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We are being told loudly and repeatedly that the gargantuan mortgage bail-out
package is necessary because illiquid mortgage-backed securities are clogging
our financial arteries, threatening the economic equivalent of cardiac arrest.
The idea of the plan is to transfer these supposedly valuable, but currently
unmarketable, assets to the government so that private institutions can freely
lend once more. The monumental flaw in this argument is that the mortgage backed
securities are in fact highly liquid, just not at the prices the owners would
like to receive.
Mortgage bonds are just like houses. They won't sell if the owners stubbornly
refuse to drop the price. However, they can find buyers if they acknowledge
reality, and lower their expectations accordingly.
The government tells us that if these assets are held to maturity their full
value will eventually be realized, and that it is only because of a lack of
current liquidity that their value is not reflected in the market. However,
as many private transactions have shown us in recent months, these assets will
find buyers at the right price. These are not overly exotic assets but relatively
straight forward mortgage obligations. The inability to find buyers is not
a function of liquidity but simply of price. The government is seeking to "create
liquidity" by overpaying.
The government's assumptions about the "held to maturity" value of these mortgages
completely understate the likelihood of widespread default. Some of the "illiquid" assets
represent tranches of mortgage-backed securities that will be completely wiped
out. Even the higher quality tranches will suffer severe losses due to mortgages
that will inevitably go bad.
For example, take a $500,000 adjustable rate mortgage on a condo in Las Vegas
that has a current value of only $250,000. To assume that this asset can be
safely held to maturity is absurd, when in all likelihood the borrower will
default shortly after the rate re-sets, even if the borrower has not yet shown
signs of distress. Of course such a mortgage would be completely illiquid if
one tried to sell it anywhere near par, but would be extremely liquid if priced
to reflect a more realistic value; say 35 cents on the dollar. But if the government
pays prices that fairly factors in likely defaults, it will bankrupt the very
institutions it is trying to bail out.
Another factor that has not yet been considered is that that the government
has already indicated that it will try to avoid foreclosures by reducing the
principal and interest rates on the loans it acquires to levels current homeowners
can afford. This will immediately eliminate the delusion of the government
recouping its "investment" as even if held to maturity the mortgages will never
be worth anything close to what the government pays.
Also missing in the discussion is the concept of the time value of money.
Even if a substantial percentage of the $700 billion is eventually recovered,
it will still represent a huge loss for taxpayers who theoretically have to
come up with the cash today to buy the mortgages. Further, the inflationary
nature of the bailout ensures a substantial rise in long term interest rates.
This will further suppress the present values of the low coupon mortgages the
government will be restructuring.
The moral hazard implicit in the government's willingness to re-write troubled
mortgages ensures that the plan will spark a wave of new delinquencies by borrowers
looking to cash in on the windfall. Since troubled loans will no longer be
foreclosed by lenders but instead sold to the government, the rational choice
for many homeowners will be to stop making their mortgage payments and wait
for a better deal from the government. This reality will eventually push the
cost of this bailout well above $2 trillion.
In addition to the government bailout, distressed lenders are looking to the
suspension of "mark to market" accounting rules as a means of salvation. These
rules require institutions to value their mortgage assets according to the
most recently traded price. However, suspending these rules will not make the
losses go away. Rather it will simply allow lenders to pretend that the losses
do not exist.
Armed with such fantasies, banks could pretend that their mortgage assets
had more value, and that their balance sheets were well capitalized. They would
not need to raise more capital in order to fund new loans. But, just as a person
with no sensitivity to pain runs the risk of catastrophic injury, such a move
would encourage financial institutions to take greater risks which, in the
end, will produce more bankruptcies and greater losses.
In fact, the Senate version of the bailout bill, which authorizes a suspension
of mark- to-market, also increases the dollar limit on FDIC insured deposits
from $100,000 to $250,000 (with no extra money budgeted to fund the increased
taxpayer liability). Only in Washington would a bill pass which simultaneous
makes banks more likely to fail while increasing taxpayer exposure when they
do!
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