Title: Housing, Housing Finance, and Public Policy
1Housing, Housing Finance, and Public Policy
- Lawrence J. White
- Stern School of Business
- New York University
- Lwhite_at_stern.nyu.edu
- Presentation at the Hudson Institutes discussion
on Where Did the Risk Go?, Washington, DC, May
3, 2007
2Summary
- Housing and home ownership
- Overview of residential mortgage finance
- Sub-prime lending
- Over-arching questions
- Conclusion
3Housing and home ownership
4Housing policy
- Widespread subsidy of housing consumption
- Income tax deductions and exemptions
- Tax breaks and subsidies for rental
- GSEs (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHLBs)
- FHA, VA, Ginnie Mae
- Direct provision (public housing)
- Too much is never enough!
5Home ownership
- Encouraging home ownership is a major goal of
housing policy - There are genuine positive externalities from
home ownership - But home ownership is not for everyone
- Rental subsidies do not encourage home ownership
6Housing policy consequences
- Much of the subsidy encourages larger, better
appointed homes on larger lots, second homes,
etc. - The U.S. invests too much in housing and not
enough in other productive assets - The tax advantages mostly benefit higher income
households - Housing policy is not especially well focused on
encouraging greater home ownership
7Overview of Residential Mortgage Finance
8The components of residential mortgage finance
- Originate mortgages
- Service mortgages
- Collect the savings for funding the mortgages
- Issue deposits or liabilities to funders
- Guarantee deposits or liabilities
9Traditional portfolio lender vs. securitization
summary
- Traditional portfolio lender
- Vertically integrated (bundled) components, by
banks thrifts - Securitization
- Vertically dis-integrated (unbundled) components,
by a wider variety of specialized parties
10Traditional portfolio lender vs. securitization
(1)
- Originate mortgages
- Trad Thrifts banks
- Sec Thrifts banks mortgage banks
- Service mortgages
- Trad Thrifts banks
- Sec Thrifts banks mortgage banks
11Traditional portfolio lender vs. securitization
(2)
- Collect savings for funding mortgages
- Trad Thrifts banks
- Sec Thrifts banks insurance cos. pension
funds mutual funds hedge funds - Issue deposits or liabilities to funders
- Trad Thrifts banks
- Sec Thrifts banks Fannie Mae Freddie Mac
Ginnie Mae private label issuers
12Traditional portfolio lender vs. securitization
(3)
- Guarantee deposits or liabilities
- Trad FDIC (FSLIC)
- Sec Ginnie Mae Fannie Mae (?) Freddie Mac
(?) FHLBs (?) private label senior/sub
structures
13An extra element
- In the 1990s (and through 2003) Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac greatly expanded their portfolio
holdings of residential mortgages
14FFs recent growth
- Residential Mortgages and MBS
- Fannie Freddie Tot Mkt
- Year Mtgs MBS Mtgs MBS
- 1980 56B 0 5 17 1,100
- 1990 114 288 22 316 2,903
- 2000 608 707 385 576 5,514
- 2002 821 1,040 590 730 6,856
- 2003 920 1,301 661 752
7,725 - 2004 925 1,408 665 852 8,847
- 2005 727 1,598 710 974
10,046 - 2006 724 1,784 701 1,123 10,921
15The forces driving securitization
- Efficiencies of the MBS process
- The revolution in data processing and
transmission - Differential capital requirements
- Banks and thrifts need 4 capital to hold a
mortgage, but only 1.6 capital to hold MBS - Aggressive portfolio growth by Fannie and Freddie
since 1990 - Advantageous funding costs
- Freddie went fully public in 1989
- Differential capital requirements Fannie
Freddie need 2.5 capital to hold a mortgage
specialist thrifts are constrained by the 5
leverage requirement
16The pluses and minuses of securitization
- Securitization provides access to more sources
of funding, allows more parties to invest in
residential mortgages diversification - Securitization allows more customization of risk
- But securitization (because of the vertical
unbundling) increases the problems of asymmetric
information
17Sub-prime lending
18The expansion of sub-prime lending
- Partly due to the revolution in data processing
and transmission - Partly due to expanded securitization
- Partly due to pursuit of the American dream
- Partly due to the recent history of rising home
prices
19The debacle in sub-prime lending
- Partly due to excessive optimism about rising
home prices - Partly due to securitization (asymmetric
information, moral hazard) - Partly due to poor borrower information
20A new focus for public attention sympathy
- The focus is on the borrowers, not on the lenders
- Because of securitization, lender losses will be
wide but not especially deep - In foreclosures, borrowers lose downpayments
transactions costs credit reputation
21Overarching questions
22Housing (1)
- To what extent should home ownership be
subsidized? - What are the best ways of subsidizing home
ownership? - Beyond encouraging homeownership, should housing
consumption itself be subsidized? - Is too much is never enough a sensible policy
standard?
23Housing (2)
- How can the transactions costs of house
buying/selling be reduced? - What to do about RESPA?
- What to do about real estate brokerage?
24Housing finance (1)
- With mortgage securitization now a well-developed
technology and with mortgage finance now a
national market, is there still a need for the
special status of Fannie Freddie the FHLBs? - With commercial banks now as the dominant
portfolio lenders, to what extent does deposit
insurance subsidize banks mortgage lending (any
more than it subsidizes banks other loans)?
25Housing finance (2)
- Are the large portfolios of Fannie Freddie a
potential systemic problem? - How necessary are these large portfolios to their
efficient operation? - Is the 30-year fixed rate mortgage a necessary
fixture in American mortgage markets? - Does all of the prepayment risk have to be borne
by lenders (i.e., no prepayment fees)?
26Housing finance (3)
- What can/should be done for current borrowers in
distress? - What should be done in sub-prime for the future?
- Should there be a suitability requirement placed
on originators? - How deep into the unbundled chain should
responsibility be placed? - Is there a role for greater education of
borrowers?
27Conclusion
- Housing and housing finance issues are important
- They are likely to be with us for a long time