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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: rules + could + lending  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/12/2008)


The Southern Ledger
Regulators Under Fire For Ignoring Red Flags
Insurance News Net (press release), PA -
Brokers joked that anyone who could fog a mirror could get a loan, borrowers exaggerated their incomes with impunity, and the race to the bottom in lending ...
Home-buying hassles New Orleans CityBusiness
Borrowed time: Effects of housing crisis trickle down to private ... Northern Virginia Daily
all 521 news articles »
Proposed Rules Signal A More Expansive And Intensive Examination ...
Mondaq News Alerts (subscription), UK -
Lending Transactions: The proposed rules state that the extension of a loan or similar financing by a foreign person to a US person, accompanied by the ...
Kenya: Housing Finance Rights Issue Lays Ground for Capital Injection
AllAfrica.com, Washington -
As HF has grappled with many legacy problems from its troubled lending book that has resulted in billions of loans being written off and mounting ...NBO:HOUS - NBO:KCBK
Cutting Back
Daytona Beach News-Journal, FL - 22 minutes ago
Local institutions that responded to inquiries appeared to be mirroring a national trend toward tighter lending that showed up in a Federal Reserve survey ...
Banks tighten lending rules
NEWS.com.au, Australia - May 5, 2008
Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan warned yesterday that underlying inflation was high and would take time to contain ? a hint that there could be more rate rises ...

AFP
Subprime lesson: raise rates when inflation low, BIS expert queries
AFP -
The analysis, in a series of regular working papers, draws some lessons, suggesting that central bankers should establish rules for rescuing financial ...

CNBC
Legislating a way out of the housing crisis Politicians offer help ...
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - Apr 27, 2008
Leonard and other consumer advocates wholeheartedly support the bill as helping to stamp out predatory lending. California mortgage bankers oppose it but ...
Rental plan overreaches Boston Herald
Loan Industry Fighting Rules on Mortgages StarNewsOnline.com
all 18 news articles »
JER Investors Trust Inc. Q1 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
Seeking Alpha, NY -
What we haven't seen is a pick-up in use of the primary lending or the securitization markets. One objective indicator is CMBS issuance volume. ...JRT

USA Today
Cover story: Recent disputes at Fresno State reflect continuing ...
USA Today -
Cal-NOW has stayed active in athletics issues, filing complaints or lending support in seven college cases and three high school cases over the last 15 ...

BusinessWeek
How New Global Banking Rules Could Deepen the US Crisis
BusinessWeek - Apr 18, 2008
They will either have to reduce risk by cutting back on lending, or sell more shares to give themselves a bigger capital buffer, or both. ...
Source: Google News

Bank Foreign Lending, Mandatory Disclosure Rules, and the Reaction of Bank Stock Prices to the … -
M Smirlock, H Kaufold - Journal of Business, 1987 - JSTOR
... This evidence suggests that the market could assess the degree of foreign loan exposure
and that the regulatory view that disclosure rules were needed to ...

On the Need for an International Lender of Last Resort -
S Fischer - Journal of Economic Perspectives, 1999 - JSTOR
... Spelling out the rules would nonetheless serve a useful ... of last resort, moral hazard
problems could arise with ... risk because they would receive loans from the ...

Blueprints for a New Global Financial Architecture
CW Calomiris - International Financial Markets: The Challenge of …, 2003 - books.google.com
... policies, to prevent abuse of IMF lending, it is ... in the case of mandatory banking
regulations, rules should be ... risk in sovereign debt, countries could face a ...

Asymmetric bank lending channels and ECB monetary policy -
L Gambacorta - Economic Modelling, 2003 - Elsevier
... the optimal monetary rule proposed here could be improved ... this case, indeed, the
optimal policy rule also depends ... change in the spread (?bank lending channel ...

A risk-factor model foundation for ratings-based bank capital rules -
MB Gordy - Journal of Financial Intermediation, 2003 - Elsevier
... failure to distinguish among commercial loans of very ... carefully specified and calibrated
model could deliver a ... portfolio credit risk than any rule-based system ...

Lending Analysis Support System (LASS): An Application of a Knowledge-Based System to Support … -
P Duchessi, S Belardo - Systems, Man and Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on, 1987 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
... a management scientist or skilled technician could provide the ... loan applications,
is presented ... 9]. During knowledge aquisition, concepts and rules are acquired ...

Crises Now and Then: What Lessons from the Last Era of Financial Globalization -
B EICHENGREEN, MD BORDO - NBER Working Paper, 2002 - papers.ssrn.com
... Receipts to service the loan could be few initially, making it hard to keep
current in the absence of additional debt finance. This ...

