Showing posts with label Freddie Mac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freddie Mac. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Current Events & Trends: Where is America headed?

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ about socialism. This follows this post about the European Union. For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632. You can follow me at blogspot here and at twitter here https://twitter.com/brianleesblog. Please consider following both in case one goes down!


Current Events & Trends: Where is America headed?





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Not so long ago liberal commentators in the United States spoke of the European economic success in glowing terms - indicating that social democracy works.

They praised the European dream of collective responsibility and worldwide consciousness—leading to a better tomorrow for mankind. They also intoned about the European guide to better capitalism—really as much socialism as the market could bear. One or two liberal observers were even asking Americans if they were born on the wrong continent.
Yet recent events have shown these views to be somewhat embarrassing. Gideon Rachman wrote in the Financial Times: "The normal processes of democracy in Italy and Greece had been unequal to the economic crisis. The European Union's repeated failure to find a solution to the debt crisis—and so secure the future of the euro—illustrated that pan-European politics were working no better than the national variety" ("Our Age of Mounting Indignation," Dec. 30, 2011).
Historically the Europeans who immigrated to the new world for a better life have since established their own methods in the political and economic fields. The American way of life has a brand all its own, including its take on capitalism. Though far from reaching the ideal, overall it has proved more economically successful than the more planned and regulated economies of other nations.
Yet there can be little doubt that the present American administration favors the European social model. So will the European model then become the dominant force in the United States?
Certainly President Obama has challenged traditional U.S. economic strategy and tactics—seeking to "spread the wealth" by taxing the rich, increasing government spending and initiating costly social programs such as his new, much more pervasive health-care legislation, and his recent rejection of the proposed oil pipeline between Canada and Texas (which would have added tens of thousands more jobs). A Wall Street Journal editorial stated: "Obama has done nearly everything he wanted. That's the problem" ("The State of His Policies," Jan. 26, 2012).
This November's national elections may decide just how much farther Americans are willing to travel down the road in quest of European-model socialism. Will the outcome of these U.S. elections turn out to be a referendum on whether or not the United States should become an honorary member of the European Union?
To fully understand America's role in the world from God's point of view, read our free Bible study aid booklet The United States and Britain in Bible Prophecy . It will give you the essential historical and biblical background to understanding the severe challenges facing America and the British Commonwealth of English-speaking nations. (Sources: Financial Times [London], The Wall Street Journal .)

Monday, February 27, 2012

Why Are the Big Issues Not Being Discussed?

An interesting article from www.ucg.org  about issues affecting Americans. This follows this post about a rape crisis in South Africa.  For a free magazine subscription or to get this book for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886-8632.

Why Are the Big Issues Not Being Discussed?


A commentary by Melvin Rhodes




The Bible warns of economic consequences when a nation's citizens turn away from God.



I was sitting in downtown Accra, Ghana's capital, talking to a resident of the city whom I've known for almost thirty years. He was telling me that he had won the lottery. Not the national lottery that would have given him millions of extra Ghana cedis to spend, but rather the U.S. immigration lottery. This meant that he and his family could now enter the United States legally and that he would be given a green card.



It was disclosed a few months ago that since September 11, 2001 more than ten million new people have moved to the United States, both legally and illegally. That adds more than one million people per year. Some enter because of family connections, others because they have skills needed in the United States, still others because they are refugees or victims of persecution in their own lands. Many enter as students and never leave. The immigration lottery is another opportunity to enter the United States—one in which anybody can enter his name.



I asked my friend what he hoped to do when he arrived in America. He told me that Ghanaians will do jobs that Americans won't do! I told him that my son who has a business degree is now cleaning apartments and offices since losing his job a few months ago. I also mentioned that I've frequently been waited on in restaurants by people who have a masters degree but can't find a job. He was shocked at hearing this.



Another Ghanaian explained to me that all who enter the United States are expected to support family members back home by sending back a significant part of their earnings. Billions of dollars leave the United States annually in support of overseas family members.







Shortly after I returned home, I heard that the number of people who have lost their jobs since the beginning of this year is over 600,000.



It's time somebody did the math. With over 600,000 jobs already lost and unlikely to be replaced due to economic concerns plus almost 1.5 million new immigrants (including children) every twelve months, we could have well over a million extra people in the job market by the end of this year. And this assumes that the immigrants who have come to the United States in previous years all have jobs!



As job uncertainty increases you would think that by now this massive annual influx of immigrant workers would be a major national issue. But it isn't.



After returning to the United States, I was struck by how consistent our national media is in not highlighting these major issues facing this country—whether immigration, legal as well as illegal, or the growing federal deficit, which may worsen with the bailout of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.



The way the U.S. government will likely come up with the funds to save those two gigantic lending institutions is by printing more money or by borrowing more money, which increases America's indebtedness to other nations.



It all sounds like crazy economics to me!



But the basic problem is spiritual! When people forsake God they cannot see anything clearly. As more American citizens lose their jobs, often replaced by cheaper imported labor, and the country progressively increases its indebtedness to other nations, Americans will increasingly lose out just as God anciently predicted they would as a consequence of their turning away from Him.



Isaiah's appraisal of ancient Judah was: "The whole head is sick, and the whole heart faints. From the sole of the foot even to the head, there is no soundness in it …" (Isaiah 1:5-6 [5] Why should ye be stricken any more? ye will revolt more and more: the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint.

[6] From the sole of the foot even unto the head there is no soundness in it; but wounds, and bruises, and putrifying sores: they have not been closed, neither bound up, neither mollified with ointment.





See All...). The Bible warns that this will be the case for nations whose citizens turn away from God.



Deuteronomy 28 contains a warning applicable to the modern descendants of Israel who settled much of the United States. In the first part of the chapter, promises are made for obedience. Included in them is the promise: "You shall lend to many nations, but you shall not borrow" (verse 12). This was the case for many decades, both in ancient Israel and in modern America.



Later on in the chapter this warning is given as a consequence of citizens turning away from God: "The alien who is among you shall rise higher and higher above you, and you shall come down lower and lower. He shall lend to you, but you shall not lend to him; he shall be the head and you shall be the tail" (verses 43-44).

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The Missing Unemployment Statistics

An interesting article from www.ucg.org about the true unemployment numbers. This follows this post about the Bible's truthfulness as contrasted with other books.  For a free magazine subscription or to get this book for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886-8632.


The Missing Unemployment Statistics


A commentary by Melvin Rhodes



The economic upheavals that frequently plague our economies won't end until Christ returns and establishes a godly financial system. So, what should a Christian who trusts God and believes His written Word do in times like this.



According to the Lansing State Journal (8/23), Michigan's hard hit economy is looking better. Unemployment has dropped from 15.2% to below 15%, the paper has twice reported.



I might feel a lot better if I could take this at face value. Unfortunately, the hard figures reveal a different story!



Unemployment is under reported

My son works for the state's department of unemployment, sometimes cynically described as "the fastest growing sector of the Michigan economy."



The reason unemployment figures are looking better, he explained, is because increasing numbers of people are coming off unemployment benefits.



Here is how it works.



Unemployed workers receive benefits for only a limited number of weeks. With extensions, people may now receive benefits for over a year but eventually they run out. That is now happening to more and more people.



My son also explained to me that 99,000 people in Michigan will have received all of their available state unemployment benefits by the end of this year. That means they could become destitute, with no income, no health insurance and unable to pay their mortgages—which indicates more foreclosures are to come!



Other unreported factors

That's not the only reason the unemployment numbers look better. People who move out of state are no longer counted as "unemployed." Nor are people who retire. Nor are the tens of thousands who have returned to their native countries. Nor are those who are in part time work, some earning as little as $50 per week. Nor are those who have had their hours and pay cut.



"CNN Newsroom" (Sunday August 23rd) predicted that 650,000 people across the United States will lose their unemployment benefits by the end of this year. This includes the 99,000 in Michigan. The prediction is that 4.4 million Americans will lose theirs before the economy recovers. That's 4.4 million people with no means of feeding themselves, short of lining up at the local soup kitchen.



