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Benjamin Cole's avatar

Egads.

Too much credit going to housing construction?

The US needs 10 million additional housing units, maybe 20 million. Imagine how much credit that would take.

Stiglitz may, indirectly, have one concern sorta-kinda right: There is so little new construction, that the average age of housing units in the US is aging by nearly one year in every year.

At some point, this will begin to take a toll. Plumbing goes bad, wiring, new roofs are needed, termites etc. Windows do not keep out rain and so on.

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Jon Seed's avatar

I'm sympathetic to your main point that although there was a credit boom, supply constraints led the housing boom prior to 2006 and the credit crunch following was largely behind the housing price collapse and supply constraints lead the ensuing price surge outside of poor urban areas. I think, though, you overstate your case and will try and stick to the empirical data to refute some of your claims or my reading of your claims.

1) There was a supply glut in Nevada post 2007, not in new buildings but in REO/Foreclosures. FNMA alone reported REO acquisitions increasing form 530 properties in 2007 to 9,418 in 2010. AZ, 751 to 20,691. Freddie was likely no different (happy to share the FNMA presentation via email as well as subsequent comments.

2) Easing credit conditions thru 2006 fueled demand and subsequent supply. To quote a John Maudlin newletter from 7/1/2005, https://www.mauldineconomics.com/frontlinethoughts/thoughts-on-the-housing-bubble-mwo070105 "Private market share went from around 30% to over 50% from early 2000’s to 2006. The growth was disportionally [sic] in the lower fico neighborhoods." True, FICO's underwritten by the agencies didn't go up much, but private label mortgages went from a estimated 30% in 2000 to the quoted 50%.

But the agencies were very active in both Alt A and subprime and amassed huge AAA portfolios of both and both made up the majority of new mortgages in places like Nevada. Over a third of homes purchased in 2005 was estimated by the National Association of Realtors as investment properties and second homes.

3) The collapse in credit was almost all private label led. Bear Stearn's and Lehman's respective collapse came as they built up positions in subordinated bonds they couldn't move and certainly weren't financing them for servicers. Banks couldn't securitize as investors went on strike. Both Freddie and Fannie tried creative fixes like simply wrapping subprime, but that proved very costly with hindsight.

4) There was support for the agencies to step in. To quote from a mid-2007 Credit Suisse research piece: "With a dysfunctional non-agency securitization market, all eyes turned towards the GSEs to provide some relief. Lenders are tightening offerings that they cannot sell to the agencies and raising rates in a dramatic fashion on products including even jumbo mortgage loans that are offered to creditworthy borrowers.

To maintain liquidity in the mortgage market, lawmakers like Senator Dodd, are requesting OFHEO, the regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to increase the limit on the amount of mortgages and related MBS the two GSEs can buy.

On a related note, on July 30, Freddie Mac issued a $105.6 million subprime deal, Structured Pass-Through Certificates (SPCs) Series T-074, backed by loans originated by Wells Fargo. This deal is actually a wrapped Wells Fargo Home Mortgage ABS 2007-M09 deal, to which Freddie Mac provide guarantees on four Class A Certificates. It is part of Freddie Mac's $20 billion commitment to Congress to provide liquidity to the subprime market."

I'm not sure I'm arguing against what you've written; rather, I hope to give some context. As a structured product salesman at the time, I witnessed first hand both the excess and the near disappearance of credit and its affect. As one of my previous libertarian traders told me at the time "Thank God for the agencies".

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