Harry Long

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Recent responses by policymakers to insolvency risk at Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) are entirely wrongheaded. Not only do financial markets realize that credit protection supplied by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac might be fictional in a full-blown mortgage crisis, but also that their guarantees of mortgage-backed securities create distortions in interest rates which destabilize markets. Even worse, logic suggests that these GSEs are making real estate more expensive, not more affordable, to American homeowners. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are prominent causes of the current financial crisis, not part of the solution. 

The market has clearly come to terms with the fact that since Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not government backed, but government sponsored, that their historically lower cost of capital is not warranted. The collapse in their stock prices and the rise in their borrowing costs is evidence of this.

As Fannie Mae's annual report states:

Although we are a corporation chartered by the U.S. Congress, the U.S. government does not guarantee, directly or indirectly, our securities or other obligations.

This wouldn't be particularly relevant except for the fact that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac then turn around and, in the words of Fannie's Annual Report:

...issu[e] and guarant[ee] mortgage-related securities that facilitate the flow of additional funds into the mortgage market.

Yes, you read correctly--guarantee. With highly leveraged balance sheets, these guarantees are clearly at risk without government intervention.

But why are such promises dangerous? 

It is incredibly illogical for a society to encourage any concept of credit insurance by any entity, since it encourages the charging of relatively lower interest rates which do not reflect the true probability of default.

Therefore, the solution is for mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to carry interest rates denoted by the risk, not an interest rate which partially reflects the credit risk and partially reflects an almost meaningless promise to pay in the event of widespread defaults on the underlying mortgages, sans government intervention. It is precisely at the point when one would need such credit insurance, a crisis, at which the insurer would be least able to pay, since homeowners tend to default in a highly correlated fashion.  

Therefore, since the promise of credit protection may be illusory in times of crisis, it heightens distortions in interest rates and creates credit shocks rather than dampening shocks to the financial system. When optimism abounds, market participants overestimate the true credit protection that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are able to provide with their leveraged balance sheets. They bid up mortgage-backed securities bundled by these firms to unrealistic levels, do not correctly discount the risk that the GSEs might not make good on their promises of credit protection, and narrow credit spreads. This creates a debt bubble, as we have seen, and heightens market instability.

In contrast, the former unquestioning confidence in such credit protection has been replaced by a view that it could be meaningless without explicit government guarantees. Rather than increasing market efficiency, the real possibility of meaningless promises is destabilizing and inefficient.  

Policy makers forget that in today’s world, capital is everywhere to be found. Investors do not need highly leveraged institutions to provide the shabby semblance of credit protection. Investors crave more information in tandem with more simplicity in order to decrease uncertainty and to better evaluate credit risk. Risk is not the issue. Uncertainty is the issue.  

The logical solution is for investors to bear the full credit risk without any semblance of credit protection (after all, isn't that what investment means, bearing the risk of loss?!) and to charge an interest rate which is compensation for the risk assumed. This spoiled, ridiculous concept that we can eliminate risk by having it born by financial institutions which are themselves highly leveraged is the adult version of the tooth fairy.

If the GSEs are allowed to collapse, interest rates will immediately adjust, as they have started to, to account for the real credit risk of the underlying mortgages. These higher interest rates, in the longer term, will drive investment in residential mortgages better than any GSE. Such a free market solution would make mortgage securities easier to value, free from the uncertainty that leveraged GSEs introduce into the financial system. 

Anyone who argues that we have insurance in the physical world, which generally works quite well, and that therefore insurance in the financial world is no different, is living on fantasy island. Despite the musings of the chaos theorists, there is absolutely no correlation for an insurer between snow damage in Alaska and between car accidents in Florida. In the financial markets, the effect of leverage creates correlations between totally divergent assets and geographies. Real estate may be local in nature, but because mortgages are usually handled by large national financial institutions (whose bankers, like lemmings, seem to get the same dumb ideas all at once when they do something dangerous like talk to each other on the phone, or golf at the country club), correlations become national and potentially international in scope. 

Humans, unlike weather systems, behave like sheep. And there is nothing real about real estate in any country in which it's financed primarily be debt. As we have seen, it is then a financial asset which derives a large part of its value from the cost of financing. And if the cost of financing is distorted by promises to pay which may not be kept, the reliance on such unkeepable promises should not be encouraged in the financial system.  

Furthermore, it unintentionally acts against the original purpose of the GSEs, which is to make housing more affordable. Even if the government decides, as recently suggested in the media, to explicitly back Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s obligations, this will perpetuate the very distortions in the bond and real estate markets which have lead to the current subprime crisis.

By distorting interest rates downward, it makes the price of real estate more expensive--and accomplishes exactly the opposite of the GSEs original purpose, by making real estate less affordable to the very people GSEs are meant to help. Politicians are behaving disingenuously when they claim that propping up the GSEs helps potential homeowners. The subprime crisis has done more to make real estate cheaper in this country than any government program.

Any bailout of the GSEs would not be about homeowners. It would be about charity to financial institutions and investors who have not behaved logically and stand to lose terribly due to sloppy decision making. I like to call it affirmative action for the rich and stupid. 

Disclosures: Harry Long does not currently have long or short positions in FNM or FRE. This could change at any time.

