GSE Things
I Think……
On GSE matters, my analysis sometimes hits but, occasionally,
I miss…..badly. It’s tough work being a GSE
seer (no benefits, no contractual time off, or even healthcare!!).
But I tend to write and analyze instinctively, taking a
fact or item from here and one from there, trying to weave a plausible
explanation for blog readers based on my history.
I’ll repeat I don’t believe this Congress’s Republican
majority is up to any major GSE reform legislation in 2018, given the
complexity of the mortgage issues, the chaos and market upheaval embedded in
what the anti-GSE interests are seeking, the fact that it’s an election year
and the GOP burden of running on Trump’s record is difficult enough, added to the
core reality the GSEs are working well
and no major operational issues exist. Consumers can get fixed rate
financing, generally, from lenders in their own communities at reasonable
prices, while credit requirements seem to be slowly widening meaning greater
eligibility.
Not that GSE risks have disappeared, they haven’t. Watch
this week, if/when Senate Banking does a “reg reform” bill, which could draw
something mischievous which seeks to pre-empt any 2018 executive/regulatory
initiative.
Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) to the delight of many in the
volunteer state--not the least of whom was Rep. Marcia Blackburn (R-Tenn.) who wants
Corker’s job--decided to stick with his plan to retire this year, but he still could
make trouble.
However, the general Fannie/Freddie terrain placidity and
the absence of jarring headlines, social media emergencies, artificial budget
deadlines suggests to me no major congressional
“GSE reform” restructuring will happen in this even numbered year.
Now, if we just can get some decent basement furniture for
HUD Secretary Ben Carson (and satisfy Mrs. Carson), that department can get
back to doing nothing and staying out of the headlines competition with other
White House humiliations and dishonors.
I am not going to comment on GSE legal developments and court
cases because there is nothing I can add to my belief that the GSEs will get little support from the federal
judiciary until the Treasury takes some action to signal it wants Fannie
and Freddie around long term. Yes, judges and their clerks read the newspapers
and view social media just like others.
Still, reports of Judge Margaret Sweeney’s picture showing
up on DC area milk cartons do suggest fears of her disappearance.
GSE
fans and GSE Foes
There are two groups of GSE supporters—with the twain
occasionally overlapping—investors, who want to see GSE
common and preferred stock rise in price, so they can cancel book losses or
even make a profit on stocks they’ve held for years and/or bought when the
bottom fell out of Fannie and Freddie stock 10 years ago.
The second group is systemic admirers--where I firmly stand
(although I also am an investor but with a basis that would not shake my net
worth if it disappeared)--those who
believe the GSE-dominated secondary mortgage market truly is the most
efficient, fairest, and practical method of delivering well priced (for all
concerned) mortgage credit to every community in the nation, through a network
of primary market lenders present virtually everywhere or via the Internet.
For me, an added bonus is that Fannie's and Freddie's operational systems force the nation’s largest
lenders (the “bank financial establishment”) to adhere to the GSE underwriting
requirements if they want Fannie and Freddie to bless their mortgage loans
converting them to GSE securities.
As long as Fannie and Freddie blunt that inclination, banks
can’t run mortgage-rogue, which they surely would with no restraints.
The GSEs act as governors on what I contend is the
big banks natural inclination to cut corners and force decisions on consumers
which mainly benefit the lender/bank. That control is one of their major fears.
The GSE investor crowd seems to be the lightning rod for
negative media and congressional attention largely because some of them include
hedge fund interests, while the second group of F/F systemic supporters get
steamrolled because most critics don’t understand how the market works or how
it did work before 2008. All they know is “GSEs bad.”
That hostility also is ironic because the anti-GSEs
battalions have tons of multi-billion dollar financial institutions and their
equally fat and wealthy senior execs—whose combined wealth overwhelms the GSE
investors--but those folks never get GOP mention or abuse because critics act
ignorant if their true objective.
