January 19, 2009
The Three Phases in Combating the Financial Crisis
The Government’s efforts to combat the worst financial crisis since the
1930s can be divided into three phases. Phase one, executed in good part
in catch-as-catch-can fashion, was directed toward shoring up financial
firms that were under-capitalized and had lost the confidence of their
creditors. The goal was to prevent their failure, which would have made
the crisis worse – far worse.
Phase one is still far from over, new flare-ups continue to arise,
capital shortages remain widespread, and new approaches for
recapitalizing banks are being considered. But the threat of major
failures that would further destabilize the system has largely receded.
Phase two, executed in much more deliberate fashion, was to reduce
interest rates to mortgage borrowers. Where phase one had the highest
priority, phase two is low priority, adopted largely because it is easy
to implement and helps some homeowners, even if not those who most need
it.
Lower rates have generated a refinance boom in the midst of a growing
recession, like an oasis in the desert. The impact is limited because
access is restricted to homeowners who qualify for loans that can be
purchased by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, or insured by FHA. To lower
their rates, borrowers must have equity in their property and good
credit -- the thirstiest homeowners can’t drink from this oasis.
Phase three has yet to be defined, but the focus has to be on shrinking
the foreclosure rate. The financial crisis started in the housing market
and will not end until home prices stop declining and foreclosed homes
stop flooding the market.
None of the existing programs, including loan programs (Hope for
Homeowners and FHA Secure), counseling programs (Hope Hotline), and
foreclosure moratoriums have made a significant dent in the foreclosure
rate. To make major inroads into the foreclosure rate, we need a marked
increase in contract modifications of mortgages on the path to
foreclosure, returning these loans to good standing and keeping them
there. The private sector has made efforts in this direction, but the
loans they have modified are too few and the modifications too small to
make a substantial difference. In particular, very few modifications
reduce the loan balance, which is why about half of them re-default
within 6 months.
Another important objective of phase three is to begin the process of
restoring confidence in the quality of financial assets, which the
crisis has undermined. With the loss of confidence has come the loss of
ascertainable values and marketability. This is the major reason why
borrowers today who need loans larger than those that can be sold to
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac have to pay a rate premium of about 2%, which
is about 8 times larger than it was before the crisis.
A Proposal For Dealing With the Foreclosure Problem
The following are the main features of a plan directed to these
objectives that Igor Roitburg and I submitted to the US Treasury. For a
detailed version, see
Breaking the
Back of the Financial Crisis.
Government will encourage servicers/investors to mark down loan balances
to 90% of current market value by contributing to the markdowns, and by
guaranteeing timely payment of principal and interest on modified loans.
Eliminating negative equity on modified loans will lower payments and
incent borrowers to remain in their homes, which will reduce the
incidence of re-defaults.
The Government outlays required to support balance write-downs will be
large, but will be secured by second liens which borrowers will be
obliged to repay in the future. In this way, the Government will be able
to recover some (if not all) of the outlays.
Government will encourage private mortgage insurers (PMIs) to underwrite
and provide payment insurance on modified loans by offering to share
losses with the PMIs. In addition, the payment insurance would carry
full faith and credit back-up insurance by the Government National
Mortgage Association (GNMA), which will make it highly desirable to
investors.
Payment insurance supported by GNMA will make modified loans marketable,
and shift some of the workload in processing modifications from
understaffed servicers to PMIs. GNMA will receive a piece of the
insurance premiums, which should make this part of the program
self-supporting or even profitable for the Government.
For space reasons, I have left out such topics as how the interest rate
will be set on modified loans, and the terms imposed on borrowers for
repayment of the advances made by Government. I have also left out the
long-run role of mortgage payment insurance in stabilizing the housing
finance system of the future. These topics are discussed in the longer
version.