It's not a pretty picture, no matter how you look at it. Things are clearly not getting any better.



One economist, not alone in his concern, wrote an op-ed in the Financial Times August 25th on the increasing likelihood of a double dip recession similar to the Great Depression. Following the Crash of 1929 the economy actually started to pick up, with the Stock Market making gains for five months in a row. Then the sixth month came and the rest is history.



Some are saying the same is likely now. The 'D' word is increasingly mentioned.

Talk of "Depression" is enough to make anyone depressed, on a personal level.



The economic upheavals that frequently plague our economies won't end until Christ returns and establishes a godly financial system. So, what should a Christian who trusts God and believes His written Word do in times like this?



The appropriate response!

The Bible clearly instructs each of us to "seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness (Matthew 6:33But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.



See All...).



In addition to praying each day "Thy kingdom come" (Matthew 6:10Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.



See All..., King James Version), Christians should also remember to ask: "Give us this day our daily bread" (verse 11). Previous generations had to do this—often in times more challenging than now.



In the western world we've taken far too much for granted and have consistently failed to thank our Creator for all the physical blessings He has given to us. Faced with losing everything, this is a good time to start thanking God every day for all that He has given us.



Maybe for a while government can help if you lose your job, but that help won't last. Besides, the government is rapidly going broke. The U.S. deficit is so great that the BBC said a new word will soon be needed to describe it (BBC World News, PBS, 25th August).



Christians should not take anxious thought for tomorrow (Matthew 6:34Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.



See All...). Worry never helps. Do what you can to help yourself and ask God each day to help you provide for your family needs.



How long this recession (or depression) will last cannot be accurately predicted. One thing is certain. We must all accept a lower standard of living, going without some of the pleasures we once took for granted. However, we can take assurance from King David who observed: "I have been young, and now am old; Yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his descendants begging bread" (Psalm 37:25I have been young, and now am old; yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread.



See All...).



As we go through this difficult time, let's all remember to pray more fervently, "Thy kingdom come." And for a really in depth understanding of what that Kingdom will be like, please request, read online or download our free booklet, The Gospel of the Kingdom .

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Occupy Wall Street's misguided anger‏

A very interesting post from http://www.westernpac.org/ about Occupy Wall Street. This follows this previous post about it. This follows this previous article about it to encourage American energy independence. This is a key issue to prevent money from going to hostile countries such as Iran  and Venezuela. For more that you can do to get involved click HERE and you can read a very interesting book  HERE!

Occupy Wall Street's misguided anger‏


Dear Patriot,






Yesterday, I shared part of my analysis of the financial meltdown with you. I said clearly that I sympathize with many of the protesters about the failure of Wall Street in regards to the financial markets. I still remember watching the value of my home collapse, watching as one by one people close to me were let go and laid off from their jobs, and seeing foreclosure signs popping up in my neighborhood. While all that was happening, Wall Street executives were taking billions of dollars in bonuses. AIG went so far as to have Chris Dodd and Timothy Geithner change bailout language to allow them to pay their failed executives $165 million dollars in bonuses with some of the $170 billion dollars in taxpayer bailouts.



Decisions made on Wall Street literally destroyed millions of American lives, and it was their lack of prudence that caused skyrocketing unemployment and plummeting home prices. They failed the American people and while we suffered incredible hardship, they used their influence in government to keep their gravy train going. In a free market, they would have suffered the consequences of their bad decisions, but they had an ace up their sleeve: they controlled the Federal Reserve and the Treasury.



When they needed a bailout, former Goldman Sachs CEO Hank Paulson was there to deliver $700 billion dollars worth of bailouts. Paulson and Fed Chair Ben Bernanke scared Congress into passing the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) under the premise that Paulson would use that money to buy the toxic assets that we talked about yesterday. After passage, Paulson changed his mind in favor of giving the banks a “cash infusion,” or gigantic handout. Paulson, Bernanke, and Timothy Geithner had already manipulated the free market when they arranged shotgun marriages between Merrill Lynch and Bank of America, and Bear Stearns and JP Morgan. While they helped consolidate power for some, they also let Lehman Brothers fail. After letting Lehman fail, they changed policies and opened up the Federal Reserve discount window to investment banks. This policy shift would have saved Lehman, but conveniently for Goldman Sachs it came just hours too late. Hank Paulson used his government position to eliminate one of his firm's largest competitors.



Despite promises to the contrary, Obama continued Wall Street’s control of fiscal policy by reappointing Wall Street favorites Ben Bernanke (Fed) and Timothy Geithner (Treasury). Obama famously said to 13 Wall Street bankers, “I’m the only thing between you and the pitchforks,” and he has been delivering for them ever since.



I sympathize with the “Occupy Wall Street” protestors because when I joined the Tea Party movement, I wanted to see the criminals who caused this mess serving long prison sentences. I started researching how the whole thing happened, and what I found was that the people who needed to be put in prison were GOVERNMENT officials. The irresponsible Wall Street executives deserved to fail and suffer the same fate as the American people they stole from, but the true criminals are the corrupt government officials who betrayed the American people by manipulating the market in exchange for favors. As the ranking members of the House and Senate committees that oversaw fiscal policy, Barney Frank and Chris Dodd were the worst offenders. They were joined by a long list of bipartisan bastards who sold us all out, and as I learned, I focused my anger towards both defeating the corrupt politicians and electing patriots who would investigate their criminal behavior.



I could go on and on about how the government, at the behest of Wall Street, engineered the financial collapse, and for the sake of brevity have left out information about Clinton’s deregulation, the “Affordable Housing Act,” and hundreds of other corrupt policies purchased for pennies on the dollar from crooked politicians. Hopefully, the “Occupy Wall Street” protestors will realize the same way I did that the only reason Wall Street was able to rob the American people -searching to satisfy their unquenchable greed - was that a large group of corrupt politicians took control of a government that had far too much control over our lives. The solution is not MORE government; the solution is FAR LESS government.



I believe in limited government, personal responsibility, and FREE markets. The markets have been manipulated by a government that is far too powerful. I hate the corrupt bastards whose reckless gambling sank our economy, but I blame the corrupt government that both let them do it, and then protected them from the consequences that they had earned. I pray that these protestors will educate themselves and make the logical decision to join our political movement that is going to restore our great nation.



To leave a comment on this issue, please visit us on Facebook or at our blog.





Sincerely,



Dustin Stockton

Co-Founder, Western Representation PAC

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Obama Justice Department Forces Banks to Make Risky Loans, Planting the Seeds of a Future Financial Crisis

A very interesting post from http://www.openmarket.org/ about banks being forced to make risky loans. This follows this post about the Senate, not the House, stalling on the Budget Plan! This follows this post about the House GOP's communication problem and this article about  the recent news about ending the ban on offshore drilling which would encourage American energy independence This is a key issue to prevent money from going to hostile countries such as Iran  and Venezuela. For more that you can do to get involved click HERE and you can read the very interesting book that is shown HERE!

You can also write your two Senators about this banking crisis HERE!

Obama Justice Department Forces Banks to Make Risky Loans, Planting the Seeds of a Future Financial Crisis


by Hans Bader


in Bailout Watch, Economy, Legal, Politics as Usual, Property Rights, Sanctimony



The Wall Street Journal today writes about how the Obama administration is repeating the “mistakes of the past by intimidating banks into lending to minority borrowers at below-market rates in the name of combating discrimination.” Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Thomas Perez has argued that bankers who don’t make as many loans to blacks as whites (because they make lending decisions based on traditional lending criteria like credit scores, which tend to be higher among white applicants than black applicants) are engaged in a “form of discrimination and bigotry” as serious as “cross-burning.” Perez has compared bankers to “Klansmen,” and extracted settlements from banks “setting aside prime-rate mortgages for low-income blacks and Hispanics with blemished credit,” treating welfare “as valid income in mortgage applications” and providing “favorable interest rates and down-payment assistance for minority borrowers with weak credit,” notes Investors Business Daily.



