Dream Homes and Mortgage-Debt Nightmares
by
Eric Englund
by Eric Englund
DIGG THIS
On September 13, 2006, the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing,
and Urban Affairs invited a panel of experts
to testify on the topic of "The Housing Bubble and Its Implications
for the Economy." With the housing market dramatically slowing
down, there is angst amongst the plutocrats in Washington D.C. that
a nightmare scenario will unfold in which millions of over-leveraged
homeowners struggle to avoid foreclosure; with many eventually losing
the battle. Accordingly, the bursting of the housing bubble may
cause a financial calamity that will make the S&L crisis, of
the early 1990s, pale in comparison. Not surprisingly, as the Washington
Post reported,
the aforementioned experts have concluded that the housing "…sector
is just returning to normal and is not poised to crash…" Nothing
could be further from the truth.
In reading over the testimony, prepared by each expert, it is clear
that there is concern that some regions of the U.S. have experienced
unsustainable real estate price escalations. As a result, there
is a danger that homebuyers in such regions may have overpaid for
houses and condos. Should a significant pullback occur, in these
once-hot housing markets, homeowners will suffer the consequences
of owing more money than their houses are worth (i.e. being upside
down).
To compound this problem, mortgage lending has been reckless, with
homebuyers commonly purchasing homes using exotic mortgages such
as adjustable
rate mortgages (ARM), interest only mortgages, and option ARMs.
With over $3 trillion in ARMs set to adjust in the next 12 months,
there is a degree of nervousness amongst these experts as to how
well homeowners will weather the storm of higher monthly mortgage
payments. The consensus, nonetheless, is that the slowdown in the
housing market will not stop the juggernaut that is the United States’
economy – even if a higher rate of mortgage defaults materializes.
Such a conclusion demonstrates that dream-interpretation is a key
component of today’s mainstream economic analysis.
A glaring problem, with this expert-testimony, pertains to a complete
lack of understanding as to how the housing boom emerged in the
first place. A healthy boom must be engendered by an accumulation
of savings. Considering that there is a negative
savings rate in the U.S., America’s housing boom has been driven
by easy credit as engineered
by the Federal Reserve’s monetary central planning – this is why
the housing boom is more properly deemed a bubble. And, of course,
a credit-induced boom invariably leads to a bust. For true enlightenment,
I would suggest that these panelists read The
Austrian Theory of the Trade Cycle.
It is also interesting that the panelists focused on the matter
of house-price appreciation and how certain states saw more of this
phenomenon than others. Hence, it is commonly asserted that all
housing booms are strictly "local." Panelists, predictably,
expressed worries about the "overheated" housing markets
in Arizona, California, Florida, Maryland, Nevada, and Virginia.
Real estate speculators, indeed, did enter these markets looking
to "flip" houses and condos in order to make a quick buck.
This denotes, sure enough, that lenders were shoveling money out
the door to all comers looking for a mortgage loan – be it speculators,
permanent residents, or buyers of second homes.
It is ultra-easy credit that has driven home prices, in many locales,
to stratospheric levels. And the national media reported breathlessly,
ad nauseum, as to how so many people have made a financial killing
in the housing market. Even if frothy housing markets were local,
real estate captured imaginations from coast to coast. Accordingly,
a "bubble-mentality" emerged, on a national scale, in
which Americans sought to cash in on housing – one way or another.
Using this perspective, and considering that mortgage lending standards
dropped to near zero countrywide, I would argue that the housing
bubble truly became a national phenomenon.
So how did Americans, not living in a rapidly-appreciating housing
market, cash in on the craze? First of all, regardless of where
one lived, the common mantra was "you’d better buy a home today
before they become too expensive." Additionally, the talking
heads on CNBC, and elsewhere, were cackling such nonsense as "housing
is a can’t-miss investment for the long-run." Is it any wonder
that homeownership hit a record
in the United States? To be sure, this record homeownership is a
manifestation of the housing-bubble mentality. Secondly, with the
assistance of banks and other lending institutions, Americans became
conditioned to believe that houses were really ATMs standing at
the ready to disburse funds on command. Thus, nationwide, Americans
have borrowed against home equity to pay for new cars, boats, flat-screen
TVs, vacations, home remodels, you name it. Houses are not only
homes, but appeared to be self-filling piggy banks.
Using these two points, I disagree with the assertion
that all housing bubbles are strictly local. Most assuredly, there
are cities in Florida and California where house-price appreciation
was surreal. Where this assertion falls apart is that the housing
boom was driven by easy credit and not accumulated savings – and
easy credit has been available in all 50 states. Even if real estate
speculators weren’t heading to Butte, MT or Detroit, MI looking
to flip houses and condos, mortgage loans were still incredibly
easy to come by for even the most unqualified of borrowers. Therefore,
a low-wage first-time homeowner in Detroit (with a 0%-down adjustable
rate mortgage) can incur a financially ruinous level of mortgage
debt just as easily as a high-wage professional in Tampa can do
so by going overboard when extravagantly remodeling a home – 100%
funded by an adjustable rate home equity line of credit (HELOC).
Both Michigan and Florida, as a matter of fact, are in the top-ten
list of states with the highest foreclosure
rates in the United States. Interestingly enough, Florida ranked
2nd in the U.S. for house-price appreciation while Michigan
ranked 51st – this information
was compiled, for the one-year period ending June 30, 2006, by the
Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight and includes the
District of Columbia.
