just
a few months ago.
In the post-meeting
FOMC statement, expect the usual
cautionary statement that "conditions
continue to warrant exceptionally
low levels" in the federal
funds rate to be maintained.
After all, increasing joblessness,
weak growth in household income
and the reluctance of consumers
to spend will, at the very least,
cause some hiccups to the economic
recovery if not an outright
stumble at some point.
But Bernanke and
company will need to place a
greater emphasis on the need
to preserve price stability
now that the worst is behind
us. In order to keep a lid on
interest rates, particularly
long-term rates, markets must
be convinced that the Fed is
willing to eventually put muscle
behind that rhetoric and not
cave to political interests.
While under the purview of the
Federal Reserve and not the
rate-setting FOMC, the Fed will
continue backing away from liquidity
programs that have been used
to prop up the economy and resuscitate
credit markets.
A more immediate
concern is whether the Fed will
sunset or extend their purchases
of Treasury securities set to
expire in September. It is debatable
as to whether these purchases
have helped bring down long-term
interest rates, but they have
certainly kept them from rising.
The Fed's decision to extend
the program or not has implications
for mortgage rates either way.
If the Fed extends the Treasury
purchase program beyond September,
it will help keep a lid on mortgage
and other long-term interest
rates, or at least keep them
from climbing as fast as they
otherwise would as the economy
reflates. But it will also fuel
concerns that the Fed is either
stoking inflation by continuing
to pump money into the system
or that they are monetizing
the U.S. budget deficit.
Failure to extend
the Treasury purchase program
at a time when the economy is
regaining its footing and the
Treasury continues to issue
boatloads of new supply means
there is little to restrain
an upward march in rates. History
has shown that interest rates
go through spurts, moving a
lot in a very short period of
time and very little over longer
periods of time. After kissing
4 percent in early June, the
10-year Treasury note has spent
much of the summer in the 3.5
percent to 3.75 percent range,
despite steady economic progress.
If the Fed suddenly exits the
Treasury market, we could quickly
find ourselves playing in the
4 percent to 4.25 percent sandbox,
putting 30-year fixed mortgage
rates over the 6 percent mark.
Still low in a historical context,
yes, but enough to throw cold
water on refinancing activity
and perhaps even quashing some
prospective homebuyers' plans
as well.
Let's also look
out into 2010. This year, the
Mortgage Bankers Association
forecasts $2 trillion in mortgage
originations, and the Fed is
buying $1.25 trillion of that.
Will the Fed continue to buy
agency mortgage-backed securities
in large quantities after the
end of the year? And if not,
is there enough demand to soak
up whatever the Fed doesn't
buy? The Fed will need to carefully
calculate in order to keep mortgage
rates below 6 percent.
While we're still
some time away from an increase
in short-term interest rates,
the Fed's game plan must take
form and be verbalized now in
order to keep interest rates
from climbing too fast and to
quell concerns about eventual
inflation.
Wednesday,
July 22
Posted
11 a.m. Eastern
Another jobless
recovery?
Fed Chairman Ben
Bernanke's appearance before
the House Financial Services
Committee yesterday lacked any
unexpected revelations. One
point in his prepared remarks
did catch my attention, however.
"Although
the unemployment rate is projected
to peak at the end of this year,
the projected declines in 2010
and 2011 would still leave unemployment
well above FOMC participants'
views of the longer-run sustainable
rate."
Reading between
the lines, Bernanke seems to
suggest we're in for another
jobless recovery. My own opinion
is that it will be the mother of all jobless recoveries.
Sure hope I'm wrong.
Regarding the
economy: On July 31, the
initial estimate of second quarter
economic output, affectionately
known as Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, will be released. There
is a possibility that the economy,
either based on initial estimates
or subsequent revisions, will
eke out some growth.
Now, let's not
get too far out over our skis
but be cautious about interpreting
this if it should come to pass.
Here's why: Any growth posted
by the U.S. economy will largely
be due to a shrinking trade
deficit, as imports (what we
buy) have fallen much faster
than exports (what we sell).
So bottom line, any growth in
the U.S. economy during the
second quarter is more testament
to the resilience of foreign
consumers than it is American
consumers.
Reader comments:
Here are a couple reader
replies to my last post suggesting
some much-needed improvements
to the Making Home Affordable
mortgage plan.