In seeking to vaporize Fannie and Freddie, despite the
MBA’s and bigun's rhetoric, the TBTF banks want the GSEs revenue and market
place. It’s a simple explanation. The battle is all
about the money!!
Triple irony is that most GSE Hill critics lamely would claim, “Well Fannie and Freddie are part of the government,” without realizing
that the big banks get and always received far greater subsidies from Uncle Sam
than the GSEs, making them far more red, white, and blue. . But try and explain
that to Congress, since most banks don’t accept that reality and never inform
Congress of that bank business fact!
And that problem potentially worsens, since most of the GOP-drawn GSE alternatives come with even grander
federal loan loss guarantees for bank mortgage backed securities. But
what’s another hundred billion or so to the guys who recently blessed two
trillion in additional red ink with their “tax reform” giveaway.
The congressional
GOP seems to draw distinction between which zillionaires they like and admire
and those they dislike and jape, i.e., the hedgies and others who bought GSE
stock when it was dirt cheap, hoping it would grow in value. (That used to be
country club Republican behavior, but I guess not anymore?)
Systemically and analytically, I most vexed by GSE
opponents who can’t describe what F&F do but believe, instinctively,
whatever the GSEs do and the way they do it is wrong. The latter’s
ability to reason is badly dysfunctional.
I keep trying to think of ways to get through to these
elected representatives to focus on, operationally, on what’s best for their
constituents, not just on how much the big banks can contribute to their
political campaigns.
HOPE
Two themes seem to be bobbing up and down in DC, in
various manifestations, and to me that’s
a very good thing.
The first is the “bad guys’” focus/fear that either FHFA Director Mel Watt or Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin—separately
or together (I just can’t see Watt moving dramatically without Mnuchin
agreement) will move through executive or regulatory action to provide GSE
relief and therefore remove the restraints allowing GSEs greater freedom to
serve the nation’s mortgage finance system. (See
legislative caution mentioned above.)
In past blogs we’ve noted that is hopeful (for the “good
guys”) and why the optimism exists, i.e. Congress incapable of slicing the GSE
Gordian Knot. It’s heartening, but never underestimate the power and tenacity of
the big banks and their allies to suborn any GSE positives.
For me hope #2 is Mnuchin coming back to the GSE warrant
values and the $100 Billion plus in fresh
revenue it represents for the Treasury, and its “General Fund,” if this
Administration chooses in a meaningful way to keep F&F alive. (Just like Watt
needs Mnuchin’s blessing, Mnuchin needs Trump’s approval.)
The Treasury and the White House would gain a big slug of money
soon and perpetuate a fair and efficient GSE system, which currently is appropriately
regulated, although slightly overdone and
rigid. The GSE system, for nearly 50 years, has been good for consumers, the mortgage finance system, and its professional players. The post 2004 segment
was an aberration, easily explained by the dastardly political interference
which deprived Fannie of experienced and proven leadership as subprime lending heated up. (Read
“The Mortgage Wars” for the story.)
Again, despite their constant laments, big banks have
earned plenty of money in the GSE dominated secondary market, while they own
the primary market.
Another plus, but just beginning to blossom, is the echoing
of an argument that Tim Howard and others have made. “Future investors in mortgage
debt, securities, and guarantor operations will be quite leery and most
hesitant, if the federal government fails to address and re mediate the Fannie
and Freddie precedent of Treasury blithely aggrandizing billions of dollars
from core mortgage market principals and keeping that money.
Interest rate and credit risk are home loan market issues, but government
theft by political fiat is tough to predict and protect against, strongly
arguing to crucial required mortgage participants, “Just don’t gamble with that possible
jeopardy” and look elsewhere in the economy to put your money.
Staying
(largely) Quiet on Trump
I promised myself and others I would lower the volume on my
President Trump objections and I will.
I just hope the nation sees and appreciates the
institutional chaos, as well as political and policy damage, this tweeting shoot
from the hip President is inflicting on the nation and world.
The government is filled with personnel vacancies and the
Trump Administration can’t attract quality people to fill them.
