View Full Version : Fed's seek further control...
SteamWake
06-25-10, 08:39 AM
In what is called a 'sweeping financial overhal' a bill is destined to land on the presients desk.
I see it as another layer of control by the federal goverment.
A new consumer protection bureau housed in the Federal Reserve would have independent funding, an independent leader and near-total autonomy to write and enforce rules. The government would have broad new powers to seize and wind down large, failing financial firms and to oversee the $600-trillion derivatives market. In addition, a council of regulators, headed by the Treasury secretary, would monitor the financial landscape for potential systemic risks.
"We've put in the hands of the president a very powerful set of tools for him to reassert American leadership in the world," Frank said.
Re assert? When / how did we lose it Mr. Frank.
Honestly I'd be willing to bet that a large majority of americans dont even know this legislation is in motion.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/25/AR2010062500675_pf.html
mookiemookie
06-25-10, 08:56 AM
There are those that see any system even slightly to the left of a Somalia-like anarchy as complete government oppression and control.
Radical deregulation led to the financial crisis. An abdication of traditional lending standards and practices led to the financial crisis. Obviously the industry is incapable of reigning in its own excesses, so naturally the pendulum will swing the other way and the Feds will reign it in for them.
SteamWake
06-25-10, 09:37 AM
Radical deregulation led to the financial crisis.
and here I thought it was reckless spending and a bunch of 'bad loans'.
"It's a great moment. I'm proud to have been here," said a teary-eyed Sen. Christopher J. Dodd(D-Conn.), who as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee led the effort in the Senate.
"No one will know until this is actually in place how it works. But we believe we've done something that has been needed for a long time. It took a crisis to bring us to the point where we could actually get this job done."
Wow Hillary is that you?
krashkart
06-25-10, 09:51 AM
and here I thought it was reckless spending and a bunch of 'bad loans'.
I think mook was indicating that it was deregulation that opened the door to reckless spending/bad loans in the first place.
EDIT
Now that I think of it my stepdad mentioned something similar awhile back, too.
SteamWake
06-25-10, 09:53 AM
Fannie May and Freddie mac??
Wait werent those goverment programs?
krashkart
06-25-10, 09:57 AM
You got me, brother. I hadn't even heard of them before the markets went nose-down.
mookiemookie
06-25-10, 10:02 AM
Fannie May and Freddie mac??
Wait werent those goverment programs?
They weren't the causes of the crisis. They were actors, but the non-bank subprime originators were making the lion's share of the toxic loans. FNMA and FHLMC were no more the singular cause of the crisis than any one of the individual banks such as Lehman, Bear or B of A.
Snestorm
06-25-10, 03:23 PM
It's very interesting, in where the power will lie.
The Federal Reserve is no more a part of your federal government than Federal Express.
Also interesting how this legislation escaped major media coverage.
mookiemookie
06-25-10, 03:34 PM
It's very interesting, in where the power will lie.
The Federal Reserve is no more a part of your federal government than Federal Express.
Putting the Consumer Protection Agency under the purview of the Fed was a mistake in my opinion. The Fed was completely negligent in their oversight during the runup of the credit bubble. Their malfeasence was one of the main causes of the crisis.
But your statement is wrong. The CEO of FedEx isn't appointed by the President, Federal Express doesn't give testimony to congress, FedEx isn't audited by the GAO and FedEx doesn't rebate its interest earned back to the Treasury. Unlike the Federal Reserve.
Snestorm
06-25-10, 04:12 PM
Putting the Consumer Protection Agency under the purview of the Fed was a mistake in my opinion. The Fed was completely negligent in their oversight during the runup of the credit bubble. Their malfeasence was one of the main causes of the crisis.
But your statement is wrong. The CEO of FedEx isn't appointed by the President, Federal Express doesn't give testimony to congress, FedEx isn't audited by the GAO and FedEx doesn't rebate its interest earned back to the Treasury. Unlike the Federal Reserve.
Your government doesn't own the Federal Reserve.
