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Paulson Vs. the Free Market

By Michael Pento | December 04, 2007 | 7:00 PM | 6 Comments

Joining the Fed's effort to meddle with the free market is Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and his plan to rescue the housing market. The essence of his plan is to convince the owners of sub- prime adjustable mortgage debt to freeze the interest rate resets for a period of about five years, a proposal which is supposedly only to be available to those who will become indigent once the higher rates become effective. Ostensibly, this will ameliorate the anticipated surge in mortgage foreclosures and prevent a further decline in home prices.

The first reason to eschew Mr. Paulson's plan is that his deal, if successful, may serve to protract the issues with housing for years to come. Offering to freeze the rate for only those who cannot afford higher rates is silly and we will certainly see claims of indigence from many who can actually pay. Unfair speculation on my part? Just read this article on the amount of fraudulent Katrina aid relief claims.

After all, who would voluntarily pay the higher rate when they can keep their existing rate by pleading poverty?  The result will be an even further decline in CDO prices and even less availability of credit, not more. At this time it is projected by HUD's Secretary Alphonso Jackson that no more than 25% of consumers will foreclose on their sub-prime loans. Which is better financially for the holders of these mortgage products, to have 75% pay the higher rate or to have nearly all sub-prime mortgage holders pay the introductory rate for five years or longer?  I know which one is moral.

Another consequence of the Paulson plan will be that future loans will carry a much higher interest rate. Underwriters in the primary market and buyers in the secondary market must be compensated for the increased risk of having the government intervening in a private contract. If the government forces the abrogation of these contracts it will cause tremendous long term damage to the housing market.  If it merely acts as a facilitator between the two parties the damage may be less but the impact will be negligible. Since the holders of the debt are no longer local banks but foreign buyers, I have my doubts as to Treasury's ability to bring any far-flung parties together. In addition, there is nothing currently preventing the parties from getting together if they both so desired--making Treasury's role a public relations move, at best, unspoken coercion, at worst.

Most importantly, Paulson's anti-capitalist plan serves to reward those who behaved irresponsibly and punish those who lived within their means. It will act as a disincentive for consumers who, during the housing bubble, either rented or purchased a more modest home while simultaneously rewarding consumers that spent recklessly! Not only is it morally bankrupt but is also detrimental to the economy in the long term because after the period of abeyance expires, the adjustable rate mortgages would theoretically reset. Therefore, all that is accomplished will be to prolong the inevitable crisis-does anyone truly expect those who got the free lunch to begin paying for it after five years?  Those sloppy financial habits will only be more deeply ingrained by then.

In an attempt to aid the real estate market, the Treasury and Fed are actually serving to exacerbate the problems associated with housing. If they would allow the free market to work, home prices would fall, allowing solid buyers to enter the market at lower prices.  Would it be a pain-free process?  Certainly not-we're well past that point-but by keeping unqualified consumers as home owners they foster an artificial environment of unfairness and inflation. Mr. Paulson's scheme is thus destined to fail, and it will likely make today's housing-related problems even worse in the process.

*NOTE: I also discuss the upcoming Fed meeting and its implications in the final segment of this week's edition of Market Neutral.  Click the link to listen!

Comments (6)  |  Related Topics  » |

 
Where is JFK When You Need Him?

Didn't JFK say something like: "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country."  Not to make this a political discussion but I could go on as to what the Bush era of politics has done to phsyche of this country.  The sad thing is that I am not sure what it would take to reverse these trends. 

For example, we are told we have a "war on terrror"  which essentially is a war on our way of life.  Since 9/11, I have been told of and I have seen first hand the sacrifices of our "young men and women", but where has been the sacrifice of those not in uniform.  The only sacrifice I have been asked to make for this war effort is to keep spending and go to the mall.  With 9/11, the President missed a great opportunity to galvanize the citizenry around a common bond.  I wonder how a $3 a gallon gas tax would have gone over to pay for the war effort or to stimulate innovation to get this country away from dependence on Middle East oil?  Now that would have been a real sacrifice for the greater good.

Lastly, my words are not meant to convey Bush bashing or a political stance one way or another, but it is very clear to me that these political, social, and economic issues can not be solved with simple cliches and even quick monetary fixes.  It will likely take a generational change in thinking.

Submitted by Guy Lerner on Wed, 2007/12/05 - 11:54am » reply |
 
Sign of Our Times?

It is just a sign of our times; there is an expectation in this country -- whether it be our politicians or institutions ---that we get something for nothing.  There is too much focus on the immediate future and very little attention to events in the distant future.  From monetary policy, to infrastructure build out, to education, to entitlement programs and to our energy policy, everything we do today mortgages our future.  And with competition for resources -not just raw materials but intellectual resoursces from the developing world - , never has it been more important that social and economic policy be the most far thinking as possible.  Placing a band aid over everything is not the solution. 

Great article by the way!!!

Submitted by Guy Lerner on Wed, 2007/12/05 - 2:14am » reply |
 
Bail outs

It is another example of the government's new role of repealing the business cycle and their new mandate to inflate away all problems in the economy.

Submitted by Michael Pento on Wed, 2007/12/05 - 10:41am » reply |
 
Paulson is kidding himself

of course his plan wont work. buy gold, readers, buy gold

Submitted by dollarcrumbs on Tue, 2007/12/04 - 9:15pm » reply |
 
Ben Bernanke's meddling I

Ben Bernanke's meddling I understand he was an college professor (read Socialist), but Hank Paulson was the former head of Goldman Sachs!  I believe they, collectively, are doing this to "protect" the markets in next years election year.  But given the probable outcome of next years election for the House, Senate, and probably Commander in Chief, this administration is giving our economic system a strong push towards Socialism, that the next administrators will continue.  Unfortunately the current players have committed to this path which spells trouble for housingfor years to come.  They are basically delaying the inevitable.  Instead of money flowing from "weak hands to strong hands", strong hands will support the weak until these programs fail down the road.

Submitted by Jerry Slusiewicz on Wed, 2007/12/05 - 10:01am » reply |
 
Look out!

If this is how Wall st. conservatives behave, then what hope do we have if the Democrats take the White House. Who will address the ultimate problem of entitlement reform if we can't allow even a 10% correction in the dow without massive government intervention in the markets--75bps of rate cuts with more to come and a consumer motgage bailout proposal from the President and the Treasury.

Submitted by Michael Pento on Wed, 2007/12/05 - 10:53am » reply |

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