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Obama’s Egregious Hypocrisy on Housing

In 2010, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act, which  created the new “Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (CFPB),” an all-powerful agency vested with the power to limit the choices of consumers in financial markets, making it harder and more expensive to obtain credit.  This unaccountable agency operates autonomously within the Federal Reserve and will not be subjected to congressional appropriations or oversight.

Yesterday, the CFPB announced its new statist mandates on mortgage lending institutions and banks, limiting the ability of people to obtain mortgages.  Here is the gist of it from CQ (subscription required):

Under the proposed rule, lenders would have to examine consumers’ financial information, including employment status, income and assets, debt and credit history. Lenders could not offer loans with little or no documentation, which was a hallmark of the subprime era.

Borrowers would need to have sufficient assets or income to repay their loan. Lenders would be required to evaluate a borrower’s long-term ability to repay, rather than simply the ability to do so during an initial period.

The rule would set new underwriting standards that lenders would have to meet in order for loans to be considered “qualified mortgages,” a status that provides some protection against future liability. Going forward, the new standard is expected to largely define the type of mortgages that will be available.

For a mortgage to be qualified, it cannot require the borrower to pay excessive points or include risky features. Those would include a term longer than 30 years, interest-only payments or negative-amortization payments that increase the principal amount of the loan.

In an effort to ensure that consumers are able to meet financial obligations in addition to homeownership, qualified mortgages will generally be unavailable to people with debt-to-income ratios greater than 43 percent.

Sounds pretty much like commonsense, right?  Banks should only lend to those who have the ability to pay it back.  So why would banks need these new regulations?

This is a consummate example of the arsonist acting like the firefighter.  Obama’s allies fought for years to create entire offices and programs dedicated to forcing banks to underwrite risky mortgages under the dubious goal of universal home ownership.  Concurrently, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bought up the lion’s share of the subprime mortgage securities and fueled the toxic asset bubble.  The bubble popped, bringing down the entire economy with it.

All we have to show for it is $140 billion in taxpayer bailouts for Freddie/Fannie and a $16.3 billion shortfall at the Federal Housing Administration.

When Obama was a young community organizer, he made a lot of money off  instigating lawsuits against banks for so-called “red-lining.”  In addition, let’s not forget that he is a big fan of the Community Reinvestment Act, which is the catalyst for risky mortgages.

Yesterday, I caught up with Congressman David Schweikert (R-AZ), who sat on the Financial Services subcommittee with jurisdiction over housing policy in last Congress.  He is not impressed with Obama’s sudden aversion to risky loans.  “It is incomprehensible to me how the President can support a program like the Community Reinvestment Act. This government litmus test, amended during the Clinton Administration, played a key role in the housing market crash five years ago.  How much more proof do we need to see that the President continues to take us down the wrong path to recovery?”

Additionally, Obama has championed the HAMP (Home Affordable Modification Program)  and HARP (Home Affordable Refinance Program) programs, which provide refinancing to high-risk underwater applicants.  He backs the Menendez bill,  which would essentially open the floodgates on refinancing by eliminating most of the already lax qualifications for refinancing currently in place.

And evidently, he has no problems with 3% down loans from the FHA, so long as the taxpayer is shouldering the risk.

Obama is forcing private institutions to abide by guidelines that are antithetical to the goals he has pursued through government and as a community organizer – the very goals that have encouraged and coerced banks to engage in risky lending practices for years.

What’s next?  Will he hire Barney Frank to be the next housing czar?

COMMENTS

  • http://scipio62.livejournal.com/ scipio62

    I think it’s even worse than what is mentioned in the post. Thanks to racists like Thomas Perez and the other leftist Democrat hacks infesting the Civil Rights Division of the DoJ, all supported by Obama and Holder, the federal government will still be allowed to bring suits against banks, accusing them of “redlining”, despite the hardened standards.

  • Locked and Loaded

    Double entendre alert: Where’s a shark when you really need one?

  • joshinca

    Those rigid underwriting standards, if strictly enforced, will kill any housing recovery for a couple of decades, with numbers of attendant economic and social problems.

  • http://americanstance.org pweldon

    Which see: http://www.redstate.com/pweldon/2013/01/08/absurdity-meets-tragedy-in-the-great-fiscal-farce/

    Regards, Pete Weldon
    americanstance.org

  • jimmyg

    I have purchased 3 houses in my lifetime, in 1974, 1979 and 1985. It is my recollection that the above guidelines were in force, although they may not have been in force under govt. mandates, at that time. Do we really want to go back to the time where if the purchaser had a pulse he was able to obtain a mortgage loan? How soon we forget.

  • joshinca

    Unconventional mortgages were originally created for people with variable incomes, like commissioned salespeople, the self employed and small business owners. The problem occurred when they were popularized and pushed onto the larger borrowing market. So the new regulations will be unduly harsh on people without traditional W-2 income. A large and growing percentage of the overall population has that type of employment and income. These regulations will also prevent otherwise qualified young people from buying, leading to lower household formation, lower marriage and birth rates etc.; which has been a feature of Obama’s depression.

    Beyond that, this will be a constriction on lending, despite record low mortgage rates, leading to a prolonged period of stagnation until the rules are relaxed. Maybe we can have a growing economy without a strong housing sector, but it has not happened in more than 100 years and the burden of proof is on anyone claiming that it will be different this time.

  • redbaker123

    The subprime housing bubble was caused by HUD quotas for subprime mortgages, quotas imposed on government lenders as well as the big banks which all wanted to expand. The quotas started at 30% of all mortgages in 1992, and rose incrementally until they were 56% of all new mortgages in 2008, when the housing price bubble popped. By that time 48% of all mortgages were subprime, and 64% of them had been underwritten by government backed agencies like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

    You can read all about it in Edward Pinto’s “Government Housing Policies in the Lead-up to the Financial Crisis: A Forensic Study” available at http://www.aei.org/papers/economics/financial-services/housing-finance/government-housing-policies-in-the-lead-up-to-the-financial-crisis-a-forensic-study/

    Pinto also has a Jan 10 article showing how the “reforms” being implemented just more of the same, in disguise. http://www.aei-ideas.org/2013/01/cfpbs-new-qualified-mortgage-rule-the-devil-is-in-the-details/

  • rightlane1111

    This is about a power grab. Yup….have to look past this little smoke screen. So…here we go. With companies having to deal with Obamacare, many are cutting hours so they do not have to pay for it, thus leaving the payment to the employee, who earns less money and therefore cannot qualify because his income is lower. Then we have Obama’s crowning achievement of stimulating jobs (cannot anyone say payback for backers). The number of jobs available is going down. Then we have his increased taxes on corporate businesses. What are they going to do…get the heck out of the country. Mom and Pops…he’s busted them. So…what is left…why it will be..let’s see…co-ownership with the government. I left the banks out…because in the end…if we let him keep going…he will throw them under the bus as well as his beloved unions. Another example of dwindling numbers that have LESS income because of his RECOVERY!

  • jpkoch

    If you asked a random American who and what caused the Mortgage Meltdown of 2008, he would say, “George Bush, Wall St, greedy bankers.” If you showed them the financial statistics, laws that Congress passed, lawsuits that the DOJ pressed, and the speeches of our politicians that showed the real culprits were lawmakers (primairily Democrats), Progressive Activists, GSEs, and dishonest consumers (lied about income, job status, immigration status, etc…) they would think you are insane.