![]() | ||||||
San Diego Housing Bubble News and Analysis |
||||||
~Navigation~~User login~~RSS~ |
Not Everyone Should Own a Home!User Forum Topic
Submitted by michael on October 7, 2008 - 6:35pm
Not Everyone Should Own a Home Even without Fan and Fred, American mortgage rules are unusually lax. By JANET ALBRECHTSEN Article Maybe only a friendly foreigner could say this. But America needs to realize that not everyone can own a home. The American Dream of home ownership for all is a fraud. Politicians who pimped this dream created an unsustainable mortgage industry whose collapse is only surprising because it didn't happen earlier. America's mortgage industry will not recover, nor deserve to recover, unless it is prepared to challenge this politically unpalatable reality. Why listen to an Australian like me? For starters, as our central banker, Glenn Stevens, said a few weeks back, Australian banks are "light years away from what's happening in other banking systems around the world." Australia's four major banks sit amongst the 20 AA rated banks around the globe. And as the Sept. 23 International Monetary Fund Country Report on Australia concluded, Australia's banking sector "is sound with stable profit, high capitalization and few non-performing loans." The reasons go directly to regulatory differences that should interest Americans. Take nonrecourse mortgage loans. When Australians borrow money to buy a house, they know that if they default and the mortgaged property doesn't cover the debt, they will be responsible for the shortfall. And the lender will chase them for it. It's a neat way of reminding Australians to borrow responsibly. In America, where populist post-Depression laws in many states have mandated loans be nonrecourse, the opposite is true. Americans can take out a mortgage more or less as a one-way bet. If you can't afford the repayments and can't refinance, you just send the keys back to the bank. Borrowers wipe their hands of liability. So, naturally, an American in financial strife will pay off debts that carry personal liability -- such as credit cards -- before they pay off their mortgage. Quite apart from ugly economic effects of such laws, they are objectionable in a moral sense. America is meant to be the land of sturdy individuality and personal responsibility. Instead, nonrecourse lending laws mean that mortgages, as an asset class, are of dubious value. This is made worse by the fact that traditionally many American mortgages were typically set at a fixed rate for the 25- or 30-year life of the loan and the borrower often has the nifty ability to refinance without penalty. Most Australian mortgages are usually subject to a variable rate of interest. Fixed-rate loans are limited to around five years. So when Australian lenders offer a fixed-rate loan for five years, they fund it by borrowing five-year money. If borrowers want to repay a fixed-rate loan early, sensible economics require that they pay the lender a "break" fee, which compensates the lender for the lost interest the loan would have brought in had it been carried to term. Prepayment penalties are either prohibited or severely restricted in the U.S. Thus, an American lender who makes a 30-year fixed rate loan that the borrower can prepay at any time without penalty is simply making a bet about the average life of a loan. And while it's true that there are good quality statistics about how long American loans usually last, these are necessarily averages. Averages don't reflect actual experience and are especially misleading when real outcomes are at the extreme. If market interest rates fall below the fixed interest rates, borrowers will simply refinance at lower rates. Another fine deal for borrowers. If market rates rise above the fixed interest rates, borrowers will stand pat. So loans are terminated by borrowers when they are profitable for lenders and loans last longer when they are unprofitable for the banks. Who would want to be an American lender? America has a long and undistinguished history of populist politicians stacking the cards against lenders and in favor of risky homeownership. Proving that good intentions are no guarantee of good policy, President Jimmy Carter's 1977 Community Reinvestment Act, which required banks to make loans to low-income people, was just another legislative leg-up for high-risk borrowers. If socially laudable but economically reckless laws cause entirely predictable problems for lenders, don't be surprised if taxpayers have to bail them out. The final proof that American social policies have made mortgage lending an unviable industry rests with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. If sensible business people don't get into the mortgage industry because it is fundamentally a bad business, the American way has been to send in a couple of quasi-government agencies to fill the gap. Fannie and Freddie dominated the mortgage industry because ultimately government was prepared to fund activities that prudent lenders would not. When their implicit government guarantee became explicit, America's system of government-directed lending on socially desirable, but commercially imprudent, lending stood exposed. Now, Australians -- and others -- place a high value on homeownership too. But they are aghast at the dumb things America has tolerated in pursuit of that goal. Even more dumbfounding is that nobody in Washington seems to be talking about fixing it. Ms. Albrechtsen writes a weekly column for The Australian
|
~Finance and investing~*Investment advisory services and securities offered through Girard Securities, Inc., member SIPC/FINRA. ~Recent articles~~Active forum topics~
Sponsored Links
|
||||
| © 2004-2008 piggington enterprises llc | terms of use | privacy policy | powered by Drupal | ||||||
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||||
I agree with everything Janet said about the US mortgage situation. But I have to poke back at her gloating about how much better things are in Australia.
Before drawing any conclusions about the wonderful Aussie mortgage / home business, I'd like to see Aussie statistics comparable to the Case-Shiller indexes, showing historical home prices over the last 20-25 years, versus income. And then I'd like to see the proportion of homes in Australia purchased mostly with other people's money.
My guess is that Australia is also in a bubble, but one that has a different popping time.
Read Steven Keen.
http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/
Good on ya, mate...hahahaha
Thanks, Peter. At what stage is the home price cycle in Australia? How about mortgages and banks? Do you think the recourse laws will be enforced when 20% or more of the population would lose money from it?
I dont know the Oz market that well. But, if you read back through Steve Keen's blog, you can get an idea of where they're at. It looks like about a year behind the US debacle. But I could be wrong. I've heard the NZ market is just starting there in some cities.
I was in NZ and Australia all of last January, and their RE markets were as bubbly as ours. But their interest rates on homes, about 6 - 8% were dampening speculation more responsibly than ours. Still, their prices had had a big runup to silly levels, and the conversations with locals often turned to RE price appreciation.
Looking forward, the two countries will likely get clobbered by the fact that they are big natural resource and tourism-based economies, and will fare badly in the current commodities collapse accompanying world-wide recession.
I think NZ could really crash as it was a big target of the carry trade from the JPY. It's been driven up a lot by speculation. And thus, I believe will come down hard when it's got to rely souly on tourism and commodities. Wouldnt mind buying some property there in a few years. What a clean place!!!
I've been in NZ for over a year. Prices here are falling, but nowhere near as fast as in SoCal. Many people are still in denial here, or, if they have accepted price declines, are clinging to the soft landing/plateau theory. I don't think things will fall as far as in CA for the reasons the article mentions. Banks don't lend with less than 20% down, interest rates are around 8%, you actually have to prove your income, and the loans are recourse. I expect to see something like what middle America is experiencing, with 10-20% drops in nominal prices.
The reserve bank governor is surprisingly honest and competent here. He has been among the earliest in calling the price declines.
NZ is already being killed by the unwinding of the carry trade. NZD just hit a 5 year low against the USD, not sure it has much further to fall. The agricultural sector is going gangbusters (NZ is the "Saudi Arabia of milk") and essentially keeping the country afloat. I don't think tourism will fall too much thanks to the weakened currency.