Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Regulators supply credit union aid

Regulators supply credit union aid

A government plan makes $40 billion available to credit unions hit by losses on mortgage securities. Struggling home owners get another $2 billion.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal regulators said Tuesday they are making more than $40 billion available to support several credit unions that suffered losses from mortgage securities, and will provide another $2 billion to help struggling homeowners.

National Credit Union Administration Chairman Michael Fryzel said the credit unions should "use these programs constructively as they work through these difficult times."

The new borrowing from the Treasury Department will be available under a special facility that Congress approved in September for the agency, which oversees some 8,100 federally insured credit unions.

The new lending facility will provide aid for some credit unions, known as corporate credit unions, that furnish wholesale financing and investment services to the greater population of retail credit unions.

Some of the 28 corporate credit unions in the United States have sustained steep losses on paper from the depressed value of the mortgage-backed securities they hold.

The majority of credit unions, which are cooperatives owned by their members, are financially strong.

The other program will involve up to $2 billion in low-cost loans to retail credit unions to be used for reducing mortgage rates for delinquent and strapped low- and moderate-income homeowners who are their members. Credit unions will have six months to modify home loans under the program. more

Monday, December 8, 2008

Playing the blame game

Playing the blame game

Chances are you can't succinctly express your views on that complex question. But the American public will settle on one of four catch phrases over the next several months. Whatever bit of conventional wisdom wins out will have an impact on the economy. The contenders are as follows.

Free markets ran amok. The broad deregulatory trend of the past 30 years finally went too far.

Financial geniuses cooked up new ways to buy, slice, dice, reconstitute, and sell mortgages as novel securities that no one really understood but that investors were willing to buy because rating agencies - clueless, conflicted, and unregulated - said they were solid. Mortgage brokers were permitted to confuse and deceive prospects.

Supposedly stabilizing the whole system was a multitrillion-dollar market in credit default swaps that was totally unregulated. When government fails to police the financial sector strictly, that is what happens.

If this version wins out, watch for heavy new regulation of risk markets and financial institutions - leading to reduced innovation, profitability, and market values in the sector.

Greenspan did it. In the late 1990s, when former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan knew that stock prices were irrational, he failed to put the brakes on, and then, trying to rescue the economy after the resulting market bust from 2000 to 2002, he cut interest rates too far too fast. Credit became insanely easy throughout the economy, and everybody but him could see it.

He even reassured the nation that there wasn't a housing bubble, and such words from the maestro emboldened hapless homebuyers to continue down their doomed path of paying and borrowing ever more money.

When one person gains so much influence over the financial system and screws up, the result is disaster. Expect little structural change but intense new congressional and media scrutiny of the Fed if this explanation triumphs.

Bill Clinton spawned the subprime epidemic. To gain favor with the lower-income voters who are an important part of their base, the Democrats heavily revised the Community Reinvestment Act in 1995 and took other measures that virtually forced lenders to give mortgages to subprime borrowers.

Remember the outcry over redlining, the practice of refusing to lend for homebuying in certain neighborhoods? Congress sure fixed that, and now those neighborhoods are the hot zones of the foreclosure crisis. Banks that refused to lend to those borrowers weren't evil, they were prudent - until Clinton and Congress made that illegal.

Even if Democrats have come to believe this now, they will be hard pressed to narrow the scope of homeownership. So expect little change.

Get articles by email:

Reduceri Preturi Auto Moto Reduceri Cadouri Electrocasnice Haine Vacante Laptop
Pizzerii Restaurante Cluburi Cafenele Puburi Terase Baruri Ceainarii
Vinuri Spumante Vinuri Vrac VinuriVinuri Romanesti Training Grile
Forum USH Facultati Licenta Masterate Forum Marketing Mate Info Management Sociologie REI Finante Drept Limbi Straine Filosofie
Istorie Geografie Romana Muzica Sport Finante Blaj Psihologie Brasov Management Brasov Stiinte Juridice Contabilitatea