UDROP: A Contribution to the New International Financial Architecture -
WH Buiter, AC Sibert - International Finance, 1999 - Blackwell Synergy
... loans. In a Ponzi scheme, the borrower each period borrows an amount at least equal
to last period?s principal plus interest due. 10 This ?rule? could of ...

[PDF] Rules and Regulations -
F Register - Hand - occ.gov
... C Prior to this joint interim rule, the CRA ... Before these revisions, a lender could
choose among four ... considered the purpose of the loan being refinanced. ...

Multi-Discourse Conversations -
P Holm, J Ljungberg - From Workflow to Conversation - handels.gu.se
... prolong loan? it would occur there as well.) Page 134. 122 We can form other types
of guidelines for conversations. A very simple template rule could be ...

Source: Google Scholar

Tighter lending rules could backfire

By Jack Guttentag

Case histories of subprime loans that have gone to foreclosure often generate righteous indignation. With benefit of hindsight, many if not most of them look as if they never should have been made. Such indignation is one important motivator for recent demands that government should require that all home mortgages be "affordable."

While affordability is a difficult concept to define rigorously, one well-defined affordability rule has emerged with the approval of bank regulators, community groups and many legislators. It applies to adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs, which have more than their proportionate share of foreclosures.

In many cases, lenders assess the ability of ARM borrowers to make their payments at the initial interest rate, which is artificially low. When the rate increases, the payment also increases and may become unaffordable.

I will use the 2/28 ARM, the most widely used instrument in the subprime market, to illustrate. The rate is fixed for two years, after which it is adjusted every six months to equal the value of the rate index at the time of the adjustment, plus a margin, which is fixed for the life of the loan. Any rate increase may be limited by a rate-adjustment cap.

For example, assume the initial rate is 6 percent; the index is one-year LIBOR, which currently is about 5.4 percent; the margin is 6 percent; and the adjustment cap is 3 percent. If the index remains unchanged, the rate after two years will rise to 9 percent, the maximum permitted by the cap, and six months later to 11.4 percent. Assuming a 30-year mortgage, the payment will increase by 32.7 percent in month 25, and by another 21.3 percent in month 31. The borrower may not be able to manage such formidable increases.

The affordability proponents propose that lenders should be required to qualify borrowers at the fully indexed rate, or FIR, which is the current value of the index plus the margin, rather than the initial rate. In the example, the FIR is 5.4 percent + 6 percent = 11.4 percent. The logic is that borrowers who at the outset can meet the payment calculated at the FIR will find it affordable 24 or 30 months later when the rate increases.

The requirement, however, would have little impact because it can be so easily (and legally) evaded. This may be a good thing because the consequences of an effective rule might well be unacceptable.

Borrowers are qualified using maximum ratios of mortgage payment plus other housing expenses to income. Assume the maximum ratio is 36 percent and that the borrower taking out the 2/28 ARM described above barely qualifies -- his ratio is 36 percent -- when the payment is calculated at 6 percent. Calculating the payment at the FIR of 11.4 percent would push the ratio to 51 percent, making the borrower ineligible.

The maximum ratio, however, remains within the lender's discretion. This means that a lender who wants to make the loan has only to increase the maximum ratio to 51 percent and, presto, the borrower qualifies at the FIR. This would be a completely legal evasion. In the subprime market, ratios of 50-55 percent are not uncommon.

In principle, government could close this escape valve by freezing the qualification ratio, and 25 years ago this might have been possible. Ratios of 36 percent and 28 percent, measured with and without nonmortgage debt service, were then more or less the norm. As underwriting systems have evolved, however, maximum ratios have proliferated. They now vary from one loan program to another, and with other factors that affect risk, such as credit score, down payment, type of property, and loan purpose.

Government intrusion into this very complex process in order to make the FIR rule effective would be a disaster, and nobody has suggested it.

Proponents of the FIR rule either don't realize how easily the rule can be evaded, or are satisfied to go through the motions. If the rule was effective, they might be forced to confront a really thorny issue.

Any government underwriting rule that is more restrictive than those selected by lenders, and which cannot be evaded, will reduce the number of households who qualify for loans. Of this group that is cut from the market, some would lose their homes through default and foreclosure had they received loans. This is the intended benefit of the more restrictive rule. A larger number, however, would have become successful homeowners under the previous rules and are now denied this opportunity. This is the unintended but inescapable cost of the restrictive rule.

To prevent one foreclosure by tightening standards, we prevent a larger number of successful loans. I don't know what that number is, or what society should view as an acceptable number. These questions have been studiously avoided.

Next week: Unaffordable loans that are in the public interest.

The writer is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Comments and questions can be left at www.mtgprofessor.com.

Copyright 2007 Jack Guttentag

 
 
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