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It's a Wonderful Mess |
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Nowadays, it's impossible to watch the 1946 holiday movie "It's a Wonderful Life" and not feel a twinge
of respect for Henry F. Potter, the villainous banker... |
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Nowadays, it's impossible to watch the 1946 holiday movie "It's a Wonderful
Life" and not feel a twinge of respect for Henry F. Potter, the villainous banker played by
Lionel Barrymore. Potter was not above drawing the last drop of blood, but at least borrowers knew whom to
hate. And if they were late paying, they knew where to crawl.
That's not necessarily the case today. Mortgage companies often ship the loans to Wall Street, which repackages
them into securities sold around the globe.
So if you're a borrower in trouble, and your loan is diced up into some mortgage-backed security, you'd be
hard-pressed to find a lender's ear. How's your Chinese?
In olden days, the bank that made mortgages kept them. The borrower's problem became the
bank's problem, so it was in the interests of both to keep the loan afloat.
The movie shows a run on the Bailey Building & Loan, during which Jimmy Stewart's George Bailey says this to a
panicked depositor: "Hey, Ed, do you remember last year when things weren't going so well and you couldn't make
your payments? Well, you didn't lose your house, did you?"
Because old-fashioned bankers were stuck with the loans they made, they cared deeply about
who got them. Bailey is nicer and more generous than the nasty Potter, but there's not a lot of difference
between their lending standards.
Remember the scene where Potter chews out Bailey for giving a mortgage to Ernie the cab driver? He accuses Bailey
of lending money to any pal he shoots pool with.
Bailey responds, "I can personally vouch for his character," but also notes that Potter had the papers
documenting Ernie's salary and life insurance benefits. That established his friend as creditworthy.
In other words, Ernie did not have a "no-doc" loan, a modern invention that doesn't require borrowers to
provide proof of their financials. Because applicants could put any income number they wanted on the forms, these
mortgages soon became known as "liar loans."
Last year, 40 percent of new home loans were made to people with fragile credit. And more than 37 percent of the
subprime mortgages were of the notorious "no-doc" variety. That federal regulators didn't step in to stop
the madness is astounding.
The name of the game for the mortgage originators — the guys who put the dancing figures on
their Web sites — is collecting big upfront fees from borrowers and selling the loans to the investment houses who
palm them off on unwitting investors.
[HOT: Builder-owned mortgage companies are even worse. Because they
have a vested interest in selling the homes, they often make riskier loans, pressure real estate
appraisers to inflate the home's value, and pressure inspectors to overlook construction defects and code
violations. All of the large national volume builders that we surveyed owned their own finance (mortgage, title
& insurance) companies.]
To deter a depressed Bailey from killing himself, the angel Clarence shows the hero what the world would have been
like had he never been born. In that vision, Bedford Falls turns into Pottersville, an evil place full of bad
people and good jazz.
Fewer residents owned their home in Pottersville, but that nightmare town had some things over today's Greenspan
City. Pottersville didn't have block after block of boarded-up houses lost to foreclosure, as is currently seen in
many American communities.
Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan had cheered on the housing bubble that raised home prices to ridiculous levels.
And despite the warnings, he ignored the recklessness and downright cons that would inevitably push mortgage market
into crisis.
[HOT: More contributed to the global collapse than the housing
bubble or Greenspan's role. Macro economists say a massive imbalance of international trade and
capital made the collapse inevitable. Housing was the spark, but any of several other bubbles could have
caused it if housing didn't. Americans were borrowing and spending wildly, buing products made in Asia after we
outsourced manufacturing their. China pumped so much money into our economy to feed our spending habit that the
Fed lost its ability to steer an overheated market to a soft landing.]
The weak borrowers who couldn't get a mortgage from the sourpuss Potter — and probably not Bailey — were better off
than the moderns lured by the happy dancing figures. The latter were sucked into paying inflated house prices and
fleeced by stiff fees and punishing interest rates. Then they lost their homes.
Which is less attractive, Pottersville or Greenspan City? It's a real tossup.
Providence Journal columnist Froma Harrop's column appears regularly on editorial pages of The Times. Her e-mail
address is fharrop@projo.com.
by Froma Harrop
12/19/2007
Source: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2004081039_froma19.html
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