"I would
like to write a comment about
your proposal to let homeowners
who lost their jobs not to pay
their mortgage for number of
months and then get reduced
payments if their new income
is lower. I think it's
nonsense.
"If something like
that should happen, I would like
to see all the renters get similar
provisions. And reduced rents
as well once the income gets
lower."
Landlords are in a position
to make those concessions if
they choose and if their own
financial circumstances allow.
I know of some that have suspended
rent payments while their tenants
are out of work.
"Your thoughts on highlighting
the need to increase the refinancing
eligibility caps to at least
150% addresses a vast amount
of responsible homeowners who
would benefit from refinancing
to more affordable home loans.
Speaking from experience, my
home is over 50% upside down
on the mortgage balance to home
value ratio. I agree that this
approach is effective, it is
not another bailout, but a guarantee
for the creditworthy on good
standing loans that are on the
books of government entities
of 'Fannie' and 'Freddie'."
There are some others I hope
to post in an upcoming blog
entry. Stay tuned.
Thursday,
July 16
Posted
2 p.m. Eastern
Are mortgage
modifications really the key?
Not to beat a
dead horse, but it is worth
revisiting the Making Home Affordable
initiative because the foreclosure
problem just isn't going to
go away. I want to point out
two things: one that is missing
and another that isn't working
anywhere close to expectations.
Unlike 2007 and
2008, the primary catalyst for
foreclosures is now job losses.
This will continue to be the
case through 2009, and, in my
estimation, 2010 as well. One
aspect of Making Home Affordable
that is sorely missing is what
I would term a "national forbearance
program for the unemployed."
You don't need me to tell you
that unemployment is at a 26-year
high with the number of unemployed
having doubled since the onset
of the recession in December 2007
to 14.7 million. Even scarier
is that one-in-three, or 4.4
million, have been unemployed
longer than six months.
So we can see
that foreclosures aren't going
to come to a screeching halt
as long as we're seeing numbers
like this. Which is why I feel
that a formal "forbearance program
for the unemployed" is a glaring
omission from the plan and something
sorely needed. Some may say
that if homeowners had an adequate
emergency savings fund to begin
with that a job loss wouldn't
lead to foreclosure. While I
am a huge proponent of emergency
savings, with 4.4 million people
unemployed longer than six months,
there are plenty of homeowners
that DID have an adequate savings
cushion only to completely blow
through it during an extended
period of joblessness.
So what would
my so far mythical "forbearance
program" entail? Only homeowners
that could show they were current
on their mortgage payments up
until the point of a job loss
would be eligible. These people
are not deadbeats. They deserve
the benefit of the doubt. And
what I would like to see is
a plan that relieves them of
making mortgage payments during
a period of joblessness. (And
OK, maybe you limit it to
a one-year time frame. I'm not
going to quibble too much about
the details at this point when
we don't even have the current
framework in place). Only once
they return to full-time work
would they be required to make
mortgage payments. And if they
go back to work at a reduced
pay rate, they could be fast-tracked
toward a potential loan modification
at that point to bring the payments
(but not the total debt owed)
in line with their new income.
In addition, the
current modification plan uses
what is known as a net present
value test to determine whether
a modification makes sense.
(This test assesses which of
two courses has a higher current
value and is done by discounting
future payments back to a value
today.) The net present value
test is certainly applicable
to a "forbearance program for
the unemployed" and is one that
eligible borrowers would likely
pass with flying colors. After
all, someone that has made payments
on time every month while employed
has demonstrated a willingness
to make payments as long as
they are capable. Forbearing
mortgage payments at the onset
of unemployment and resuming
six or nine months hence would
carry a higher net present value
than the permanently reduced
payments of a mortgage modification.
Again, I'd rather
not quibble over the exact details
and shades of gray of who is
or isn't eligible. Rather, my
goal is to point out a gaping
hole that, if addressed, could
slow foreclosures and avoid
those that are preventable.
But instead, I
continue to see a focus on mortgage
modifications. Just recently,
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
and HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan
penned a letter to large mortgage
servicers urging them to staff
up and accelerate the pace of
mortgage modifications. I'm
not sure that cures our current
ills. The Making Home Affordable Modification Plan
is geared toward reducing mortgage
payments as a percentage of
household income, with the goal
of preventing foreclosures by
reducing mortgage payments to
31 percent of household income.