Under Perez’s “disparate impact” theory, banks are guilty of racial discrimination even if they harbor no discriminatory intent, and use facially-neutral lending criteria, as long as these criteria weed out more black than white applicants. The Supreme Court has blessed a more limited version of this theory in the workplace, but has rejected this “disparate impact” theory in most other contexts, such as discrimination claims brought under the Constitution’s equal protection clause; discrimination claims alleging racial discrimination in the making of contracts; and discrimination claims brought under Title VI, the civil-rights statute governing racial discrimination in education and federally-funded programs. Despite court rulings casting doubt on this “disparate impact” theory outside the workplace, the Obama administration has paid liberal trial lawyers countless millions of dollars to settle baseless “disparate impact” lawsuits brought against government agencies by minority plaintiffs, even after federal judges have expressed skepticism about those very lawsuits, suggesting that they were meritless.





Fearing bad publicity from being accused of “racism”, banks have paid out millions in settlements after being sued by the Justice Department, even though they would probably prevail before most judges if they aggressively fought such charges (although doing so would probably cost them millions in legal fees). A Michigan judge called one proposed settlement “extortion.” These settlements provide cash for “politically favored ‘community groups’ ” allied with the Obama Administration, and the Journal’s Mary Kissel predicts that “many” of the loans mandated by these settlements “will eventually go bad.”



The banks accused of “racism” by the Obama administration include banks that were previously praised by non-political government agencies for their success in minority outreach and lending to minorities in regions in which they did business. For example, the Obama administration is suing Cardinal Financial Corp., even though “the FDIC in the past gave kudos to Cardinal for its lending practices. Justice is now accusing Cardinal of failing to open branches and achieve racial loan quotas in counties that its federal regulator never before contended should be the focus of its lending,” arguing that it was not enough for the bank to make loans to minority applicants who applied for loans, and that it had an affirmative duty to open new branches in heavily-black areas it had never done business in before.



The Obama administration’s demands suggest it learned nothing from the financial crisis, which was caused partly by “diversity” mandates and affordable housing mandates that encouraged lending to people with bad credit scores who later defaulted on their loans. Banks were under great pressure from liberal lawmakers to make loans to low-income and minority borrowers. For example, “a high-ranking Democrat telephoned executives and screamed at them to purchase more loans from low-income borrowers,” The New York Times noted. As The Washington Examiner noted, the government also “encouraged riskier mortgage lending by minimizing the role of credit histories in lending decisions, loosening required debt-to-equity ratios to allow borrowers to make small or even no down payments at all, and encouraging lenders the use of floating or adjustable interest-rate mortgages, including those with low ‘teasers.’” The liberal Village Voice previously chronicled how Clinton administration housing secretary Andrew Cuomo helped spawn the mortgage crisis through his pressure on lenders to promote affordable housing and diversity. “Andrew Cuomo, the youngest Housing and Urban Development secretary in history, made a series of decisions between 1997 and 2001 that gave birth to the country’s current crisis. He took actions that—in combination with many other factors—helped plunge Fannie and Freddie into the subprime markets without putting in place the means to monitor their increasingly risky investments.”



Financial analysts at major investment banks have recently recognized that these government mandates played a bigger role in the financial crisis than previously thought. Former financial executive Ed Pinto has chronicled how the government promoted the risky non-traditional mortgages that defaulted in huge numbers. A recent book co-authored by The New York Times’ Gretchen Morgenson chronicles how federally-promoted lower lending standards spawned the financial crisis, and put minority borrowers into homes they could not afford.



The Obama administration is also considering a massive new bailout that would increase the cost to taxpayers of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Government-Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) whose bailout has already cost taxpayers more than $160 billion that will never be repaid (and will probably wind up costing at least $400 billion)



Monday, June 21, 2010

The Minority Mortgage Meltdown: More Evidence—But Our Elite Doesn’t Want To Know

An interesting post from http://www.vdarecom/ about housing forclosures. This follows this post about America's unsecured border with Mexico and this post about the MURDER of ROBERT KRENTZ, who the protestors and boycotters won't give a solution for, but will call Americans racist for trying to prevent another MURDER, and this post which shows that there are 30,000 openly illegal immigrants in the border town of El Paso across from the recent Juarez shooting. For more interesting stories like this click here to follow this blog.

The Minority Mortgage Meltdown: More Evidence—But Our Elite Doesn’t Want To Know
By Steve Sailer
We keep satirizing this, but now a Washington Post news story really is headlined
Minorities hit harder by foreclosure crisis
“Minority homeowners have been disproportionately affected by the foreclosure crisis and stand to lose homes at a faster pace than white borrowers in the future, according to a report released Friday by a nonprofit research group. … The ‘analysis suggests dramatic differences in how the foreclosure crisis has affected racial and ethnic groups,’ the report said. ‘African American and Latino borrowers have borne and will continue to disproportionately bear the burden of foreclosures.’ "
(By Renae Merle, Saturday, June 19, 2010)
If you translate this out of the evasive passive voice and into the active voice, you come up with something more informative, namely:
AFRICAN AMERICAN AND LATINO BORROWERS DEFAULTED AND WILL CONTINUE TO DEFAULT DISPROPORTIONATELY.
But defaults couldn’t possibly be the fault of the defaulters, if the defaulters are minorities, could they? So instead, Felix Salmon of Reuters asks Are foreclosures racists? June 18, 2010:
“If you’re a high-income Latino with a mortgage, you’re almost twice as likely to be facing foreclosure than a high-income non-Hispanic white person. And in general, the foreclosure crisis is hitting blacks and Latinos much harder than it is whites, according to a startling new report from the Center for Responsible Lending.”
Now, you might think that foreclosure rate has something to do with, say, blacks and Hispanics having remarkably fewer financial assets to use as safety cushions in case housing prices don’t continue to rise. After all, a 2007 Federal Reserve Board report to Congress (PDF) noted:
“Black and Hispanic families are less likely than non-Hispanic white families to have any financial assets, so the disparity in median financial assets for all families (rather than just those with financial assets) is even larger, with the overall medians for black and Hispanic families roughly 5 percent to 7 percent of the non-Hispanic white median.”
Moreover, African-Americans and Latinos are less likely than whites to have prosperous relatives who can help them out with a loan if they are in danger of defaulting.
You might think that, but being aware of those facts just shows you are a racist. Salmon [Email him] writes:
“I’ll hazard a guess and say that this probably has something to do with a lot of middle- and high-income Latinos in California and Arizona being sold subprime mortgages, even when they qualified for a prime loan.”
The Washington Post’s Merle agrees that discrimination is the cause:
“Research has shown that minority borrowers were more likely to receive subprime loans during the housing boom even if they had credit scores, incomes and loan sizes similar to those of whites. Some housing experts say that minority borrowers received higher rates on subprime loans compared with similarly situated white borrowers, resulting in higher monthly payments and quicker defaults.
“‘I think it reflects that minority borrowers were targeted by the sellers of these [risky] mortgages,’ said Barry Zigas, director of housing and credit policy at the Consumer Federation of America.”
Obviously, minority borrowers were targeted—the federal government has been promoting mortgage lending to minorities for more than 30 years.
But if blacks and Hispanics were more creditworthy than lenders were giving them credit for being, then they’d have lower foreclosure rates than whites, right? But this report is about how they have higher foreclosure rates. (This point was first made in Forbes magazine by Peter Brimelow and Leslie Spencer back in 1993—when it could have saved us all a lot of trouble).
In fact, blacks and Hispanics have even worse foreclosure rates than this study claims. Although the Post and Salmon don’t mention it, the report flat-out admits that its crude methodology underestimates the gap in default rates between whites and Non-Asian Minorities:
“Like all estimates, ours has limitations. Most importantly, our method only captures differences in foreclosure rates between racial and ethnic groups that are due to differences in distributions of loans along the four dimensions that we use when calculating foreclosure rates (i.e. loan year, state, occupancy and loan segment). … Within the list of potential factors not included in our analysis, several tend to be associated with both higher foreclosure rates and borrowers of color. As a result, our results are likely to underestimate racial and ethnic disparities …”
The three researchers from the Center for Responsible Lending (Debbie Gruenstein Bocian, Wei Li, and Keith S. Ernst) don’t actually have data on foreclosures by race. Instead, they have federal data by race on who receives mortgages and they have private data on who fails to pay them back (but the foreclosure data doesn’t mention the race of the defaulter). Instead, the CPL is, as they confess, “implicitly assuming” that the foreclosure rates are identical across races for each type of loan (e.g., 2006 California owner-occupied subprime).
Fortunately, other researchers have actually done the hard work of matching public race information with private foreclosure information, mortgage by mortgage. And they have found the CPL’s assumption of racial equality in foreclosure rates within segments to be wrong.
For example, the 2008 study Lending in Low- and Moderate-Income Neighborhoods in California (PDF) by Dr. Elizabeth Laderman and Dr. Carolina Reid of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank calculated foreclosure rates by race on 239,000 mortgages in California handed out during the Bubble:
They concluded:

