I’m kicking this one up to the top, in honor of today’s events. It’s a historical look about the early MBS markets. Now before you jump me for my incorrect conclusion, I didn’t realize that the hedge funds leveraged their loan holdings 10 to 1 (or more). That “38 bucks a month” translates to a loss of about 6%. In hindsight, with full knowledge of the leverage employed, I’d have thought that your “IRA” would lose half its value.
Enjoy!
BAD LOANS: Buried In The Back Of The BreadBox
Let me tell you a story about how the subprime mortgage market collapsed and millions of baby boomers had to accept less money in retirement. If you liked the Da Vinci Code, you’re gonna love this one. It’s not wrapped up in sex, or murder, or corruption, just good-old fashioned “pass the buck” and “what the little guy doesn’t know won’t hurt him” attitudes.
WARNING: If you are prone to believe conspiracy theories, you are going to curse, kick the cat, and be extremely pissed off after you finish reading this.
Here is the dirty little secret of the mortgage securitization boom of the last 5-10 years: The little guy gets stung with the losses.
First, a little history lesson. It’s kind of boring but stick with me here. Mortgage backed securities (MBS) were originally the old Ginnie Mae pass-through certificates. The VA or FHA packaged up their loans and sold them through Wall Street to little old ladies who wanted to “juice up the yield” on their portfolio. They were safe because they were backed by a government agency. They yielded more than treasuries because they were a conglomeration of various mortgages. The money was loaned at, oh… 14% (remember the early 80’s ?) and the investors received, say…12%. It was a good deal because the little old lady could only get 9% on Certificates of Deposit. The difference was spread among loan servicers, Wall Street, and even the gub-a-mint agency by employing this securitization tactic.
The problem was that loan principal was returned, along with the interest, on the old Ginnie Mae pass-throughs. Little old ladies didn’t care because they weren’t going to live long enough to spend all of their money (these were 30 year issues). However, Wall Street had problems selling these deals in bulk to institutions because of the prepayment features.
An ambitious mail-room clerk named Lew Ranieri worked at Salomon Brothers and saw an opportunity in the mid 80s. Salomon Brothers was hiring rocket scientists to create a new breed of mortgage-backed security, a collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO), designed to more accurately predict the prepayment speed of the mortgages backing the bonds they sold. Lucky Lew ran around the country preaching God, motherhood, baseball, and a CMO in every portfolio. Lew convinced the WORLD investment community that the American homeowner was a damn good bet.
It worked ! The American homeowner was a damn good bet. The MBS market boomed and the rocket scientists found a way to make more money selling derivative products that only they understood. All was well until some punk MBS salesman at Merrill Lynch (relax, I was one of them) convinced the Orange County, CA Treasurer to roll the dice with the county’s money on derivatives. The market moved against him and one of America’s wealthiest counties declared bankruptcy.
ARE YOU STILL AWAKE ? Good! Here’s where it gets juicy.
Fast forward to 2001. A little mortgage broker from New York grew into one of the largest lenders; Countrywide. He, among others, understood the power of the MBS market and started designing new mortgage products. He, among others, understood that if you loosened the guidelines a LITTLE BIT, you could add one quarter to one half percent to the rate and whet the appetite Wall Street had for yield. Something was about to happen that would have the Wall Street Titans begging the little mortgage broker for more mortgages with the guidelines loosened just a LITTLE BIT.
Two planes crashed into some big buildings in Lower Manhattan and the world as we knew it ended.
Fearing a global liquidity crisis, Alan Greenspan started the process of easing interest rates down to their lowest level in over 40 years. Mortgage rates, and their subsequent MBS yields, dropped like a ball off a table. The Titans of Wall Street were now beyond begging the little mortgage broker for loans with guidelines loosened just a LITTLE BIT; they told him to lend money to anyone who could fog a mirror. The Wall Street rocket scientists (remember them?) felt that housing prices were about to take off. If they were wrong, no big deal…because….(now here’s the part where you get pissed off and start throwing stuff at the computer…)
Wall Street was selling these MBS to pension funds and mutual funds. The little old ladies didn’t own these mortgages anymore, it was you and your company’s retirement money. Basically, the Titans of Wall Street never had to answer for the performance of these loans because the money managers wanted that last little bit of yield the risky or exotic mortgages produced. The rising housing market would disguise the loose guidelines (defaults would just be refinanced) and everyone would make their little golden crumbs as the vanishing loaf was buried deep in the breadbox. If that wasn’t enough, the lenders would buy securities firms and the securities firms would buy lenders, all of them buying time before the cat got out of the bag.
