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Reflections on the Mortgage Market :: February 8, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
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Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2008 > Reflections on the Mortgage Market
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SH R R E

Reflections on the Mortgage
Market

Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto

Introduction
We all know that over time, markets and policies undergo change,
but some things will always remain constant. One is Neighborhood
Housing Services’ (NHS) commitment to promote sustainable
homeownership. Another is the Federal Reserve's commitment to
foster the availability of credit and banking services in low- and
moderate-income communities. These are worthy goals in both good
times and bad.

President and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Neighborhood Housing Services of
Greater Cleveland Annual Luncheon
Cleveland, OH
February 8, 2008

As all of us know only too well, one of the most pressing issues facing
our nation and our local communities here in Northeast Ohio is the
rapid deterioration in the housing sector. The housing slump, and its
spillover into the financial markets, is the largest factor behind the
current economic slowdown. Our financial markets have been
unsettled since last August by the impact of mortgage-related losses
on financial institutions. Many lenders are tightening their standards
and lowering their risk profiles, which is affecting spending in the
overall economy.
In Ohio, more than 20 percent of the subprime adjustable-rate
mortgages have fallen into delinquency. Foreclosure rates have
reached a 30-year high, and the once-healthy markets on the coasts
are rapidly catching up with us.
Most people I talk to these days are asking me two questions about
the current housing situation: How did it happen and what have we
learned? Those are the questions I would like to address in my
remarks today.
I will begin by sharing my views on how financial innovation has
reshaped the mortgage market over the past few decades. Then I will
talk about the promises and pitfalls of that innovation and about how
the current situation in the mortgage market has unfolded. Finally, I
will describe ideas that have been proposed to protect consumers
while preserving the availability of mortgage credit.
Please understand that my remarks today are my own and do not
necessarily reflect the views of my colleagues in the Federal Reserve
System.

Financial Innovation and the Mortgage
Revolution
Financial innovation has truly revolutionized the way we finance our
homes. Just a few decades ago, when many of us were buying our
first homes, the mortgage process was much different than the one
that exists today. Our mortgages came with fixed rates and we had

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Reflections on the Mortgage Market :: February 8, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
to come up with a 20 percent down payment. Our local mortgage
lender originated, funded, and serviced the loan. That lender funded
the loan mainly with deposits and held the loan until we paid it off.
What a difference a decade or two makes. Today, different parties
originate, package, guarantee, and service loans. Investment banks
can slice and dice mortgages into risk categories, package them into
mortgage-backed securities, and sell them to investors around the
world. As a result, huge sums of money have flowed into the U.S.
housing market during the past several years. At the end of 1995,
investors owned $194 billion worth of home mortgages packaged as
mortgage-backed securities. Ten years later, that number had
skyrocketed by about tenfold, to $1.6 trillion.
Partly as a result of these financial innovations and partly as a result
of the lowest interest rates in a generation, loans to increasingly
riskier borrowers were funded. As this happened, the door of
homeownership was swung open to millions of households for the first
time. Homeownership rates increased by an amazing 4 percentage
points within one decade - up to about 69 percent in 2006.
Unfortunately for many people, the dream of homeownership has
been tarnished by an explosion of defaults and foreclosures. Ongoing
problems in the subprime market have spilled over into
neighborhoods, the broader financial markets, and our economy. In
the fourth quarter of last year, the nation's homeownership rate
declined back to its 2002 level.
I have seen the devastation of some of Cleveland's neighborhoods,
and I am especially dismayed that so much of the good work resulting
from the partnerships between banks and community-based
organizations has been undermined by these problems.

Promises and Pitfalls of Innovation
What went wrong? Unfortunately, the recent housing boom, which
seemed like a surefire win for lenders and borrowers, also masked
some critical flaws in the global mortgage-financing system.
Let’s look at some basic assumptions of this system. For the system
to work smoothly, a vast network of participants - brokers,
appraisers, lenders, rating agencies, insurers, and investors - all must
manage their risks. To do this, they must make assumptions about
the performance of individual loans under various economic
scenarios. They must also make assumptions about the performance
of the financial markets as a whole when circumstances change.
When financial instruments are new and complex, assumptions about
risk and about how borrowers will perform under duress have not yet
been stress-tested. When home prices are rising and interest rates
are falling, loan losses are expected to be low. But when home prices
are falling and interest rates are rising, loan losses often turn out to
be much higher than anticipated.
The seemingly flawless functioning of the system during the housing
boom may have led people to underestimate the risks they were
facing. Lenders assumed that brokers and appraisers would practice
due diligence in evaluating the borrowers and their properties.
Investors, in turn, assumed that lenders would work only with
reputable brokers and that ratings agencies could accurately measure
risk.
We also know that some mortgage brokers clearly did not have the
best interests of their borrowers at heart. In boom times, it was easy
to concentrate on generating fee income through high volumes rather
than focusing on whether certain borrowers were truly ready to