It's the other way around. This is why your vote means almost nothing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=daZcn3CCywM
It's not just The Federal Reserve, but The Central Bank of almost every government in the world.
mookiemookie
06-25-10, 05:15 PM
Your government doesn't own the Federal Reserve.
It's the other way around. This is why your vote means almost nothing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=daZcn3CCywM
It's not just The Federal Reserve, but The Central Bank of almost every government in the world.
The conspiracy theory video was made much better with the YouTube's vuvuzela button.
UnderseaLcpl
06-25-10, 10:19 PM
The way I understand it is that Fannie Mae was created in 1938 or somewhere thereabouts to help provide housing for those who couldn't afford it by purchasing and offering subprime mortgatges, as a way to give banks an incentive to lend to those of little means. Though it was never profitable on a consistent basis, Fannie Mae continued to provide a market for subprime loans up until the housing market crisis in the late 70's, a smaller version of what we experienced. At that point, people began asking questions about the wisdom of using a government agency to operate in such a fashion in a free market, and Freddie Mac was established as a compromise, expanding the motrgage market but introducing a pinch of capitalism into the mix as a publicly-traded company.
This system wasn't a problem at the time, as the rate of subprime lending was fairly low, and the the Federal lenders could cover shortfalls, but with the influx of immigrants and speculation in the past 10 years, we were set up for a bubble to burst.
I see this as a failure of government, not of the market, as evidenced by the fact that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were the first to fall. If there had been no Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac there would be no significant subprime mortgage market and there would have been no house of cards to topple. Blaming the market for the crisis is like blaming electricity for taking the path of least resistance. If you're smart, you can make it work for you, but if you're foolish you'll get shocked.
Stealth Hunter
06-25-10, 10:36 PM
Radical deregulation led to the financial crisis. An abdication of traditional lending standards and practices led to the financial crisis.
Quite right. There's plenty of blame to go around, and it doesn't fasten only on one party or even mainly on what Washington did or didn't do. The problem is one of irresponsibility and greed, with hard-working homeowners and billionaire villains each playing a role. To sum up, put the blame on:
Home buyers (http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1824), who took advantage of easy credit to bid up the prices of homes excessively.
109th Congress (http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d051009sp.pdf), which supported and passed a mortgage tax deduction that gave consumers a tax incentive to buy more expensive homes (and other assets).
Real estate agents (http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1824), most of whom work for the sellers rather than the buyers and who earned higher commissions from selling more expensive homes.
The Clinton administration (http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/clinton-rejects-blame-for-financial-crisis-2008-09-25.html), which pushed for less stringent credit and downpayment requirements for working- and middle-class families.
Mortgage brokers (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business/july-dec08/econtrouble_08-20.html), who made bad investments, offered less-credit-worthy home buyers subprime, adjustable rate loans with low initial payments, but exploding interest rates.
Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan (http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2004/20040223/), who in 2004, near the peak of the housing bubble, encouraged Americans to take out adjustable rate mortgages.
Wall Street firms (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business/july-dec08/econtrouble_08-20.html), who also made bad investments and paid too little attention to the quality of the risky loans that they bundled into Mortgage Backed Securities which they invested in, and issued bonds using those securities as collateral.
The Bush administration (http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/09/20/business/prexy.php), which failed to provide needed government oversight of the increasingly dicey mortgage-backed securities market and also slashed interest rates to make credit cheap.
Mark-to-Market (http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2008/07/mark_to_market.html), an obscure accounting rule which can have the paradoxical result of making assets be worth less on paper than they are in reality during times of panic.
Collective delusion (http://www.business.cch.com/bankingfinance/focus/news/Subprime_WP_rev.pdf), or a belief on the part of all parties that home prices would keep rising forever, no matter how high or how fast they had already gone up (a lot like the attitude Americans had just before the Crash of 1929 with investing in the stock market).
The Reagan administration (http://hnn.us/articles/53527.html[/URL), which deregulated much of the private sector for the sake of adhering to the public's interests, which allowed savings and mortgage institutions to invest recklessly with less government intervention (and reduced the government's power all through the sector).
mookiemookie
06-25-10, 11:04 PM
If there had been no Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac there would be no significant subprime mortgage market and there would have been no house of cards to topple.