"We also find that race has an independent effect on foreclosure even after controlling for borrower income and credit score. In particular, African American borrowers were 3.3 times as likely as white borrowers to be in foreclosure, whereas Latino and Asian borrowers were 2.5 and 1.6 times respectively more likely to be in foreclosure as white borrowers."
This shouldn’t be a new discovery.
The March 2004 report Analysis of FHA Single-Family Default and Loss Rates for the Department of Housing and Urban Development by Robert F. Cotterman showed that black and Hispanic default rates on Federal Housing Administration mortgages handed out in the 1990s were more than twice as bad as the white rate. Even when adjusted for FICO scores and other objective factors related to credit risk, minority default rates still look worse.
Cotterman observes:
“Blacks, Hispanics, and those in judicial foreclosure states and underserved areas have higher conditional loss rates, other things the same.”
A careful 2008 Boston Federal Reserve study, Subprime Mortgages, Foreclosures, and Urban Neighborhoods, by Kristopher S. Gerardi and Paul S. Willen found that blacks and Hispanics had higher foreclosure rates on subprime mortgages in Massachusetts back through the late 1990s.
Minority default rates are not a minor technical issue. The volume of lending to minorities during the Housing Bubble was much vaster than is widely understood. According to the federal Home Mortgage Disclosure Act database, minorities received half of all subprime mortgage dollars nationally during the 2004-2007 Housing Bubble. At the Ground Zero of the disaster, California in 2006, minorities got 77 percent of all home purchase subprime dollars and 56 percent of total home purchase dollars.
Mortgages were the fundamental units out of which the financial industry, private and public, built their pyramid schemes.
These fast-buck artists could get away with it for a simple reason: in our culture today, when bankers (such as Angelo Mozilo of Countrywide, Roland Arnall of Ameriquest, Richard Syron of Freddie Mac, and Kerry Killinger of Washington Mutual) and politicians (such as Henry Cisneros and George W. Bush) demand more lending to minorities, they aren’t derided as conmen, moonshooters, fast-buck artists, usurers, boiler-room operators, suckers, or fools.
Instead, they are praised as financial statesmen winning the war against racist redlining.
Which brings us to today.
It’s time once again to trot out the biggest cliché in all of journalism: philosopher George Santayana’s observation that
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Here we are, almost three years after the subprime market tanked in the summer of 2007 and 20 months after the economy as a whole followed subprime down the drain. And our country’s big guns are still trained not on learning from our mistakes, but on continuing to obliterate supposed stereotypes about the creditworthiness of minorities—the same obsolete obsession that helped get us into this mess.
This isn’t to say that the subprime-initiated mortgage meltdown was the only cause of the crash, or that the crash wouldn’t have happened later anyway. What I’m saying is that mortgages were the direct impetus of the economic disaster, just as the Wall Street Crash of October 1929 led to the Great Depression or the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in the summer of 1914 was the direct cause of the Great War. Similarly, America may well have eventually gotten involved in WWII if Pearl Harbor had never happened, but Pearl Harbor was the direct cause of our entry into the Second World War.
In the cases of 1914, 1929, and 1941, a huge amount of intellectual effort has been devoted to understanding these precipitating events. In contrast, the Main Stream Media account of the causes of the Housing Bubble and Bust are still severely lacking, largely because everybody who was anybody—e.g., Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama—were all in essential agreement that minorities should get more mortgage dollars.
And they were all wrong.
Unfortunately, public discourse in modern America mostly doesn’t exist to find answers to important questions. Instead, it exists to furnish talking points to partisans for attacking other partisans. Since there was broad agreement that minorities should borrow more, nobody is in any hurry to revisit this bipartisan blunder.
Consider the Federal Reserve Board dissertation from which I quoted above:
Report to the Congress on Credit Scoring and Its Effects on the Availability and Affordability of Credit
Submitted to the Congress pursuant to section 215 of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003
August 2007
The second paragraph of this Fed study mandated by the 2003 Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) explains that it was done to determine if “credit-scoring models may have adverse effects on certain populations, particularly minorities”. The legal Theory of Disparate Impact states that any evidence of black or Latino underperformance in anything is evidence of “discrimination” unless rigorously proved otherwise.
But, as this graph from the Fed study of 301,536 individuals’ credit history through 2003 shows, blacks and Hispanics had lower credit ratings on average (using a 0 to 100 scale devised by the Fed researchers).
In other words, the Fed spent the Housing Bubble years of 2003-2007 compiling a 304-page report demanded by Congress on whether credit scoring systems (e.g., FICO scores) were irrationally preventing minorities from borrowing enough.
This report wasn’t worked on from 1963 to 1967, when the Civil Rights movement triumphed, but from 2003 to 2007, a period in which exactly the exact opposite problem—minorities being loaned more than they could afford to repay—was about to bring down the American economy.
I’ve called that the Guns of Singapore Syndrome—although that’s unfair to the otherwise incompetent British commanders who lost that city in early 1942 in what Winston Churchill called the “worst disaster” in the history of the British Empire. The British had famously installed 15” coastal cannons aimed to protect Singapore from attack by sea from the south, only to have the Japanese army attack by land from the north. (Actually, the British did manage to swivel most of the guns around—although, unfortunately, they were furnished largely with armor-piercing anti-battleship shells ineffective against infantry).
In contrast, our elites haven’t managed to swivel much at all. They’re still acting as if it’s 1967 and the perceived problem is discrimination against minority borrowers. They’ll go so far as to change the name of what they are denouncing from “redlining” (the bête noire of the Clinton and Bush Administrations) to “reverse redlining” (what Obama is out to stomp), but that’s it. They aren’t going to learn anything. They are simply allergic to facts.
Now, you might think that it would have been more sensible for Congress to have the Fed study why minorities were getting so many loans they couldn’t pay back. But, no, our Guns of Singapore are permanently pointing out to sea.
For instance, that 2007 Fed study of the credit scores and repayment performance on all types of credit over the subsequent 18 months found that rather than credit scoring having an unfair impact on blacks, blacks had an unfair impact on credit scoring. The biggest problem with the predictive validity of credit scores turned out not to be that they were biased against African-Americans, but that credit scores were biased in favor of African-Americans. Blacks not only had lower average credit scores, but they were significantly less likely to repay their loans than whites with the same scores:
“The analysis conducted for this study finds that credit scores consistently predict relative loan performance within all population groups; that is, for all populations, the percentage of individuals experiencing a serious delinquency on one or more of their credit accounts consistently declines as credit scores increase….
“The analysis also finds that some groups perform worse (experience higher rates of serious delinquency) on their credit accounts, on average, than would be predicted by the performance of individuals in the broader population with similar credit scores. For example, on average, blacks perform worse than other racial and ethnic groups with similar credit scores.”
In other words, FICO scores work overall within groups at predicting likely deadbeats. The problem is between groups—but the bias is in the opposite direction of what Congress wanted to find!
You’ve probably read a lot about credit over the last three years. How often have you heard the conclusions of this 2007 Fed study mentioned?
I hadn’t heard of it until last week! And I’ve written on the subject dozens of times going back some three years.
[Steve Sailer (email him) is movie critic for The American Conservative. His website www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily blog. His new book, AMERICA’S HALF-BLOOD PRINCE: BARACK OBAMA’S "STORY OF RACE AND INHERITANCE", is available here.]