Just read the papers, watch TV (seldom FOX) and contemplate
if the guy at the top is damaged and inoperative, aren't multiple segments of the
federal government likely to be as well?
Where do we see that stability, not the White House or any
of the domestic agencies? We’re hoping it exists in the judicial, FBI, and
national security agencies, but what if things are shaky there, as well?
These anxieties also are happening among Republicans, just waking
up to DJT’s worrisome antics, whether it’s gun control (he’s been on several
sides of this matter), military parades, Jeff Sessions, $25 Billion for the
“wall,” immigration matters, Hope Hicks, nepotism, i.e. Ivana and Jared, foreign
trade, unlimited presidential terms,and more.
Please stay tuned and dedicated to playing your role in our
democratic system, meaning educate yourself and vote!
Maloni,
3-4-2018
11 comments:
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4152656-freddie-mac-bailout-faux-bailout
look at the screencapped mnuchin quotes i the S&C.
this is a recapitalization--- after this bill works through... sometime in 2018
gse jumpstart already expired, why would they renew it now?
they control the ADMIN... you act like repubs and democrats are going to come together and prevent a majority administration from implementing its own solution
Awesome as usual!
"Now, if we just can get some decent basement furniture for HUD Secretary Ben Carson (and satisfy Mrs. Carson), that department can get back to doing nothing and staying out of the headlines competition with other White House humiliations and dishonors."
FHFA has direct origins in HUD and Housing is the core responsibility of of HUD as the name suggests (US Dept of Housing and Urban Development). FnF were part of HUD and never part of Tsy. Despite this, currently HUD is sitting in the back seat and allowing TSY to destroy affordable Housing including FnF in favor of loan shark banking.
When will HUD Sy Ben Carson say something about ending fake and lawless conservatorship?
Glen--All the facts in the world, most of which we, i.e. "the good guys," have, and what's it done without the politics supporting us?
There's a reason why they put the worst at HUD.
It's all Mnuchin and what the warrants represent. If that doesn't sway him and his boss, nothing will.
**************************************************************************
Anon--See my answer to Glen. Carson has no real influence in this Admin or on the Hill.
Repeat, it's all about Treasury.
Your last paragraph is an absolute head scratcher, it doesn't fit anywhere in this post, other than to say. "as an aside, I hate Trump"
Bill Maloni's
Fist time I read any of your blogs. Found it informing and interesting. I would like to respond to your analogy on Trump, you say
"I promised myself and others I would lower the volume on my President Trump objections and I will."
If you truly want others to honestly respect your views of what you are blogging you should have omitted the Trump bashing.
I am bipartisan, having voted many different parties in my 52 years of life I truly believe that this F&F fiasco would be a much tougher road regarding a positive outcome for home buying taxpayers and investors if a Democrat would be in power. Your last paragraph could have been omitted, it really does not add anything of value to what I thought was a well written blog. Just my opinion, take it for what it's worth.
Mike Cain, Virginia Beach VA
John--
Thanks for reading and commenting.
I don't know if you are a regular, but in past blogs I have vented--mightily--my frustration with the President, his policies and programs. I am not a fan. I think he is a destructive personality. (See hsi tweets today about BHO and HRC. He's the Presidednt and they're out of office. He's won, get on with your day job!)
The blog's concluding thoughts--which represent maybe 200 or so words in a 1600 word blog--is a placeholder and prompt for readers.
It's a reminder of why the one democratic thing we can do is vote against DJT's congressional (and state) enablers from office and, eventualy, go against him, if he chooses to run again.
I hated Obama so much for the GSE issue that I did not vote for another Democrat Hillary.
Anon--
Not a surprising statement. I'veheard it often.
What I've since come to realize is that many citizens feel just as strongly about Trump that many of you felt about Obama.
That's our national burden right now and, somehow, we as citizens need to figure out how each of us can reduced that chasm, because the leadership isn't coming from the White House or Captal Hill.
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