This article has 15 comments:

  •  
    Jul 11 08:46 AM
    Finally... a well thought out and written article on SA.
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  •  
    Jul 11 10:12 AM
    I agree, well thought out.
    Reality dictates that the government at this time has no choice but to intervene and guarantee the Bonds etc of these organizations. By inuendo they are in no position to do otherwise. If they intervened for Bear Stearns this is a no brainer.
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  •  
    Buffett, said "that these companies are the worst account disasters in the last 10 years. The people at the top have been getting a free ride for a longtime.
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  •  
    Great article! These artificially low interest rates have made real estate totally unaffordable for most of the country.

    Higher interest rates may drop the home values and increase payment amounts, but at least the principal would go down to something that families could pay off with a few extra payments a year. The idea is to buy a house, not fund multi-million dollar salaries for wall street tycoons.
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  •  
    Jul 11 02:55 PM
    at last-conservative socialism in the goldilock world.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Jul 11 06:01 PM
    BRAVO !
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Jul 12 12:51 AM
    I think your argument is sound rationally as it pertains only to the markets. With that being said, how do you propose dealing with the enormous social and political fallout that will occur as normal American's home values decline (as will happen with rising interest rates)? How should Obama deal with this as our next Economist-in-Chief?
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Jul 12 03:11 AM
    Dear Waxy, I have no power over the article comments. I welcome spirited debate over anything and everything I write. Please post again. I apologize if there was any glitch.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Jul 12 03:18 AM
    Just to reiterate, it's a great privilege to have a dialog with any reader. It is very meaningful to me that people would take the time to read and to comment.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Jul 12 05:07 PM
    harry i really appreciated your article. bad decisions deserve bad results. when the government stipends you get more of the same. bad farming decisions, illegals, illegitamate children, welfare, abuse of medical insurance, low quality education, abuse of infrastructure contracts, the list goes on and on. if we got government money we must spend it all or next year we get less......stupidity. if i loan someone $10,000 and they manage to complete the project on 7 or 8 i am much more likely to consider a bigger loan on their next project. instead we reward incompetence. let the buyer beware.
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  •  
    Jul 13 04:27 AM
    Couple of houses near us sold very quickly once they were marked down to affordable prices. Prices went up so high and fast due to the perfect storm. Money from stock markets went into real estate. Interest rates were low. Credit qualifications were lowered. People began speculating on the premise that house prices never go down.

    Now all of the opposite is happening. The faster house prices come down the quicker our economy will turn around. The longer the government and the Fed try to extend this the more likely that everyone will lose confidence and a deflationary spiral could be the result. On the otherhand the vast majority of homeowners bought before 2003 so the housing market woudl quickly return to normal except for those who bought high. They would have to have take large losses when selling. Of course they'd be buying a cheaper house too. The only real losers will be those who bought second homes, and speculative rental real estate after 2003.

    I don't think its wise to risk the whole economic system (dollar dilutions, umemployment, etc...) trying to prop up the housing market or the prevent the tiniest of recessions. Lets get it over with. The recession could have come and gone by now if they'd just stop trying to manipulate the price of everything. Let price action do its job.
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  •  
    Jul 15 09:43 AM
    Let's return to 25% down-payments, 30% debt to income ratio and a maximum of 25 year amortization. The median family income has to be able to buy a modest home with these standard lending practices. If not, then housing prices have to drop to make it happen.

    When your $150k house doubled in price over 5 years to $300k but your $50k salary stayed the same, that is no different than if your house price stayed at $150k but your income drop to $25k. How many North Americans would gloat about watching their incomes drop each year and get excited about that trend continuing into retirement. Income and price of goods are tied together.

    We consume houses the same as gas, why is increasing house prices seen as a smart investment but higher gas prices (especially for those SUV's bought on HLOCs) are a terrible financial disaster. Maybe if we could borrow against the gas in our tanks then we would feel the wealth effect of higher gas prices and hope they continue to rise.
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  •  
    Jul 15 09:56 AM
    Loved the article Harry. Who ever said politics never existed in the financial markets? Not because these policy makers are not knowledgeable in the aftermath of their decisions, but because they are more self-driven by their own wellfare.
    I am sick and tired of distortions in the White house, in Congress, in the media....in information that becomes public which brings nothing but failure in every aspect!

    Like you said, relying on Fannie or Freddie when they are highly leveraged and not guaranteed does not make any sense. Instead of it being pure risk, uncertainty kicks in and defies its purpose. Why do they embrace this?
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Jul 15 09:06 PM
    Nicely done. Debt is not wealth, and assets do not just go up
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Jul 16 08:01 AM
    The problem is that is it way too late in this game to change the rules. Sure, home prices would fall. Sure, Fred and Fan artifically inflate prices.

    So let them fail. Problem is, what do we now say to all those innocent home owners that did not take on a risky loan - that disclosed their income, that kept their debt to equity ratio low? Now, due to the massive glut of supply and now the even more massive drop in prices due to the "risky" market being shut down, those homeowners would probably be facing a situation where their home is worth, if they are lucky, $.50 on the dollar of their original price.

    I don't see how the author thinks that existing homeowners are not helped by keeping Fred and Fan operational in this climate. When 50% of the market evaporates overnight, it would not only destroy the housing industry but it likely would destroy hundreds if not thousands of banks - even those that are not currently in trouble.

    This would be the very worst time to try to switch to a free market system
    Reply | Link to Comment
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