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Break Up America?

I wanted to let you know about an analyst who is predicting the eventual break-up of the United States. Even if the specifics are not quite right, it might be interesting to read this article along with re-reading our booklet about this topic http://www.gnmagazine.org/booklets/US/

RUSSIAN ANALYST PREDICTS DECLINE AND BREAKUP OF USA
Tue Nov 25 2008 09:04:22
ETA leading Russian political analyst has said the economic turmoil in the United States has confirmed his long-held view that the country is heading for collapse, and will divide into separate parts. Professor Igor Panarin said in an interview with the respected daily IZVESTIA published on Monday: "The dollar is not secured by anything. The country's foreign debt has grown like an avalanche, even though in the early 1980s there was no debt. By 1998, when I first made my prediction, it had exceeded $2 trillion. Now it is more than 11 trillion. This is a pyramid that can only collapse." The paper said Panarin's dire predictions for the U.S. economy, initially made at an international conference in Australia 10 years ago at a time when the economy appeared strong, have been given more credence by this year's events. When asked when the U.S. economy would collapse, Panarin said: "It is already collapsing. Due to the financial crisis, three of the largest and oldest five banks on Wall Street have already ceased to exist, and two are barely surviving. Their losses are the biggest in history. Now what we will see is a change in the regulatory system on a global financial scale: America will no longer be the world's financial regulator."
When asked who would replace the U.S. in regulating world markets, he said: "Two countries could assume this role: China, with its vast reserves, and Russia, which could play the role of a regulator in Eurasia." Asked why he expected the U.S. to break up into separate parts, he said: "A whole range of reasons. Firstly, the financial problems in the U.S. will get worse. Millions of citizens there have lost their savings. Prices and unemployment are on the rise. General Motors and Ford are on the verge of collapse, and this means that whole cities will be left without work. Governors are already insistently demanding money from the federal center. Dissatisfaction is growing, and at the moment it is only being held back by the elections and the hope that Obama can work miracles. But by spring, it will be clear that there are no miracles."
He also cited the "vulnerable political setup", "lack of unified national laws", and "divisions among the elite, which have become clear in these crisis conditions." He predicted that the U.S. will break up into six parts - the Pacific coast, with its growing Chinese population; the South, with its Hispanics; Texas, where independence movements are on the rise; the Atlantic coast, with its distinct and separate mentality; five of the poorer central states with their large Native American populations; and the northern states, where the influence from Canada is strong. He even suggested that "we could claim Alaska - it was only granted on lease, after all." Panarin, 60, is a professor at the Diplomatic Academy of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and has authored several books on information warfare.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Bush & Socialism

It genuinely pains me that George W. Bush did this in his last year of office. Of the three branches of conservatism he has been very successful in
1. Military strength by avoiding attacks on the homeland for over seven years,
2. Social issues by defending the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), keeping stem cell research illegal, banning partial birth abortion, and appointing two good Supreme Court Justices,

but on the other he has only been partly
3. Free-enterprise capitalism by keeping taxes low, however he was unsuccessful on deficits, prescription drugs, education reform, and now this.

Bush's Legacy: European Socialism
Dick Morris and Eileen McGann http://townhall.com/Columnists/DickMorrisandEileenMcGann/2008/11/19/bushs_legacy_european_socialism The results of the G-20 economic summit amount to nothing less than the seamless integration of the United States into the European economy. In one month of legislation and one diplomatic meeting, the United States has unilaterally abdicated all the gains for the concept of free markets won by the Reagan administration and surrendered, in toto, to the Western European model of socialism, stagnation and excessive government regulation. Sovereignty is out the window. Without a vote, we are suddenly members of the European Union. Given the dismal record of those nations at creating jobs and sustaining growth, merger with the Europeans is like a partnership with death.
At the G-20 meeting, Bush agreed to subject the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and our other regulatory agencies to the supervision of a global entity that would critique its regulatory standards and demand changes if it felt they were necessary. Bush agreed to create a College of Supervisors.
According to The Washington Post, it would "examine the books of major financial institutions that operate across national borders so regulators could begin to have a more complete picture of banks' operations."
Their scrutiny would extend to hedge funds and to various "exotic" financial instruments. The International Monetary Fund (IMF), a European-dominated operation, would conduct "regular vigorous reviews" of American financial institutions and practices. The European-dominated College of Supervisors would also weigh in on issues like executive compensation and investment practices.
There is nothing wrong with the substance of this regulation. Experience is showing it is needed. But it is very wrong to delegate these powers to unelected, international institutions with no political accountability.
We have a Securities and Exchange Commission appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, both of whom are elected by the American people. It is with the SEC, the Treasury and the Federal Reserve that financial accountability must take place.
The European Union achieved this massive subrogation of American sovereignty the way it usually does, by negotiation, gradual bureaucratic encroachment, and without asking the voters if they approve. What's more, Bush appears to have gone down without a fight, saving his debating time for arguing against the protectionism that France's Nicolas Sarkozy was pushing. By giving Bush a seeming victory on a moratorium against protectionism for one year, Sarkozy was able to slip over his massive scheme for taking over the supervision of the U.S. economy.
All kinds of political agendas are advancing under the cover of response to the global financial crisis. Where Franklin Roosevelt saved capitalism by regulating it, Bush, to say nothing of Obama, has given the government control over our major financial and insurance institutions. And it isn't even our government! The power has now been transferred to the international community, led by the socialists in the European Union.
Will Obama govern from the left? He doesn't have to. George W. Bush has done all the heavy lifting for him. It was under Bush that the government basically took over as the chief stockholder of our financial institutions and under Bush that we ceded our financial controls to the European Union. In doing so, he has done nothing to preserve what differentiates the vibrant American economy from those dying economies in Europe. Why have 80 percent of the jobs that have been created since 1980 in the industrialized world been created in the United States? How has America managed to retain its leading 24 percent share of global manufacturing even in the face of the Chinese surge? How has the U.S. GDP risen so high that it essentially equals that of the European Union, which has 50 percent more population? It has done so by an absence of stifling regulation, a liberation of capital to flow to innovative businesses, low taxes, and by a low level of unionization that has given business the flexibility to grow and prosper. Europe, stagnated by taxation and regulation, has grown by a pittance while we have roared ahead. But now Bush -- not Obama -- Bush has given that all up and caved in to European socialists.
The Bush legacy? European socialism. Who needs enemies with friends like Bush?

Friday, October 3, 2008

Bash the Bailout

I want to send this article (h/t: www.Openmarket.org) to show the other side of the bailout, which has not been covered much. I hope you find this interesting.

