Does the crisis expel the EMH?

Professor Jeremy Siegel wrote this opinion piece for the WSJ yesterday and I thought it was interesting.  In it, Siegel defends the Efficient Market Hypothesis by pointing out that the paradigm in which most Wall Street firms made decisions during the credit boom (which in hindsight look like bad decisions) were steeped in the Great Moderation where bubbles and volatility were not the norm.  As a result, there models for evaluating risk did not anticipate the level of volatility that reality has now presented.  Here are a couple excerpts which I found interesting:

*The economic response to the Great Moderation was predictable: risk premiums shrank and individuals and firms took on more leverage.

*According to data collected by Prof. Robert Shiller of Yale University, in the 61 years from 1945 through 2006 the maximum cumulative decline in the average price of homes was 2.84% in 1991. If this low volatility of home prices persisted into the future, a mortgage security composed of a nationally diversified portfolio of loans comprising the first 80% of a home’s value would have never come close to defaulting.

*Our crisis wasn’t due to blind faith in the Efficient Market Hypothesis. The fact that risk premiums were low does not mean they were nonexistent and that market prices were right.

*But this does not mean that risks have disappeared. To use an analogy, the fact that automobiles today are safer than they were years ago does not mean that you can drive at 120 mph.

What’s your take?  Do you believe in the Efficient Market Theory?  Leave your comments below.

Wise Commentary from the Oracle of Omaha

For anyone involved in business or investing Berkshire-Hathaway’s annual report should be required reading.  Not so much the entire report but at least the letter which is carefully crafted by one of my favorite people, Warren Buffett.  You can read this year’s letter along with past years at this link.

I try to read it every year and was pleased that Buffett provided some commentary on the credit/ housing crisis in this year’s letter.  Here is an excerpt from the letter:

Finance and Financial Products

I will write here at some length about the mortgage operation of Clayton Homes and skip any financial commentary, which is summarized in the table at the end of this section. I do this because Clayton’s recent experience may be useful in the public-policy debate about housing and mortgages. But first a little background.

Clayton is the largest company in the manufactured home industry, delivering 27,499 units last year.  This came to about 34% of the industry’s 81,889 total. Our share will likely grow in 2009, partly because much of the rest of the industry is in acute distress.  Industrywide, units sold have steadily declined since they hit a peak of 372,843 in 1998.

At that time, much of the industry employed sales practices that were atrocious. Writing about the period somewhat later, I described it as involving “borrowers who shouldn’t have borrowed being financed by lenders who shouldn’t have lent.”
To begin with, the need for meaningful down payments was frequently ignored. Sometimes fakery was involved. (“That certainly looks like a $2,000 cat to me” says the salesman who will receive a $3,000 commission if the loan goes through.) Moreover, impossible-to-meet monthly payments were being agreed to by borrowers who signed up because they had nothing to lose. The resulting mortgages were usually packaged (“securitized”) and sold by Wall Street firms to unsuspecting investors. This chain of folly had to end badly, and it did.

Clayton, it should be emphasized, followed far more sensible practices in its own lending throughout that time. Indeed, no purchaser of the mortgages it originated and then securitized has ever lost a dime of principal or interest. But Clayton was the exception; industry losses were staggering. And the hangover continues to this day.

This 1997-2000 fiasco should have served as a canary-in-the-coal-mine warning for the far-larger conventional housing market. But investors, government and rating agencies learned exactly nothing from the manufactured-home debacle. Instead, in an eerie rerun of that disaster, the same mistakes were repeated with conventional homes in the 2004-07 period: Lenders happily made loans that borrowers couldn’t repay out of their incomes, and borrowers just as happily signed up to meet those payments. Both parties counted on “house-price appreciation” to make this otherwise impossible arrangement work. It was Scarlett O’Hara all over again: “I’ll think about it tomorrow.” The consequences of this behavior are now reverberating through every corner of our economy.

Clayton’s 198,888 borrowers, however, have continued to pay normally throughout the housing crash, handing us no unexpected losses. This is not because these borrowers are unusually creditworthy, a point proved by FICO scores (a standard measure of credit risk). Their median FICO score is 644, compared to a national median of 723, and about 35% are below 620, the segment usually designated “sub-prime.” Many disastrous pools of mortgages on conventional homes are populated by borrowers with far better credit, as measured by FICO scores.