This is absolutely false. Suprime lending didn't exist until the early 1990s.
Fannie and Freddie were actually losing market share to non-bank lenders in the subprime market during the runup to the crisis (2003-2007). And remember, the credit bubble extended to more than just home mortgages - commercial real estate, student loans, credit card receivables and other forms of debt that Wall Street had an insatiable appetite for. None of which involved Fannie and Freddie (hereafter referred to as government sponsored entities or GSEs).
The primary sources of the credit bubble and resulting economic collapse were the abandonment of traditional lending standards - banks didn't care if loans were going to pay, as they were moving them off their books to Wall Street within 30, 60, 90 days after closing anyways - and a Federal Reserve that brought rates to historic lows and kept them there for an extended period of time, all the while ignoring the bad behavior of the loan originators. Again, none of this is directly a fault of the GSEs. They did purchase loans from banks, and they did lower their requirements for the loans that they would purchase, but the majority of the garbage loans were securitized by private label issuers, and not the GSEs. Indeed, by the time that the GSEs had relaxed their rules, the die had already been cast and the housing boom was in full swing.
The GSEs were not the first to fall. They were not even government agencies - they were government SPONSORED entities. The important difference being that they could borrow from the Treasury at more attractive rates than others. They were private sector, publicly traded firms.
According to http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/05/business/05fannie.html
From 2001 to 2004, the subprime loan market grew from $160 to $540 billion. And also, by 2004 FNMA had lost 56% of its business to Wall Street firms. the GSEs relaxed their loan buying standards in attempt to play catchup to the greed of the private label securitizers who cared not about the quality of the loans they securitized, just so long as they could get them into a mortgage backed security and out the door.
The "blame Freddie and Fannie" argument even fails in terms of time and space....FNMA's been around for 70-odd years and just now they cause a collapse of the financial system? It makes no sense - especially given that the entire world experienced a housing boom during the early to mid 2000s. UK, France, Spain, Australia, Ireland - if the entire cause of the crisis could be laid at the GSEs doorstep, then how did they cause the runup internationally?
As I said before - blame the GSEs for taking part in the whole mess, but to say they were the cause and start of it is just not true.
Stealth Hunter - I agree with your list! I would add a couple culprits:
The credit rating agencies - rating junk paper as "AAA" and thus giving the green light for asset managers to purchase it based on their investment policy was a huge cause of the crisis.
The repeal of Glass Steagall - allowing depository banks, who are by definition supposed to be risk averse, to be co-mingled with investment banks who by definition take on risk is a recipe for disaster.
The 2004 SEC leverage exemption - in 2004, the SEC allowed just 5 firms - Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers - to boost their debt-to-net-capital ratio from 12-1 up to 30 or 40 to 1. This allowed for the losses to be magnified. For a testament to how destructive this decision was - look at the names on that list and see which ones still exist today.
FIREWALL
06-25-10, 11:29 PM
And don't leave out VA loans which had almost a 100% default rate.
UnderseaLcpl
06-26-10, 07:38 AM
This is absolutely false. Suprime lending didn't exist until the early 1990s. Negative. The term "subprime" may not have existed until then ( I wouldn't know) but Fannie Mae was created with the intent of providing a secondary mortgage market through purchasing risky loans, thus setting the groundwork. A rose by any other name still has thorns.
Fannie and Freddie were actually losing market share to non-bank lenders in the subprime market during the runup to the crisis (2003-2007). And remember, the credit bubble extended to more than just home mortgages - commercial real estate, student loans, credit card receivables and other forms of debt that Wall Street had an insatiable appetite for. None of which involved Fannie and Freddie (hereafter referred to as government sponsored entities or GSEs). Yeah, because Wall Street thought it had a backup plan in the security promised to GSEs by the Fed. You're missing a key point here, and that is that this whole industry is a reflection of what it is built on. Like dollars themselves, it was only worth anything because people thought other people thought it was. A whole industry was built, and then expanded upon the premise that the state would buy debt, and there was a killing to be made while high- interest payments came in. It didn't take long for a whole trading system to grow up around that system, but the system itself was bound to collapse. If there had been no Federal housing initiatives of this type banks wouldn't usually lend to high-risk customers and there would be no crisis.
