|
Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
|
February
25,
2008
|
|
By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
E-MAIL
WEB SITE
|
 |
Home Sales, Home Prices Sink Again
Bernanke’s Policies Failing, Long Recession Looms?
The National Association of Realtors
reported January existing home sales
sank to 4.890 million from 6.380 million
a year earlier, and the average price
was $201,100, down from $210,900 or 4.6,
percent from a year earlier. In
December, sales were 4.910 million and
the median price was $207,000. The large
price drop from December was
particularly disturbing.
These numbers were hardly surprising.
The National Association of Realtors
tracking statistics for new sales
contracts have been sinking
precipitously in recent months. Buyers
are scared, and recent actions by the
Federal Reserve, the Bush Administration
or the Congress offer little hope for
better times soon.
The U.S. consumer faces a constant
drumbeat of bad news. Housing prices are
falling, gas prices are rising, good new
jobs are getting scarcer than hens
teeth, and credit card terms are getting
tougher, even as the Federal Reserve
makes credit to banks cheaper.
Federal Reserve efforts to increase
liquidity and bank lending have not made
mortgages adequately more available,
especially in the Alt-A and subprime
categories. Alt-A loans are for
homeowners offering good repayment
prospects but either less-than-perfect
credit or recent income records. Fannie
Mae, generally, only takes prime
lenders, and does not finance most
upper-end, more-expensive homes.
Ben Bernanke’s strategy has two
components. The Fed has lowered
short-term interest rates by slashing
the Federal Funds rate 1.25 percentage
points since January 22, and the Fed has
permitted banks to use subprime-backed
mortgage securities to borrow from the
Federal Reserve. The latter is the
so-called term auction facility.
These policies do not solve the basic
problem, because these policies do not
provide banks with opportunities to
write many new non-Fannie Mae conforming
mortgages.
Banks cannot provide the housing
market with adequate amounts of mortgage
finance by taking deposits, writing
mortgages and keeping those mortgages on
their portfolios. Bank deposits are not
nearly enough to carry the U.S. housing
market. Much the same applies for loans
to businesses.
In normal times, regional banks
bundle mortgages into bonds, so-called
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs),
and sell these in the bond market
through the large Wall Street banks.
The recent subprime crisis revealed
the large banks were not creating
legitimate bonds. Instead, they sliced
and diced loans into incomprehensibly
complex derivatives, and then sold,
bought, resold, and insured those
contraptions to generate fat fees and
million dollar bonuses for bank
executives.
This alchemy discovered, insurance
companies, mutual funds and other
private investors will no longer buy
mortgage-backed bonds. Banks can no
longer repackage mortgages and other
loans into bonds and are pulling back
lending.
Home prices tank, consumers spend
less, businesses fail, and jobs
disappear.
Private investors have taken massive
losses, and the large banks have taken
about $150 billion in losses on their
books. This left the banks short of
capital and in liquidity crises. The
banks turned to foreign governments,
through sovereign investment funds, to
sell new shares and raise fresh capital,
and to the Fed to boost liquidity.
Neither the sovereign investment
funds nor Ben Bernanke have required the
banks to change their business models,
which essentially pays bankers for
creating arcane investment vehicles that
generate transactions fees, rather than
writing sound mortgages and selling
simple, understandable mortgage-backed
securities to investors
Without those changes in business
practices, the bond market remains
closed to mortgage finance, other than
CDOs offered by Fannie Mae, and it is
inadequate to supply the volume and
array of mortgage products necessary to
support a full housing recovery.
The Economic stimulus package tax
rebates, interest rate cuts and
Administration help for distressed
homeowners are palliatives. The stimulus
package at about $150 billion is less than the
losses taken by private investors and
the banks on CDOs.
Getting the housing market going and
the economy growing will require Ben
Bernanke to aggressively pursue banking
reform. Without genuine changes in the
way Wall Street handles mortgages, the
economy can’t get back on track.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
Opinion Articles |