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Reflections on the Mortgage Market :: February 8, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
become homeowners.
For their part, some borrowers who had sudden access to easy
mortgage credit failed to realize the heavy risks they were taking on
with subprime, adjustable-rate mortgages that would reset to much
higher rates. Expecting that home prices would continue to rise and
that mortgage rates would remain stable, borrowers thought they
could quickly refinance themselves out of trouble.
With the benefit of hindsight, we see the pitfalls that lay just below
all of these faulty assumptions. As the housing market stopped
appreciating, marginal borrowers and speculators were caught short.
It was not long before many homeowners lost either the ability or
the incentive to keep their loan payments current.
We now realize that at some point, for many of the players in the
mortgage market, optimism turned into euphoria, calculated risktaking turned into over-reaching, and healthy doses of skepticism
turned into overconfidence. Today, we are left with the damage that
has been caused by faulty assumptions and bad choices.

Where Do We Go from Here?
Clearly, there is much work to do. A comprehensive approach is
needed to address the problems we are now facing in the mortgage
market. Providers of financial services must promote a greater
understanding of the terms of the products and services they offer.
Homeowners must take responsibility for understanding their financial
transactions and increasing their financial literacy. And regulators
also have a critical role to play. Agencies must review and enforce
relevant laws and rules to ensure they evolve along with the
complexity and pace of change in the financial services industry.
As you may know, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System recently proposed some comprehensive new rules under the
Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act - or HOEPA. The intent is
to protect consumers against abusive practices while preserving the
availability of mortgage credit. The amendments were developed
following a series of public hearings and outreach efforts.
Some of the rules would extend new protections to virtually all
subprime borrowers and to other borrowers who qualify for high priced loans. Specifically, these rules include four key protections:
They prohibit creditors from engaging in a pattern or practice of
lending without considering the borrower's ability to pay.
They require creditors to verify the income and assets they rely on to
make loans.
They restrict the use of prepayment penalties.
And they require creditors to establish escrow accounts for insurance
and taxes.
The Board also proposed rules that apply to most mortgages,
including prime, to increase transparency and competition in the
market, and to protect borrowers from certain misleading and
deceptive practices. These new rules will apply to all mortgage
lenders and will give consumers the opportunity to redress wrongs
through civil actions.
The proposed HOEPA rules are an important first step to help restore
confidence in our mortgage market. To ensure that these rules are as
robust as possible, the Board of Governors is looking for comments by
April 8th. As always, your ideas are welcomed.

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Reflections on the Mortgage Market :: February 8, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Of course, attacking the housing and mortgage problems we are
facing today is a complex matter and requires multiple strategies on
both the public and private level. States are strengthening their
licensing standards, and financial institutions are taking steps to
improve their lending practices. The Federal Reserve has launched a
pilot project to collaborate with other state and federal regulatory
agencies to conduct consumer-protection compliance reviews of
nonbank lenders and other industry participants. Ultimately, the
effectiveness of all of these efforts depends on diligent enforcement.
Going forward, it will be important to safeguard the interests of
consumers while allowing lenders to continue to serve their
communities. We must be careful not to create an environment
where lenders are reluctant to serve their subprime customers. We
want to encourage responsible lenders to stay in the market and
work in partnership with organizations like NeighborWorks America
and local affiliates like NHS. Just recently, Congress recognized your
expertise by selecting NeighborWorks America to administer a large
National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling program to help struggling
homeowners.
At the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, we share your belief that
good pre-purchase counseling combined with the right loan products
result in successful borrowers. And, like you, we remain convinced
that successful homeownership is still the cornerstone of community
revitalization. The partnerships between the banks and organizations
represented here today are a testament to the imagination and
determination of Clevelanders.

Conclusion
There is no denying that we are going through some very difficult
times right now. The challenges facing our region, in particular, are
very personal to me. I grew up in Northeast Ohio, I went to school
here, and I have spent most of my working life here. Like you, I want
everyone to have the opportunity to realize his or her own version of
the American dream.
There will come a time when we will turn the corner on this difficult
period. As long as we regulate wisely and do not suffocate our credit
markets, the very real hardships of adjustment will fade, and we will
all benefit from the new practices that emerge.

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