The primary sources of the credit bubble and resulting economic collapse were the abandonment of traditional lending standards - banks didn't care if loans were going to pay, as they were moving them off their books to Wall Street within 30, 60, 90 days after closing anyways - and a Federal Reserve that brought rates to historic lows and kept them there for an extended period of time, all the while ignoring the bad behavior of the loan originators. And why didn't they care? Why was there a way to trade bad loans in the first place? Government made it happen. It's just another unintended side-effect of screwing around with the market.
Again, none of this is directly a fault of the GSEs. They did purchase loans from banks, and they did lower their requirements for the loans that they would purchase, but the majority of the garbage loans were securitized by private label issuers, and not the GSEs. Indeed, by the time that the GSEs had relaxed their rules, the die had already been cast and the housing boom was in full swing.
Like I said, they laid the groundwork. They created a market where none existed before, and where one should not yet have existed.
The GSEs were not the first to fall. They were not even government agencies - they were government SPONSORED entities. The important difference being that they could borrow from the Treasury at more attractive rates than others. They were private sector, publicly traded firms.
I've made my argument, but I'd like to address this point. GSEs are no different from government agencies in my mind, as they are backed by a fitness guarantee and operate much in the same way government does, which is to say the same way any guaranteed industry does, which is to say stupidly. They are only private firms in the nominal sense in that respect.
Furthermore, they may not have been the first to fall out of everyone, but that's splicing hairs and disregarding the Federal backing they recieved. They were definetly the first dominoes to fall, though. When they went, the market built on top of them went.
The "blame Freddie and Fannie" argument even fails in terms of time and space....FNMA's been around for 70-odd years and just now they cause a collapse of the financial system? It makes no sense - especially given that the entire world experienced a housing boom during the early to mid 2000s. UK, France, Spain, Australia, Ireland - if the entire cause of the crisis could be laid at the GSEs doorstep, then how did they cause the runup internationally? You've got me on that one. I don't know for sure. It could be any number of things, but I suspect that if the GSE's were to blame then the world runup would have something to do with everything being tied to the US economy and perhaps other nations following suit with respect to housing policies.
As far as the time element is concerned, that's a non factor. Times change, and when these agencies were established there was not a great demand for home-ownership from people who couldn't afford it. There was a moderate crisis in the late 70's, as I mentioned, which just happened to come right after an immigration spike, so this has happened before.
As I said before - blame the GSEs for taking part in the whole mess, but to say they were the cause and start of it is just not true.
Perhaps, but this crisis reminds me of a lot of earlier economic crises where everything under the sun was blamed except for government, or rather, particular policies embraced by persons in office at the time, and all that turned out to be BS. As such I am inclined to believe that the simplest explanation is the correct one.
Take, for instance, the gas crisis of the 70's, as one of the most severe in recent history. The shortage and inflation of the time were blamed on everything from the weather to OPEC to speculation to greedy oil tycoons, but those things have always been around. What caused the shortage was the government price-fixing gasoline. As Milton Friedman put it (paraphrased)"Economists may not know much, but we know how to create a surplus or a shortage. Want a surplus? Set prices above the market rate. Want a shortage? Set prices below the market rate."
He was right, and the whole truckload of BS that followed was blamed on everything except the bulls.
I see the same thing here. Affordable housing is a popular political stance, and it comes with all the trappings of similar failed initiatives of the past. You can blame anything on anything if you try hard enough, but you can't deny empirical evidence unless you are blind.
mookiemookie
06-26-10, 12:44 PM
Negative. The term "subprime" may not have existed until then ( I wouldn't know) but Fannie Mae was created with the intent of providing a secondary mortgage market through purchasing risky loans, thus setting the groundwork. A rose by any other name still has thorns. You misunderstand what FNMA/FHLMC actually did. They were bound by charter to only buy conforming (i.e. not subprime) mortgages. This only changed in the mid-2000s when they began losing market share of the mortgage market to private securitizers.