Then Alan Greenspan raised interest rates and all hell broke out. Rapid growth in housing arrested and the refinance boom stopped. Alas, the lenders and Wall Street Titans kept the easy money machine flowing. Think about it, it wasn’t their money, it is yours…so why close the bar tab if you never intend to pay it ?
Now…here is the part where you should be infuriated but don’t have to be… This crap has been buried in so many funds that it won’t have too much of a lasting effect. The debacle that we read about will be paid for by you, Mr. and Mrs. America with the $57,254 balance in your IRA account. And it is going to hurt you, probably to the tune of two or three grand. That means these HUGE default rates we read about MAY lower your IRA balance to $54,819 next year. If you’re 50 years old, it means that the monthly check you draw from that IRA when you are 70 years old WILL be some 38 bucks lighter because of this mess.
DO YOU REALLY WANT TO GET ALL WORKED UP FOR A LOUSY THIRTY-EIGHT BUCKS A MONTH WHEN YOU’RE SEVENTY?
Oh, shit ! I’m starting to sound like one of them !
Greg Swann says:
A complete killer of a post. One of your best — ever.
September 15, 2008 — 10:07 pm
Keahi Pelayo says:
I guess the rules were there for a reason. Maybe we are better off following them.
Aloha,
Keahi
September 15, 2008 — 10:49 pm
Michael Cook says:
$38… I admire your precision. It is very hard for people to appreciate the reach of the mortgage industry. Most people see a house and a bank and that is it.
I see a house, a bank who sells the mortgage, an intermidary that packages the mortgage, investors that buy the mortgage in different loss positions, insurers that insure every step of the process (AIG), who then turn around and sell options and hedges on their insurance policies (derivatities), traders that sell and trade hedges around every step in this process. The last guy in is levered between 30 to 40 times.
$38 goes a long way…
September 16, 2008 — 7:09 am
Brian Brady says:
I didn’t see as many layers as you did Michael.
It used to be simple. Loan, warehouse, sell, package, sell to investor. Then again, I should have wondered how leveraged funds could earn a 38% annual return on a 6% coupon.
September 16, 2008 — 7:58 am
Thomas Johnson says:
Here’s the biggest screwing of the little guy, ever: NY state regulators have allowed AIG to borrow against the assets of their insurance company subsidiaries. This means that they are borrowing people’s life insurance proceeds, property and casualty reserves. I wonder how they are going to pay IKE/Gustav claims after they flush $70 billion down their Lehman induced credit default swap rat hole.
Mrs. Widow we are so sorry your husband died. We spent his/your life insurance on trying to save our bonus pool. A worthy expenditure don’t you agree?
September 16, 2008 — 8:22 am
Bob in San Diego says:
Thomas – that is a great description.
September 16, 2008 — 9:11 am
Tor says:
I’ve watched this for the past 8 years in anticipation of a crash prior to making a purchase. Indeed I ran out of patience and purchased at the peak of the market 8p
-Tor
September 16, 2008 — 11:54 am
Brian Brady says:
Ouch, Tor.
History repeats itself- you’ll get another at bat
September 16, 2008 — 1:49 pm
David Shafer says:
Brian I asked Gregg to comment on this, but maybe this is more up your alley. Can you comment on the repeal of the Glass Steagal Act and the effect the Gramm-Leach-Billey act had on creating the current situation? Clinton pushed for it and got it in 1999.
September 17, 2008 — 6:14 am
Brian Brady says:
“Can you comment on the repeal of the Glass Steagal Act and the effect the Gramm-Leach-Billey act had on creating the current situation?”
A good question for Matt Padilla- our guest Monday on Bloodhound Blog Radio
September 18, 2008 — 7:39 am