For a variety of reasons, I
am not a huge fan of the plan
but there are some laudable
elements.
However, with
unemployment as the primary
determinant of foreclosure,
this does not work to fix the
current problem. What's 31 percent
of zero?
Some lenders have
taken a step in this direction
by reducing mortgage payments
to $500 for those that are unemployed.
This is nice, but without a
job, making even reduced mortgage
payments isn't feasible. There
are priorities for the first
$500 coming through the door
that outrank the mortgage payment,
such as putting food on the
table, keeping the water and
the lights on, and putting enough
gas in the car to get to job
interviews.
Now to my second
point. The focus, or "push"
if you will, on mortgage modifications
is more unsettling if those
same lenders and loan servicers
forsake the mortgage refinancing
side of the Making Home Affordable
equation.
Clearly, the Making
Home Affordable Refinancing
program is not working anywhere
close to expectations. Click
here for Holden Lewis's fine
explanation of the various
impediments.
But make no mistake.
The refinancing side of Making
Home Affordable, or MHA, is critically
important to avoiding a redux
of 2007 and 2008. I'll go so
far as to say that the MHA refinancing
plan is far more important than
the modification plan, even
if the fruits of the MHA refi
plan will not be truly evident
until 2011 or 2012.
Here is what I
mean: Folks, we've seen this
movie before. Short-term interest
rates are as low as they can
go. Eventually -- whether led
by inflation or an economic
rebound -- the Fed will need
to begin raising short-term
interest rates. (This may be
18 to 24 months away, but we
need to be thinking about it
now). The one-year Treasury
yield is currently 0.5 percent.
It's not a stretch to see that
eventually going back to 3 percent or
4 percent, and perhaps occurring
rapidly when it does. When short-term
interest rates move higher,
that will spell higher monthly
payments for millions of homeowners
that have any type of adjustable
rate mortgage. If they're stuck
in an adjustable rate loan and are
unable to sell because of being
upside-down, look out! We don't
want to go back to 2007 and
2008 just at the time when the
economy is getting its feet
back and the worst of the housing
debacle would be behind us.
Fortunately, this
is a bullet that can be dodged.
But to do so means the MHA
refi plan has to work, it has
to work well, and it has to
be expanded. Let me explain.
The MHA refi plan
offers the possibility of refinancing
millions of homeowners that
are not currently in any financial
distress into the permanent
payment affordability of a fixed
rate loan. These are homeowners
that are in many cases, victims
of nothing other than bad timing.
Perhaps they bought a home in
2005 or 2006 only to see the
value since plummet and not
only wipe out whatever down payment
they had but leave them upside
down by a significant margin.
Or maybe they bought a starter
home in 2004 intending
to move on by 2010 or 2011, and they
took a 7/1 ARM. Now that their
timetable has changed and the
starter home is taking on a
more permanent feel, they need
a loan better suited to their
extended time frame. In either
instance, facilitating a refinance
into today's low fixed rates
avoids the possibility of future
payment shock and keeps the
homeowner in a home that they've
demonstrated is affordable for
their budget. (This is even
a better option than the permanent
mulligan of a taxpayer-funded
mortgage modification for those
that got upside down by using
the home as an ATM.)
Sadly, there isn't
much evidence that the focus
of regulators, lenders and
the administration is being
placed on doing these refinancings.
Instead, the focus seems to
be kicking the can down the
road through mortgage modifications
that may or may not be necessary
or effective.
Think about how
many adjustable rate loans will
reset between 2010-2012 and
then add to that any adjustable
rate loans currently outstanding
that are experiencing payment
decreases now only to be whiplashed
upward in a higher rate environment.
To make MHA refinancing viable
and effective on the scale that
it needs to be will require
not only the focus of lenders
and regulators but also the
politicians. They can start
by toning down the mortgage
modification rhetoric and lifting
the refinancing eligibility
cap even further, from 125 percent
to 150 percent or even 175 percent.
This is money that is already
on the books, owned or guaranteed
by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Refinancing and assuring stability
in the payments involves no
extra money being doled out,
increases the likelihood that
the borrower will remain current
and avoids having to clean up
another mess in a few years.
If you've read
this far, you deserve to be
heard. I welcome your
thoughts.
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