Author: James White

  • Discussions of the Kind That I Stimulated By My First Post

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    Discussions of the kind that I stimulated by my suggestions on Monday (about what Congress might do) reveal widely different assumptions about the number and type of debtors that will default. Shouldn’t we look for the data? The data might keep conservatives from falling off the cliff to the right and the liberals from falling off on the other side- at last that is my hope. So who are the debtors and how many will default? Those are the questions for investors, legislators and lenders. But the answers are not easy to find, and, with incomplete data, each of us is the captive of his political bias. What about the defaulting debt and about the deserts of the debtors (Fools all? Every one defrauded?)

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  • Congress’ Response to the Mortgage Mess

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    Eric Sevareid once remarked that a "chief cause of problems is solutions."

    From a libertarian perspective at least, I
    suspect that we will find "problems" in the "solutions" that Congress will
    enact to solve the sub prime mortgage mess. At this point it seems inevitable
    that the current Congress (and, even more so, the one that will likely sit in
    2009) will be moved by heartrending stories of foreclosure of citizens’
    residences at the hands of mortgagees who have charged excessive rates, misrepresented
    the terms of the loan and induced the debtors to take on too much debt.

    It
    seems certain that Congress will allow stripping down of mortgage liens in
    bankruptcy. Doubtless Congress will try to shackle mortgage brokers with
    expensive certification and criminal liability. It may also go beyond abolition
    of holder in due course status for mortgage note holders to force persons in
    the chain of title of the notes to bear some of the credit loss that occurs
    when the debtor defaults. If Congress can find a way to do it constitutionally,
    Congress may also mandate some form mortgage modification. Congress might even
    take up my friend John’s foolish idea that lending too generously be a tort. Congress
    will justify the legislation by anecdotal testimony in televised hearings from
    pitiful wretches who knew not what they were doing.

    If
    my lugubrious predictions prove true, there will be a measurable–possibly
    quite large–impact on the market. Such rules will make mortgage lending less
    profitable to everyone in the system-so the number of mortgages written will
    decline and those that are written will be marginally more expensive. It will
    winnow the number of mortgage brokers and so remove some who have committed
    fraud in writing mortgages. It will make investors upstream think twice about
    buying a debt that carries not only a fraud claim but also the possibility of
    tort liability for too generous lending, and even a lasting stain (for debt
    liability) that cannot be removed by assignment to another.

    I
    am quite clear about what Congressman Paul would do to solve this crisis-
    nothing. He would note that the interest
    rate on 30 year mortgages in late January 2008 was lower than any time since
    mid 2005. He would point out that many mortgage brokers have gone into
    bankruptcy and that the gushing market for mortgaged backed securities has gone
    dry. He would point out that Countrywide rewrote more than 83,000 mortgages to
    alleviate pressure on its debtors in 2007 and that it expects to modify even
    larger numbers of mortgages this year. In short he would argue that Darwin’s rules are already
    at work and that, left to itself, the market will cure the excesses that we
    have observed. In his view adding harsh legislation on top of the market’s
    Darwinian response would cause the number of home loans to decline well below
    the optimum number.

    By
    now you will have understood that I am sympathetic to the libertarian position,
    and I wonder whether the debtors’ friends in Congress have a covert agenda,
    namely to keep those with poor credit from taking on debt even when these
    debtors are fully informed of the risks and costs and quite willing to bear
    them. To protect consumers from fraud is worthy, but is it worthy to bar an
    informed consumer from economic behavior that Congress thinks too risky? What
    do you think?