Yet at yearend, our delinquency rate on loans we have originated was 3.6%, up only modestly from 2.9% in 2006 and 2.9% in 2004. (In addition to our originated loans, we’ve also bought bulk portfolios of various types from other financial institutions.) Clayton’s foreclosures during 2008 were 3.0% of originated loans compared to 3.8% in 2006 and 5.3% in 2004.

Why are our borrowers – characteristically people with modest incomes and far-from-great credit scores – performing so well? The answer is elementary, going right back to Lending 101. Our borrowers simply looked at how full-bore mortgage payments would compare with their actual – not hoped-for – income and then decided whether they could live with that commitment. Simply put, they took out a mortgage with the intention of paying it off, whatever the course of home prices.

Just as important is what our borrowers did not do. They did not count on making their loan payments by means of refinancing. They did not sign up for “teaser” rates that upon reset were outsized relative to their income. And they did not assume that they could always sell their home at a profit if their mortgage payments became onerous. Jimmy Stewart would have loved these folks.

Of course, a number of our borrowers will run into trouble. They generally have no more than minor savings to tide them over if adversity hits. The major cause of delinquency or foreclosure is the loss of a job, but death, divorce and medical expenses all cause problems. If unemployment rates rise – as they surely will in 2009 – more of Clayton’s borrowers will have troubles, and we will have larger, though still manageable, losses.  But our problems will not be driven to any extent by the trend of home prices.

Commentary about the current housing crisis often ignores the crucial fact that most foreclosures do not occur because a house is worth less than its mortgage (so-called “upside-down” loans). Rather, foreclosures take place because borrowers can’t pay the monthly payment that they agreed to pay. Homeowners who have made a meaningful down-payment – derived from savings and not from other borrowing – seldom walk away from a primary residence simply because its value today is less than the mortgage. Instead, they walk when they can’t make the monthly payments.

Home ownership is a wonderful thing. My family and I have enjoyed my present home for 50 years, with more to come. But enjoyment and utility should be the primary motives for purchase, not profit or refi possibilities. And the home purchased ought to fit the income of the purchaser.

The present housing debacle should teach home buyers, lenders, brokers and government some simple lessons that will ensure stability in the future. Home purchases should involve an honest-to-God down payment of at least 10% and monthly payments that can be comfortably handled by the borrower’s income. That income should be carefully verified.

Putting people into homes, though a desirable goal, shouldn’t be our country’s primary objective.  Keeping them in their homes should be the ambition.

By the way, I’m currently reading “The Snowball” which is a great biography of his life.  I should have the review done in the next few weeks.

Do loan modifications work?

The NY Times reported in this article that over half of borrowers who had their loans modified in the first 3 months of 2008 are again at least 30 days delinquent on their mortgage.  This raises questions as to the effectiveness of loan modifications.

Or, it may also lead to questions about how loans are being modified.  It may be that the loan modifications that took place in the first 3 months of the year primarily focused on cutting the principal balance of the loan without addressing the amount of the monthly payment.  If this is the case the homeowner may appreciate the lesser amount owed but if they’re having trouble making ends meet it won’t do anything do address that problem.

Or, it ma be that the downturn in the housing market is making it so many of these homeowners have lost their jobs making it impossible to pay their mortgage.

No matter what the cause it is clear that underwriting got a little too aggressive over the past couple years.

We told you so!

Aaron was recently looking in a folder on his computer and came across this mailer which we sent out in October 2006 warning our past clients about option ARM solicitations.  Option ARMs are mortgage programs that have negative amortization implications when the borrower makes the minimum payment.  Not to say that ALL applications of the option ARM programs are bad.

But unfortunately the option ARM program made it into the mainstream mortgage market and consumers who didn’t understand the program were being solicited to use them.  This is one of the factors why we find ourselves in the position we are in today.

Here is the copy from our warning mailer:

It has come to our attention that many mortgage lenders are currently soliciting many of our past clients to refinance their existing loans with Option ARM Loan Programs.

· What is an Option ARM? These are complicated loan programs with low “teaser” rates and low initial monthly payments.  Many of these programs start out with interest rates as low as 1.00% for 1 month and then increase significantly.  As the interest rate increases the mortgage payments actually remain the same which then causes the homeowner’s loan balances to increase through negative amortization.

· Why are they popular? With higher real estate prices and higher interest rates, many mortgage lenders are pushing these products on homeowner’s because of the low initial monthly payment.

· Why are they risky? What is not often disclosed by lenders who push these products is that payments will increase with time as will the loan balance if the minimum monthly payment is made.   As a result, consumers are not aware that their mortgage balance is actually increasing with time.  Furthermore, lenders are paid greater commissions for pushing these loans with lengthy prepayment penalties which lock in borrowers to these products.