Bash the Bailout: Government is Not the Answer
Posted by Iain Murray
The bailout bill that passed through Congress today seeks to solve the financial mess by massively increasing government involvement in private finance. But more Government cannot be the answer to a government-created problem. The fact is that short-sighted government policies distorted the market in the first place. Bankers were certainly to blame for responding to these signals from government in the hope of a quick buck, but at its base, much of the problem was caused by government.
These are the top twelve articles, stories and papers that we think demonstrate this fact.
1. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are at the heart of the crisis, having helped to create an artificial mortgage boom. Fred Smith warned Congress about this in 2000, and was ridiculed for it. Read what happened here.
2. Steven Malanga outlines the “long road to slack lending standards” and just how government encouraged this, at RealClearMarkets.
3. Thomas Sowell explains how economic-populist politicians used their power to help create the problem.
4. The Securities and Exchange Commission requires firms to value their assets in a way that has vastly accelerated the liquidity problem. John Berlau explains why here.
5. A detailed examination of why mark-to-market accounting distorts the market from Peter Wallison of the American Enterprise Institute.
6. Back in 2000, City Journal warned that the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which encourages unrealistic aspirations to home ownership, was doomed to failure.
7. Earlier this year, Michelle Minton looked at how the CRA had indeed helped contribute to the subprime crisis.
8. Dan Mitchell argues that government created the problem, and more government will make things worse.
9. Even the International Monetary Fund recognizes that government “bailouts” don’t just merely postpone the inevitable in a banking crisis, they make things worse. This is a long paper, but see p. 4 in particular.
10. One of the oldest forms of government intervention in the financial markets has been deposit insurance. Yet globally it destabilizes capitalism, impedes innovation and makes a bad regulatory regime worse. British economist Andrew Lilico explains how.
11. Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron puts it bluntly: “The fact that government bears such a huge responsibility for the current mess means any response should eliminate the conditions that created this situation in the first place.”
12. Government has been becoming more intrusive when it comes to lending over the years. John Berlau looks at how they want to fingerprint anyone originating a home loan.
The bailout bill is now law, but it does little or nothing to solve the problems government created. As long as they persist, the financial markets will be at serious risk. In the end, we may need to bailout the bailout. Fixing these government-imposed problems must be a priority now if we want to have a strong, free economy.

Monday, September 29, 2008

UCG-World News & Prophecy Articles

wanted to send you some articles that were referenced on our church's website for you to read when you can. I hope you find them interesting if you haven't read them already.


Will Israel Bomb Iran?
Sep 28, 2008
Greg Sheridan of The Australian writes this weekend about a larger problem than Wall Street-the Iranian nuclear threat. He gives a preview of a report on the Middle East to come out from The American Enterprise Institute later this week. Here are some excerpts: The report is sobering and in some ways shocking reading. It begins [...]

Thoughts at the end of the week…
Sep 26, 2008
This has been a dramatic week on Wall Street. A congressional plan to “solve” the problem is still coming together and many hope it will be in place before the start of trading on Monday morning. It will be several days before we can evaluate the impact on our economy and America’s standing in the [...]

German Official Says U.S. to Decline
Sep 26, 2008
This morning in the Wall Street Journal, on page two, an article with the headline, “German Official Says U.S. Stature to Fall”. Here is a a quote from the German Finance Minister Peer Steinbruck while speaking Thursday to the German parliament. “The U.S. will lose its status as the superpower of the global financial system, not [...]

What Lies Ahead?
Sep 25, 2008
The last two weeks have seen the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression hit the United States. Large Wall Street financial firms went bankrupt and the government nationalized others. The stock market lost nearly a thousand points and gained most of it back in less than a week of trading. Panic and fear seized [...]

Bomb Blast in Pakistan
Sep 20, 2008
A bomb has gone off in Islamabad, Pakistan in front of the Marriott Hotel. Dozens appear to have died and the building is on fire. This BBC report gives details. Pakistan has been a key supporter of America’s war on terror and recently obtained a new president. President Asif Ali Zardari had today told parliament he [...]

Friday, September 26, 2008

UCG Financial Meltdown Commentary

I wanted to send you this article from one of the members of our church. It does point out the greed by lenders, borrowers and lawmakers. I hope you find it interesting.


What Lies Ahead?
September 25, 2008 by wnponline
The last two weeks have seen the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression hit the United States. Large Wall Street financial firms went bankrupt and the government nationalized others. The stock market lost nearly a thousand points and gained most of it back in less than a week of trading. Panic and fear seized the markets, prompting massive government intervention.What is behind this crisis? What does it mean for the future of America and its role in the world? The most vital question is, what should you be doing in these turbulent times?It is a long and complicated trail backwards to understand the source and cause of this present crisis. Beyond the accusations and sensational charges being lobbed back and forth is a tale of unregulated greed. One headline in the Financial Times said, “This greed was beyond irresponsible” (John Gapper, Sept. 17, 2008). Even today legislation to deal with the crisis is being held up over alarm at paying failed executives millions of dollars in severance packages. Greed, mismanagement and incompetence have combined on Wall Street to create a crisis that will likely lead to a recession.America is still the key player in the global economy. It is the largest consumer market, and the dollar is still the world’s reserve currency. Last week central banks around the world were buying and providing dollars to keep business going in their sectors. The world cannot afford to let America fail. They hold too much of its debt, and Americans consume many of the goods manufactured in their workshops and defend the skies and seas, keeping the world safe from anarchy, chaos and dictatorship. Everyone loves to bash the United States, but it is presently the indispensable element in the world system.America has taken a staggering economic blow, but it still stands. It will likely recover but it may not be the same in its world standing. The world has the perception of weakness and sometimes perception translates into reality. The European Union and nations like China, India, Brazil and Russia are not going to let the global economy remain dependent on the weaknesses of America’s economy. Look for these nations to work toward a solution that creates a larger and more powerful economic system.The United States has been in relative decline for some time while other nations have been rising in economic and political significance. We are moving closer to the time described in Revelation 18 when a super economic system described as Babylon will dominate world headlines.This is not “just another” economic crisis that we can ignore while we go about our consumer-driven comfortable lives. Real changes are coming to pass that will impact America’s standard of living and place in the world. America is not “just another” large empire that will one day pass from the scene like all the others in history. America, like its cousin Great Britain, has occupied its unique role in history because of the promises God made to Abraham of astounding national blessings. These have been realized in these two nations in modern times and the world has been the better for it. The decline of their blessing and influence in the world, also prophesied by God because of sin and moral failure, will change the course of the coming years.It is time you focused on this fact and awakened to the reality that the Great God controls the destiny of nations. This current crisis is significant and will mark a milestone in prophetic events. While we need to try to manage our finances in ways to protect ourselves and our families, the most important thing you can do is wake up to the urgency of the times and understand them from God’s perspective.It is time you and I examine whether we have been guilty of neglecting God and making idols of wealth, culture and people, and even ourselves, thus becoming blinded to the true God. I can think of nothing more important for you to do than repent and acknowledge God in your life. This is a very serious time in our generation. We will ignore it at our peril.Read, or reread, our booklet The United States and Britain in Bible Prophecy for the complete story of why these two nations have occupied their significant role in world history. And above all pray and keep watching.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Vacation Book Picks - Readers are Leaders

I wanted to send you this article below which reviews some books that explain things that are going on in the world. As the phrase goes, "Leaders are Readers." It is good to have an explaination as to how and why some of the things that are going on in this present age are happening and getting some of these books from the library or bookstore to read on your next vacation might be something worth doing.

Book picks By Thomas Sowell
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com Some parents who are concerned about their children receiving a steady diet of liberal-left indoctrination in schools and colleges regard vacation as a time to show these young people a different way of looking at things, with readings presenting viewpoints that are unlikely to be heard in classrooms that have become indoctrination centers.
Fortunately, there is a growing body of literature — both books and articles — presenting a very different viewpoint in readable language.
The academic year often ends with commencement speakers who have been in government, academia, foundations or various crusading movements, who tell the graduates how much nobler it is to go into such organizations, rather than into business.
Such self-flattering talk is seldom challenged by educators. But an outstanding recent book, "The Best-Laid Plans" by Randal O'Toole, gives a richly documented account of government actions and their consequences, and shows a far from flattering side of politicians, "experts," and environmentalists— who have ruined cities and suburbs in countries around the world.