Let’s juxtapose the top-ten foreclosure states with each one’s
latest ranking in house-price appreciation – both rankings use figures
compiled as of June 30, 2006:
|
State
|
2nd Quarter
2006
Foreclosure Ranking
|
Ranking
for House Price Appreciation
|
| Colorado |
1st
|
45th
|
| Georgia |
2nd
|
37th
|
| Texas |
3rd
|
35th
|
| Utah |
4th
|
10th
|
| Indiana |
5th
|
49th
|
| Nevada |
6th
|
19th
|
| Illinois |
7th
|
31st
|
| Michigan |
8th
|
51st
|
| Florida |
9th
|
2nd
|
| Ohio |
10th
|
50th
|
In examining this table, it is evident that there is not (yet)
a correlation between a high rate of foreclosures and a high rate
of house-price appreciation. At the moment, the above-mentioned
experts and the U.S. Senators seem obsessed with the danger that
"bubbly" real estate markets are populated with homeowners
who are over-leveraged and may be likely candidates for mortgage
defaults and, correspondingly, foreclosure proceedings. Yet, what
about the rest of the country?
Perhaps a better way to look at this table is to understand that
trillions of dollars of mortgage loans have been originated during
the past five years and that there is a national housing and
mortgage-debt bubble. Consequently, even without living in a
hot real estate market, people everywhere could mortgage themselves
into financial trouble. With seven of the top-ten foreclosure rankings
attached to states with house-price-appreciation rates in the bottom
half of the rankings, it seems obvious that these households would
become financially tapped out earlier in this housing/borrowing
craze.
Had Colorado experienced California-like house-price appreciation,
it most likely would not rank 1st in the foreclosure
ranking. In such a scenario, Coloradoans would have had the "luxury"
of being able to continue strip-mining ever-growing home equity
and borrow more money to make ends meet – such as borrowing a large
lump-sum in order to make future house payments, car payments, and
grocery purchases while still having funds left over for an extravagant
vacation. Alas, the borrowing binge ended all too soon, for many
Coloradoans, and the debt hangovers have proven to be ruinous.
Be assured that there will be a rotation in the state-by-state
foreclosure rankings. As the mortgage-debt binges come to an end
in California, Hawaii, Maryland, and Oregon, count on Colorado being
knocked from the top of foreclosure-ranking list. Soon, over-leveraged
homeowners, in these once-hot states, will experience the pain of
rising mortgage payments, declining home values, and no more home
equity against which to borrow. It makes sense that most of the
frothiest states will rise to the top of this shameful list later
in the borrowing cycle – which was set in motion by Alan Greenspan’s
panicky interest rate policy culminating in a 1% Fed Funds rate
in June of 2003.
If members of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs had any clue, they would be investigating the criminal enterprise
known as the Federal Reserve – a privately owned bank legally sanctioned
to counterfeit money. Since the founding of the inflation-happy
Federal Reserve, in 1913, the U.S. dollar has lost over
95% of its purchasing power. Heck, during the reign of Alan
Greenspan, the dollar’s value depreciated by over 40%. In the context
of the housing/borrowing bubble, the Senate Committee would deduce
the following:
- Fiat inflation encourages consumption and debt accumulation
while discouraging savings.
- In order to stave off a post-9/11 recession, the Federal Reserve
targeted
housing as a monetary transmission mechanism – generation-low
interest rates saw to that.
- By targeting housing, the Federal Reserve succeeded in seeing
to it that trillions of dollars were loaned into existence (via
mortgage debt) and, not surprisingly, stimulating the "animal
spirits" of Americans to borrow and consume as if there were
no tomorrow.
- With trillions of dollars of mortgage debt coming into existence
in a compressed time-frame (about 5 years), some housing markets
became hotter than others while Americans, from coast to coast,
found ways to tap into the mortgage-lending frenzy in order to
participate in the real estate party.
After deducing these important points, one would hope that our
Senators would seek out information in order to paint a financial
picture of the average American household. Martin Weiss, of the
Safe Money Report, has done so and discovered the following:
"According to Federal Reserve data, the typical American family
today has a balance of only $3,800 in cash in the bank, has no retirement
account whatsoever, owes $90,000 on their mortgage, and owes $2,200
in credit card debt." In other words, due to the Federal Reserve’s
harebrained monetary central planning, typical Americans have virtually
no savings and are heavily mortgaged. Intelligent Senators – if
any exist – would then conclude that the present-day American economy
is a debt-laden house of cards built upon the sands of fiat inflation.
Ultimately, the panel of experts completely missed the point in
that the housing bubble is most certainly all about debt. Whether
or not a local real estate market was hot, a record number of Americans
took the real-estate-debt plunge. Houses supplanted dot.com and
telecom stocks as the next surefire wealth-building "investment."
Americans,
now, are more deeply in debt than ever. With so little savings
to fall back upon, countless American families are one paycheck
away from foreclosure and financial ruin. Once again, just look
at the horrifying financial profile of the typical American family.
Using
the intellectual tools of Austrian economics, there is little doubt
that the debt-fueled housing bubble will turn into an economic bust
of epoch proportions. Perhaps when the bust becomes painful enough,
a superior panel of experts
will be summoned by the Senate advocating the abolition of the Federal
Reserve…one can always dream…as we are on the cusp of an economic
nightmare.
October
9, 2006
Eric
Englund [send him mail],
who
has an MBA from Boise State University, lives in the state of Oregon.
He is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You
are invited to visit his website.
Copyright
© 2006 Eric Englund
Eric
Englund Archives
|