Yeah, because Wall Street thought it had a backup plan in the security promised to GSEs by the Fed. You're missing a key point here, and that is that this whole industry is a reflection of what it is built on. Like dollars themselves, it was only worth anything because people thought other people thought it was. A whole industry was built, and then expanded upon the premise that the state would buy debt, and there was a killing to be made while high- interest payments came in. It didn't take long for a whole trading system to grow up around that system, but the system itself was bound to collapse. If there had been no Federal housing initiatives of this type banks wouldn't usually lend to high-risk customers and there would be no crisis. No. The ace in the hole "backup plan" was the fact that the originating lender did not need to keep the loan on their books. they could make any loan at all, as they knew that there would be someone on Wall Street would would buy it and securitize it. The voracious demand for securitized debt can be traced back to the decisions of the Fed - with rates as low as they were, the reach for yield led asset managers to take on other assets than traditional bonds and Treasuries. Mortgage backed securities were yielding much higher rates than any other security out there - coupled with the fact that defaults were low due to housing boom, and credit rating agencies putting their stamps of approval on all of it. It was a great deal.
It was a system of passing the buck and shortsightedness. Loan originators didn't care about the quality of the loans they made, as they could sell it to a Wall Street securitizer. Wall Street securitizers didn't care about the quality of the loans they bought, as the risk of any individual loan would be mitigated (or so they thought) by pooling it with other loans and selling it to investors. The investors didn't care, as they were earning great yields and the credit rating agencies had rated this stuff AAA. Everyone wins.
And why didn't they care? Why was there a way to trade bad loans in the first place? Government made it happen. It's just another unintended side-effect of screwing around with the market. Ah, ah - be careful there. Did government MAKE it happen? Or did government LET it happen? It's the latter - the Federal Reserve completely failed to reign in banks making liar loans (loans with no income verification) or NINJA (No Income, No Job or Assets) loans. And why was there a market for these kind of loans? FNMA/FHLMC were forbidden by charter to purchase these in the early years of the credit bubble? Where were they going? To the private label securitizers!
Like I said, they laid the groundwork. They created a market where none existed before, and where one should not yet have existed. Are you blaming securitization? The process of pooling mortgages into a security? If you are, then you should realize that the first mortgage backed security was issued in 1981. That's way before the crisis, and thus cannot be a cause of it.
FNMA and FHLMC were rife with fraud and poor risk management practices. but they did not create the market for mortgage backed securities. The private label securitization market had developed on its own by the 1990s. Wall Street was securitizing all sorts of debt - as I said before, auto loans, credit card debt, student loans, etc.
Let's do a little experiment. Imagine that the GSEs had been taken out of the picture during the mid to late 1990s (imagine they went bankrupt, or swallowed up by a black hole, or whatever). What happens? It changes nothing! The Fed still lowers rates to historic lows, asset managers still search for yield, loan originators still make crappy loans to satisfy that yield and earn a hefty profit, the credit rating agencies still stamp it all AAA, the Wall Street firms still get heavily into derivatives and still overleverage themselves. None of that relies on the GSE's existence or non-existence to happen.
UnderseaLcpl
06-28-10, 12:24 AM
You misunderstand what FNMA/FHLMC actually did. They were bound by charter to only buy conforming (i.e. not subprime) mortgages. This only changed in the mid-2000s when they began losing market share of the mortgage market to private securitizers. That's news to me. IIRC there were several initiatives passed concerning affordable housing well before 2000 that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were governed by.
But let's say that they did buy only conforming mortgages. Why did they exist? By that token alone they are interfering with the market by creating demand where there was none before. The private sector creates artificial demand as well, but it doesn't have a state to back it up, so the damage is minimized. What happens when a GSE has state backing?