Highly praised projects created by leading "experts" have repeatedly led to economic and social disasters, whether in Europe or the United States. The fundamental problem is that people don't want to live the way elites want them to live.
A classic example was the Pruitt-Igoe project in St. Louis, which had an extraordinary vacancy rate of 25 percent, rising eventually to 65 percent, before the whole project was demolished.
But, tragically, the assumptions behind such projects have not been demolished.
One statistic in "The Best-Laid Plans" shoots down one of the biggest lies of the environmentalist movement— that laws are needed to keep development from paving over the last remnants of open space. That statistic is that all the urban areas in the United States, put together, cover less than 3 percent of the land.
This statistic is all the more remarkable when you realize that O'Toole uses the Census definition of "urban"— any community with at least 2,500 people. That would include towns and villages, as well as cities.
Another remarkable and eye-opening book is "Liberal Fascism" by Jonah Goldberg. So many liberals use the term "fascism" to condemn conservative ideas that it may come as a revelation to many that the original fascism was in fact a doctrine having far more in common with the left than with conservatism.

While people on the left may deny that today, when fascism first emerged back in the 1920s it was widely recognized as a kindred doctrine by the leftists of that era.
Only after the international aggressions of Mussolini and Hitler during the 1930s made them pariahs did the left start reclassifying fascists as being on the right.
Since this is an election year, there may be more interest than usual in Barack Obama. Best-selling author Shelby Steele's book on Obama, titled "A Bound Man," gives both facts and insights that will take the reader far deeper than most media accounts.

Among my own books, the one that will probably be of the most interest to young people with no knowledge of economics is "Basic Economics." Apparently many people find it easier to understand than most economics books, since it has been translated into six other languages overseas.

My latest book on economics, however, is the recently published "Economic Facts and Fallacies." In Unhinged: Liberals Gone Wild It looks in-depth at fallacies about such things as housing, income, race, sex discrimination, the economics of academia and the Third World.

Fallacies are not just crazy ideas. Usually they are notions that sound very plausible, which is what enables them to be used by politicians, intellectuals, the media, and all sorts of crusading movements, to advance their causes or their careers.
It is precisely because most of the popular fallacies of our time, which are always especially popular during election years, sound so plausible that we need to stop, before we get swept along by rhetoric, and scrutinize the underlying flaws that turn brilliant-sounding "solutions" into recipes for disaster.

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell052108.php3

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Mother Of All Financial Scandals: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

How Prophetic Was This?

I wanted to send you this article that I came across written a few years ago. It describes some of the events going on now almost to a Tee. It was a very interesting read to describe some of what is happening even from back then and you can click on the links for further info. I do hope you find it interesting!

June 10, 2003
Mother Of All Financial Scandals: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
By Michelle Malkin
Martha Stewart is a too-easy target, an overstuffed pink piñata swinging in the wind, waiting to be thwacked by every last critic of capitalist excess. But the stock-dumping doyenne is no match for the real mother of all brewing financial scandals. That moniker belongs to the twin behemoths, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Who, you say? Unlike Martha, or the three-piece-suited villains of Enron or Tyco or WorldCom, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac haven’t been plastered all over the tabloids and prime-time TV. That’s because they are faceless, government-sponsored enterprises in a complex, loosely regulated, highly leveraged monopoly business that has engaged in questionable accounting practices and put billions of taxpayer dollars at risk—with plenty of private profiteering for company executives and Washington lobbyists, but almost zero accountability to the public. As federally chartered "government-sponsored enterprises," the two institutions have been exempt from normal securities regulations for almost their entire lives. Analysts unable to decipher Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s incomprehensible annual and quarterly reports have long suspected book-cooking with regard to their real cash flow. This week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Freddie Mac faces an SEC probe over possible accounting irregularities. Investigators will examine whether Freddie Mac may have deferred some income to smooth out results in future periods. The SEC will also probe the actions of the chief executive and chief financial officer, who were fired on Monday over an accounting review of earning restatements.The news sent stocks south and roiled some foreign markets as well.Clothed in politically correct fashions (“Catch the dream,” beckons Freddie Mac’s program to boost minority home ownership; a “leader in diversity,” brags a Fannie Mae press release), these public-private hybrids are two dangerous pigs feeding at the federal trough. Congress created Fannie Mae (nickname for the Federal National Mortgage Association) in 1938 to bolster home ownership during the Depression. Three decades later, it was partially privatized, but retained a host of government benefits. In 1970, Congress spawned Freddie Mac (nickname for the Federal Home Mortgage Corp.) to provide a lending competitor to Fannie Mae. Both entities expand the pool of money for home purchasers by snapping up loans that lenders make to homebuyers, and then converting those loans into relatively safe mortgage-backed securities that are attractive to investors. So, what’s wrong with this picture?As Fred Smith, president of the Washington, D.C-based Competitive Enterprise Institute, has noted, these financial beasts are a textbook example of "profit-side capitalism and loss-side socialism." When things go right for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, they keep the profits. But when things go wrong, taxpayers—not just private shareholders, managers, and employees—will be on the hook.Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae each receive $2.25 billion lines of credit with the U.S. Treasury. These special pipelines give the institutions an implied federal guarantee available to no other private sector competitors in the mortgage market. That protection makes them immune to the costs normally associated with riskier and riskier behavior. Moreover, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not required to pay state and local income taxes. In addition, the standard for how much money the government requires them to keep on hand in case homebuyers default on their mortgages is lower for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae than for fully private banks and thrifts. The two corporations receive an estimated $10 billion a year in hidden taxpayer subsidies. Political appointees to the companies’ boards pocket millions in stock options to bolster support on Capitol Hill. Clinton-appointed board members at Fannie Mae include March Rich lawyer Jack Quinn and Janet Reno’s lieutenant at the Justice Department, Jamie Gorelick. At the helm of Fannie Mae is another Clinton appointee, Franklin Raines, who was paid more than $4 million and had almost $6 million in unexercised stock options in his first year at the helm. Cheerleaders in both major political parties have opposed privatizing Fannie and Freddie.If Martha Stewart is the face of capitalist excess, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are the poster children for government-sponsored gluttony. The potential fall of Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae could rival the savings and loan collapse of the 1980s. Too bad the Martha bashers, blind to the far greater catastrophes of market socialism, won’t pay attention until it’s too late.Michelle Malkin [email her] is author of Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists, Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores. Click here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click here for Michelle Malkin's website.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Replacing Housing Risk with Dollar Risk

I previously sent an article about supply and demand in regards to oil prices which you can link to here http://brianleesblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/oil-prices-ship-turns.html. That article also had a link that you could click on called "Breaking the Back of High Oil" which had some articles that suggested how oil prices could be lowered. The article that I'm now sending talks about a misfortune in the Housing Market, and how mismanagement of this could have severe consequences for a very long time. The article is a little long and it does have some technicalities, but it is worth the read. Also, our own church does have a great article in this month's Good News about debt management here http://www.gnmagazine.org/issues/gn77/slave-to-debt.htm

Replacing Housing Risk With Dollar Risk, Updated
Understanding the Dimensions of the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Problem