· If you have been solicited by one of these offers and would like more information as to whether or not this loan is good product for you please contact us.  Also, visit http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_37/b4000001.htm for a good article on the subject.

Possible long-term solutions to fix mortgage woes

The Economist published this article in their weekly “Economics Focus” section back in October and I’m just getting around to blogging about it.  This section of the magazine deals with theoretical economics so it’s always interesting to see what the best minds in the field are proposing to help fix our current economic problems.

In this edition the subject matter is mortgages.  Specifically, various economists suggest fixes for the problem of foreclosures.

Let’s first define the problem:

The problem is that as foreclosures increase, the stock of housing inventory rises, pushing home values lower.  As home values go down, it prompts more homeowner’s to enter foreclosure because their is no economic incentive for them to keep current on their home.  It becomes a vicious cycle that is illustrated in the chart below.  As foreclosures increase, property values decrease, causing foreclosures to increase even more……

The proposed solutions:

*Make mortgage a “recourse” loan.  Currently mortgages are “non-recourse” which means when a bank forecloses on a home and is only able to recover a fraction of the original loan the borrower DOES NOT have to pay back the difference.  Under a “recourse” arrangement the borrower would still be personally liable for the difference between the loan amount.  This would increase the incentive for borrowers to avoid foreclosure.

*Another economist suggests adding a clause to future mortgage agreements that would automatically trigger a principal reduction on the loan amount when the value of the home decreases by a certain amount.  For example, under this clause if your home decreases in value by 20%, your loan principal would also decrease by 20%.  This arrangement would protect the homeowner’s equity position and therefore create an incentive for them to remain in their home.  The trade off is that the homeowner would need to share in the equuity appreciation in the future so that the lender is paid back.

Both of these theories are interesting.  We’ll have to wait and see if any take shape in the future.

Further tightening of credit guidelines

For those of us who have been hoping for the credit markets to show signs of stabilization we can keep on waiting.

Freddie Mac announced last week that they would no longer issue or accept underwriting approvals knows as “accept plus” approvals.  These approvals, which were mostly earned by borrowers with high credit scores and large down payments, featured little to no income documentation requirements.  In essence, these were almost like “stated income” loans because the borrower would not have to provide any income documents to confirm the income they listed on their application.

For example, we would expect that an applicant buying a primary residence with a credit score> 740 and >30% down would likely receive an “accept plus” approval.

Freddie Mac’s move to eliminate “accept plus” approvals is another sign that lenders are acting with extreme caution.  Unfortunately this move will also negatively impact many more applicants ability to buy.  However, I would expect that this will also create a niche for a private institution to

You can read the announcement at this link.

Elimination of interest-only fixed rate loans

In another sign of the times Wells Fargo announced today that they were eliminating their 30 year fixed mortgage with interest-only payments for the first 10 years.

Because Wells Fargo is a bellwether in our industry other lenders are expected to follow suit.

Explanation: Mortgage-backed securities (AKA MBS’s)

I came across this blog yesterday and started sifting through the postings.  This site does an excellent job of providing educational postings covering various topics in the mortgage industry.

Specifically, I really liked this posting which explains the factors that contributed to the development of the mortgage-backed bond market.  I also blogged about this topic around the time when speculation over the insolvency of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was hitting the news.

Essentially, mortgage-backed bonds were originally developed to “spread risk” among many financial institutions back when the banking industry was made up of many regional banks.  The need to spread risk was needed because regional banks were too leveraged to the local economy they did business in.

However, over the years the development of the mortgage-backed bond market (AKA “securitization”) has encouraged bankers to place emphasis on loan volume instead of loan quality.  Thus, we find ourselves in the mess we’re in today.

Sign #2 that the financial industry will rebound

Last week I blogged about Warren Buffett’s purchase of preferred stock in Goldman Sachs.  Today it was announced that Berkshire Hathaway (the investment firm that Buffett chairs) has reached an agreement to purchase $3 billion in preferred stock in GE.

Again I say, if Warren Buffett is jumping in now we have to be near the bottom of this mess.  Who knows how long it will take us to get out but I take comfort in the fact that Buffett doesn’t believe it will all collapse.

Dow drops more than after September 11th

How important do the markets think the financial bailout is?

On news that the $700 billion financial rescue plan got voted down in the House of Representatives th Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by almost 800 points.

To put that in perspective, when the markets opened following September 11th the Dow Jones dropped 644 points.