FHFA’s recent RBC re-proposal reg (compared to its original one) shouldn’t confuse anyone, it’s not
rocket science and it is exactly what it looks like.
A series of complex capital proposals—when applied in concert— designed
to blow up or disable the main Fannie and Freddie battle tanks and to the advantage of the large commercial banks, which still envy GSE mortgage market control and revenue.
Calabria’s ill-fitting scheme to give Fannie and Freddie
“bank like” capital requirements, has gone way beyond that and produced something
way beyond “bank like”—since there are no existing conflicting analogies in
bank law or regulation designed to deny a regulated institution market
generated revenue to establish the capital to escape “Conservatorship,” which
is what this long-delayed exercise is all about.
Based on specious reasoning, it allows FHFA’s too ideological
director to point to something which embodies the idea, “With the GSEs, you
never can have enough capital.”
Instead what we have is Calabria’s “wet dream” of how he
would solve all of the lingering big bank problems with active Fannie and
Freddie market competition. He would starve the GSEs then give Fannie and
Freddie no chance to escape continued FHFA control—not to return to privately
owned, market-sensitive financial institutions (which ironically is the charge in
his other GSE responsibilities).
Light
to the Rescue???
But the bloom may have left that planned rose—to Calabria’s
regret—when this week, Bloomberg’s Joe Light wrote a most useful article saying
what FHFA foes have been saying the new proposal will hurt
those who most need GSE financing, i.e. less wealthy families many of
whom are black and brown. Then, look at what we are seeing and hearing in
America’s streets.
In terms of added pressure (political) on FHFA and
Calabria, Light’s article and its headline--in a major business publication--will get the attention of
stakeholders—and maybe a few Senators and Congressmen-- more than what the few
GSE allies have said.
(See headline and segment below.)
Fannie-Freddie Capital Rule Seen Harming Less-Wealthy Borrowers
By Joe Light
By Joe Light
June 1, 2020, 6:00 AM
EDT
“A top regulator’s plan for boosting Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s
ability to withstand losses could mean higher costs for many mortgage
borrowers, with the burden falling most heavily on those with less wealth and
lower incomes, according to economists and housing-finance experts.
The 424-page rule released for comment by
the Federal
Housing Finance Agency last month would dramatically
raise the amount of capital the two mortgage-finance giants must hold and
likely increase fees they charge for guaranteeing loans, which would hit
borrowers in the form of higher interest rates.
FHFA Director Mark Calabria’s proposal highlights the fine line
his independent agency and the U.S. Treasury Department must walk to achieve
their stated goal of freeing Fannie and Freddie from the government’s grip. To
claim success, they will likely have to pull off a juggling act of keeping down
borrowers’ costs, protecting taxpayers, appeasing mortgage-bond holders and
enticing stock investors needed to re-capitalize the companies.
Mortgage rates would have to rise between 0.15 and 0.2 percentage
point on average to meet Calabria’s proposed capital requirements, all else
being equal, according to Bob Ryan, who was a senior FHFA adviser until
mid-2019 and now consults for firms in the mortgage industry.
The higher interest rates could weigh most
heavily on borrowers with lower credit scores and smaller down payments, said
Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi. In a stressed economic
environment, those borrowers might see rates as much as half a percentage point
higher than they otherwise would, Zandi said. That would mean, for example,
that someone with a $200,000, a 30-year mortgage would pay an
additional $58 a month if their interest rate was 4.5% rather
than 4%.
“It’s confusing to me,” Zandi said of the
proposed rule. “I’m not really sure who benefits from this. I’m not even sure
it helps their goal of privatizing” Fannie and Freddie.
If either capital requirements or return demands
increase, fees also rise.
Maloni,
6-3-2020
6 comments:
This is my guess. If Trump is not winning, MC knows his days are about equally numbered. He won't do anything significantly better. What he does will be changed by next director. Chance: 90%.
If Trump wins, he will force MC to behave. MC may do something, knowing he can stay there for 3+ years. Chance: 10%.
I expect nothing major before election.
ANA--
We agree on the election timing bein key.
MC might come back with another lower number or mechanism--which slightly reduces GSE capital--or do a "true believer" or jump off the cliff and do a regulatory Kamikaze and let those who come after worry about it.
At some point, stymying GSE positive evolution has to cost the White House because of the disfunction of the options, making Mnuchin a liar.
When Craig Philips left Treasury suddenly, I knew it was a bad sign of MC.
Mnuchin is likely unhappy with the current proposal. He lets potential investors teach MC something. (He was smart to beat Corker without fighting. He waited it out.)
I still expect exit with consent decree before Mnuchin leaves Washington. Final major change to cap rule will be in 2021.
ANA--Then I am rooting for you!!
The above was "spam."
Maloni
Post a Comment