Thursday, July 17, 2008

As of Sunday night, the US government, speaking through Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, has committed to guarantee the value of securities issued by the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.That means that you, dear Taxpayer, are about to get into the housing business in a way you’ve probably never imagined and certainly didn’t choose.So it’s worth asking a few questions about the business we’re all about to get into.What does it mean to say that Freddie Mac is insolvent on a mark-to-market valuation basis? Exactly how much risk are the taxpayers going to be exposed to? Who owns the securities (or “agency debt”) issued by Fannie and Freddie, and how do they benefit from the bailout?And most of all, what does it mean for people who want to buy houses in the future?This update of a story that was originally written three days ago includes sections on market and Congressional reactions to the GSE bailout plan.
Keep reading…
Preventing Revolutions
Fannie and Freddie (the GSEs) are chartered by Congress to borrow money from the public, and then lend it to homebuyers in the form of mortgages, at a higher rate of interest. They’re supposed to make a nice profit from the interest-rate spread.But Congress long ago gave the GSEs a line of credit from the Treasury (currently $2.25 billion, although Paulson just proposed to raise it). So there has always been a tacit assumption that agency liabilities would be guaranteed by the US government.This makes for a very interesting business model. Because of the implicit Federal guarantee, agency debt is perceived as nearly free of credit risk. This makes it exceptionally attractive to investors, and interest rates on the paper are correspondingly low.So the agencies have an artificially low cost of capital, compared to other lending institutions. Fannie and Freddie don’t make money because they’re particularly good at what they do. They make money only because people believe that the government has assumed the credit risk on their liabilities.This significantly reduces the interest rates that people have to pay on their mortgages, which without the agencies would be quite a bit higher than they are today.And that’s why Congress chartered these entities in the first place. Politicians have long understood that asset ownership keeps people from demanding radical social change. People who own houses and make mortgage payments tend not to participate in revolutions.
On Balance Sheet And Off
In addition to the direct mortgage lending that they engage in, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac also guarantee the payments on a much larger amount of mortgage debt. What kind of numbers are we talking about here?There are maybe $12 trillion worth of home mortgages in force in the US today. Fannie and Freddie together own about $1.6 trillion of those mortgages, either directly or in the form or mortgage-backed securities.To support those assets, they’ve issued liabilities in the form of coupon bonds and other debt sold directly to investors. And underneath those liabilities, the agencies have shareholder equity amounting to maybe $70 billion in all.The agencies have also been major issuers of mortgage-backed securities, which are not carried on their balance sheets. These securities amount to a total of nearly $4 trillion. They’re based on mortgages that were underwritten by Fannie and Freddie, and conform to their strict standards. So the agencies guarantee the payments made by these securities, even if the underlying mortgages default, and they earn a fee for making the guarantee.So all in, you’re looking at about $5 trillion in mortgages that are owned or guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie: nearly half of all US mortgages.Ok, now let’s get out the back of an envelope and do some arithmetic.
Potential Losses
What if the sky falls and 10% of the agency-guaranteed mortgages go into foreclosure? (Remember, we’re talking about conforming, prime mortgages: the good stuff, not the subprime toxic waste.) Figure the recovered value from a foreclosure averages half the value of the original loan. That adds up to a potential loss of half of 10% of $5 trillion. Maybe $250 billion.Does that number sound familiar? It should, because the contemplated maximum size of the mortgage bailout bill now working its way through Congress is $300 billion. So at least we’re all working off the back of the same envelope.But Fannie and Freddie only have about $70 billion in equity capital between them. When mortgages default and they lose money, the first losses are taken by the equity. When the equity is wiped out, the agencies’ debt takes the hit. So if you want to not worry about them defaulting on their liabilities, you have to make up the gap between $70 billion and whatever you think their loan losses will be.And that’s why Hank Paulson is talking about buying equity in Fannie and Freddie. It would be a matter of desperation for them to sell additional common stock in the open market now, with their stock prices at smelling distance from zero.But who’s being protected by all this? Well, who owns the debt that’s been issued or guaranteed by the agencies to fund your mortgage?
The International Dimension
To a perhaps surprising extent, part of the answer is the central banks of China, Russia and Japan. “Official” holdings of US agency debt are said to total just under $1 trillion, but they are likely somewhat higher.What the heck happened here?What happened is that investors, including central banks, chose to treat the cash flows generated by American homeowners as reserve assets, a role typically played by securities issued directly by governments (that is, US Treasury debt).These investors eagerly chose to invest in securities that paid a relatively high yield, because it was understood that the US government would assume their credit risk.Turn this over in your mind a few more times. It’s quite remarkable.Fannie and Freddie have been giving investors a free ride for years now. Investors benefit from the high yields paid by mortgages, without being exposed to the risk of default. You’d take this deal too, if you could.This totally explains the rapid growth of Fannie and Freddie, who especially in the Nineties, went out and actively marketed themselves as a substitute for US Treasuries, which were in short supply because of the Federal budget surpluses.And now these investors are demanding that the US make good on its implicit guarantee. In effect, they want to exit from their exposure to the US housing market, and replace it with exposure to the US dollar. They want their agency paper to behave like Treasury paper.Does that sound like a windfall profit for the governments of China and Russia? Yes, it most certainly is. Their agency securities will now appreciate sharply in value until they nearly converge with the value of US Treasuries.But they will still face the problem of holding securities that are denominated in dollars. They’ve replaced housing risk with dollar risk. And the dollar risk is real, because the taxpayer-funded bailout of any losses on agency-guaranteed mortgages will take the form of inflation.Foreign central banks, particularly China, will prove entirely willing to take this risk. The Chinese appear to have recently decided to slow down this year’s sharp appreciation of renminbi, partly to slow down a flood of hot-money inflows. So they’ll continue to pile up dollar reserves as fast as ever. They’ll need a place to put those dollars.And in addition, the fact that there is so much official ownership of agency debt makes it a matter of international diplomacy to propose anything which might impair their value. (For example, the otherwise perfectly reasonable idea of asking agency debtholders to take up to a 5% “haircut,” or reduction in principal value, to reflect roughly that much damage in the housing market.)I suspect that this reality is part of why Secretary Paulson insists that the pain be borne exclusively by shareholders, not bondholders.
Congressional and Market Reactions
Financial markets originally had a positive reaction to the Paulson announcements, but they turned sour almost immediately. The interest-rate spread between agency and Treasury debt, which had tightened sharply on Friday with the rumors of a GSE bailout, started widening again on Monday and subsequent days this week.Secretary Paulson himself came in for a tongue-lashing in Senate Finance Committee testimony on Tuesday. Fed Chairman Bernanke's testimony was received with more politeness. But I can't have been the only one who was struck by a sense that Bernanke is acting like a man with limited options.Bernanke is walking on a knife edge. He's trying to mitigate an ongoing credit crisis, with tools that are better suited for dealing with macroeconomic problems. He can't cut interest rates any further because inflation is already roaring now. (Although this is more complicated than it looks, as the Fed has actually kept total money-supply growth muted through sterilization operations.) And he dares not raise rates because that would slam the brakes on the financial sector (which is in dire distress) and the economy as a whole.Freddie Mac successfully executed a discount-bill raise on Monday and has another one scheduled for Friday. This wasn't surprising. Fannie and Freddie are not in immediate danger. A rather remarkable steepening of the Treasury yield curve this week, however, suggests that people are starting to realize that high inflation is here to stay. We've also seen fresh signs this week that foreign central banks and sovereign investors are accelerating their diversification away from dollar assets.
Where do we go from here?
The net effect of Congress’ 40-year experiment in fostering home ownership has been a significant misallocation of economic resources. Think about it: whenever you make something (like mortgage risk) cheaper than it should be, people will buy more of it than they should.And that crowds out investments that make more economic sense. I have a hunch that some smart economists will figure out that this is exactly why the US economy has been growing more slowly than it could have for so many years.So what happens to homeownership now? We’ve been subsidizing it with an implicit government guarantee. Should we continue to do so, but with an explicit taxpayer-funded guarantee?Or should we let the free market figure out the true value of US housing? (Undoubtedly a lot lower than it is now.) And should we end the deductibility of home mortgage interest?Free-market orthodoxy suggests that we should, because otherwise we’ll continue to overallocate resources to housing, even now that events have proven this to be a bad idea. Efficient resource allocation is what free markets do best. But it’s also what scares politicians the most, because they can’t predict (or control) what free markets will do.The mantra of many successive Administrations has been that America needs high rates of home ownership. For better or worse, we’re already hearing a very different point of view, expressed not only by some who say that “we need to put more money in people’s pockets, and ensure that housing is affordable and available.”That’s actually very different from saying that “home ownership is the American Dream.”The former implies a continued reliance on distorted incentives created by government. The latter activates the idea that if people work hard and smart, the economy will create affordable houses for them to buy.We will all need to decide together which one of these competing visions is the way forward.-Francis Cianfrocca
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