Mortgage
Reform and Stuff
Lobbyists
Give The Hill Legislation? (Is there gambling at Rick’s?)
I shocked some readers with my last blog, when I
mentioned that large parts of Johnson-Crapo statutory language (and
Corker-Warner before it) were supplied by the industries affected by and
backing the statutory proposals.
Again, nothing nefarious there and the practice has been
around forever (and yes, we/I did it at Fannie Mae)—even though both congressional
chambers have their own legislative drafting offices to provide what the
lobbyists willingly provide—often because the industries and institutions filling
staff requests to supply language know their businesses better than the Hill
and know what existing laws come into play when policy and product changes suddenly
are on the table. It is understandable that the “interests” prefer certitude in
the statute rather than unintended consequences or vagaries which permit too
much regulatory discretion.
If there is process sin here, it with the congressional
offices unapologetically taking proffered language, not amending or changing it to accommodate how
their “boss” sees the issue or how their principals want to be portrayed. The interest
group’s legislative objectives—not to mention the voluminous campaign support
which precedes or follows the official’s acceptance--often enthuse and motivate
the Senators or Congressmen, not the other way around.
As various outside sources and media parse the statutory language
(not just the accompanying prose), right now is the time to “stress test” the
CWJC provisions, and identify potential problems, which might be tomorrow’s
trigger for a repeat of 2008’s financial collapse.
If done properly, policy makers still will make changes when
shown possible land mines or errors in what they’ve accepted. And, as I pointed
out in earlier blogs, CWJC sponsors will change this bill as they hear from
more people they want as allies, most of those possible advocates have a statutory
“price” for that support.
One early analysis notes the major advantages it appears
to give the TBTF banks, including no limits on the amounts of FMIC business
they or their subsidiaries can conduct.
Hopefully that issue will play itself out over the next
several weeks, when enough Senators say, “What the Hell are we doing here?”
But how ironic is it that the Committee which sweat blood
over Dodd-Frank got criticized by the big banks before and after the bill became
law—for a package which really doesn’t inflict much pain on the big guys—now
turns around and plays sweet nursing Nanny to the same institutions?
Do you think non-stop bank D-F whining begat these bennies? Maloni's answer: Do
bears use the woods as a lavatory?
It is so much easier for Senators and Congressmen to talk
the tough pro-consumer/little guy talk than walk the tough pro-consumer/little
guy walk.
Bank
Holding Companies
Bank holding companies (BHCs) have subsidiaries and a
near infinite capacity to create new ones.
A TBTF bank already can possess subs which offer mortgage
lending, private mortgage insurance, securities insurance, securitizing and
securities sales. Why not appraisal, home sales and more? In other words, why
couldn’t a vertically integrated BHC provide near everything the new FMIC
legislation offers the commercial world?
If BHC double dipping occurs—multiple units of the bank
using the FMIC’s services and subsidies--does CWJC have the right limitations
in place or capital demands which can’t get passed around the BHC like a hot potato
so the regulators lose sight of what sub inside the big shell needs it and who
is holding it?
Can more than one subsidiary claim the same capital, if
BHC management gives it different labels?
The big financial institutions' litany of violations is
there for all to see and read (assuming the Senate solons have the time and
capacity). How did all of the financial products/services manipulation and
chicanery—which one would think would anger elected public officials—instead earn
the behemoths so much Senate Banking Committee succor?
Insurance
Regulation, A Problem?
CWJC likely will see an increase in the current handful
(seven or so) private mortgage insurance companies which will need to ramp up,
mightily in capital and possibly numbers, if they are going to fill the
legislation’s insurance demands.
The economic opportunities might also stimulate more
companies seeking insurance charters to take advantage of the $11 Trillion U.S.
housing market.
Insurers are chartered and regulated at the state level
under the McCarran-Ferguson law (bars most federal regulation).