No. The ace in the hole "backup plan" was the fact that the originating lender did not need to keep the loan on their books. they could make any loan at all, as they knew that there would be someone on Wall Street would would buy it and securitize it. The voracious demand for securitized debt can be traced back to the decisions of the Fed - with rates as low as they were, the reach for yield led asset managers to take on other assets than traditional bonds and Treasuries. Mortgage backed securities were yielding much higher rates than any other security out there - coupled with the fact that defaults were low due to housing boom, and credit rating agencies putting their stamps of approval on all of it. It was a great deal.
Of course it was a great deal. The government made it that way. The Fed was to blame, yes, but the whole structure never should have existed in the first place. FNMA was the beginning of the first national "housing project", and like every other housing project it failed utterly and was ruinously expensive because it went against the grain of market forces.
It was a system of passing the buck and shortsightedness. Loan originators didn't care about the quality of the loans they made, as they could sell it to a Wall Street securitizer. Wall Street securitizers didn't care about the quality of the loans they bought, as the risk of any individual loan would be mitigated (or so they thought) by pooling it with other loans and selling it to investors. The investors didn't care, as they were earning great yields and the credit rating agencies had rated this stuff AAA. Everyone wins.
Everyone wins, because the system was federally guaranteed, or at least it was until it failed. I think you look too much into the symptoms and not enough into the cauases.
Ah, ah - be careful there. Did government MAKE it happen? Or did government LET it happen? It's the latter - the Federal Reserve completely failed to reign in banks making liar loans (loans with no income verification) or NINJA (No Income, No Job or Assets) loans. And why was there a market for these kind of loans? FNMA/FHLMC were forbidden by charter to purchase these in the early years of the credit bubble? Where were they going? To the private label securitizers! I'd say both. We still come down to the essential problem of a market existing where it should not. A market that is not truly governed by market forces is no market at all, and it will eventually collapse. We see this all the time in the form of subsidies and legislation and trade restrictions - ever evolving, never "just right", always requiring more and more capital expenditure and legislative adjustment. This time the bubble happened to be a little too big for the market to bear.
Are you blaming securitization? The process of pooling mortgages into a security? If you are, then you should realize that the first mortgage backed security was issued in 1981. That's way before the crisis, and thus cannot be a cause of it. No, I am not blaming securitization. If I did I'd be after insurance and every other securitized asset as well, which I'm not. What I am blaming is state interference in natural market mechanisms... especially price mechanisms. That's it.
FNMA and FHLMC were rife with fraud and poor risk management practices. but they did not create the market for mortgage backed securities. The private label securitization market had developed on its own by the 1990s. Wall Street was securitizing all sorts of debt - as I said before, auto loans, credit card debt, student loans, etc.
There was no secondary mortgage market to speak of before 1938. No supply. FNMA created it.
I'd be interested in hearing your explanation of the housing crisis in the late 70's.
Let's do a little experiment. Imagine that the GSEs had been taken out of the picture during the mid to late 1990s (imagine they went bankrupt, or swallowed up by a black hole, or whatever). What happens? It changes nothing! The Fed still lowers rates to historic lows, asset managers still search for yield, loan originators still make crappy loans to satisfy that yield and earn a hefty profit, the credit rating agencies still stamp it all AAA, the Wall Street firms still get heavily into derivatives and still overleverage themselves. None of that relies on the GSE's existence or non-existence to happen.
One key thing is missing, the fitness guarantee that created the problem in the first place. Granted, rates at historic lows would have created a bubble, but nothing like what you get when investors think there's a safety.
I can see your points, Mark, but I don't think you're getting to the heart of the issue. It is true that private companies often seek maximum profit, as do investors, but they aren't stupid. If they bought into the scenario you presented there would have been an explosion of investment in everything from commodities to crops. I still see a missing factor, and that missing factor is most likely the fitness guarantee. At least, that's my opinion now. I'll have to look into it more, but this whole thing is disturbingly familiar, so I'm wary of it.
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