Historically, state insurance regulation has been lax
(that’s a nice phrase for "industry captives"), with most state insurance
officials coming right from the companies they have to regulate. Are the
various state Insurance Commissioners up to the task of regulating the new
chartered and regulated entities which CWJC produces—or will they trip over one
another to display safe havens for a new wave of insurers, plus the existing
ones?
Lenders Complaining
Already?
In camouflaged terms--which sound so thoughtful but
reflect selfish interests--some banks and mortgage companies already are
expressing concern that CWJC’s 10% first tier private capital requirement--to
protect taxpayers from lender losses—may be “too steep for____________.” (Fill
in the blank with your own public policy rationale, but you would be closer to
the truth those lenders are expressing, if you supplied, “Because it won’t allow us to
make as much money!”)
Voters
don’t like “Barry?”
President Obama last week ruminated that Democrats “get
clobbered” in midterm elections.
But in 2014's mid terms, this President will contribute political spice
to that losing sauce and be a major reason for what now looks like to be a crushing
GOP Tsunami of congressional wins, including possible loss of the Democrat Senate.
It should not have been that way, given the number of Senate/House
Republican reactionaries who could have been quarantined and ousted in
November, if the President and his congressional allies showed the political
skills to isolate and expose the “Teapublicans” with thoughtful political
initiatives.
But, instead the Hill D’s and the White House offered up Syria,
“Obamacare,” disputes with Israel, immigration missteps, lingering unemployment
and a slack recovery, Russia, Iran, Iraq—and did I mention Obamacare—and will give GOP voters and Independents grist to vote
out Democrats this fall, replacing them with Conservatives.
Maybe that’s just the way our democracy works and,
possibly, in 2016, mistakes by a GOP controlled House and Senate, could produce
the reverse and D’s will win back the
White House and possibly the Senate, again?
What
Others Are Saying
In the Weekly Standard,
an unusual source says Fannie is good!
Harlan Green in the Huffington
Post.
Housing Wire article questions if CWJC will hurt housing recovery?
Alvarez
and Marsal suggest F&F liquidation value is $200 Billion.
Writing for a forthcoming Brooklyn Law School law journal, David Reiss produces an overview of the
F&F law suits.
Maloni
3-23-2014
3 comments:
Let me be the first comment in the current blog.
I speculated that real estate sales/listings could be something banks might want to consider, if the FMIC legislation greatly enhances their business.
Right now, Bank Holding Companies (BHC) are statutorily prohibited from engaging in real estate activities.
But, as with any other matter, a motivated Congress could change that.
Before anyone asks, I have no information of bank interest in this matter.
So as I understand CWJC, there is renewed opportunity for banks, holding companies and insurance underwriting to make a killing here. So what is all this talk about "protecting the taxpayer"? The good side of this now Dimon can take his $10 million dollar raise and not have to lay off 7,000 workers weeks later.
Bill, how come there is a lot of amnesia out there concerning TBTF TARP fund spending and all the fraud and havoc created from these institutions from the last crisis we still haven't recovered from?
One final observation; I've notice whenever there is any story about Fannie Mae there is a picture of the glorious mansion which appears to be filled with opulent offices and overpaid employees. I say those are for a reason and should not be replaced with TBTF like city-center skyscrapers. We wouldn't want the employees to start jumping off the roof like they've been doing at the JPM buildings in London and Hong Kong.
Congress sometimes (many times) is an ass.
The bank forgetfulness--result fo swallowing years of lies and years of big bank money--just means the Hill will be forced to pay another big price in taxpayers money, if this deal ever becomes law and nature (and the TBTF institutions) pursue their naturally course.
Hey, those were my digs for 21 years. Not as opulent as they once were, since they squeezed in a bunch of new employees post
2008.
(Historical fact: Was an old insurance company headquarters when Fannie bought it and Hollywood once considered it as a possible location shot for the movie "St Elmo's Fire," which was filmed partially in nearby Georgetown.)
But, don't worry, at two stories high anyone jumping from the roof would survive, unless they landed on the Belgian stone driveway.
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