prophets predicting losses were given little credit
The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee held a hearing recently where the former executives of the quasi-private mortgage companies Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were questioned about what the companies knew about the risky nature of the loans that they were guaranteeing and what, if any, steps were taken to prevent the crisis of widespread foreclosures that currently confronts American homeowners.
Leland Brendsel and Richard Syron, former executives at Freddie Mac, and Daniel Mudd and Franklin Raines, former executives of Fannie Mae, appeared before a committee armed with more than 400,000 internal documents that had been subpoenaed and animated by anger as many of the committee member’s constituents have been forced into foreclosure having agreed to the questionably designed loan products that were bought by or guaranteed by the companies.
The documents, which included internal memoranda and e-mails, are replete with evidence that the companies were well informed of the disastrous ramifications of loan products that required no down payment and no documentation of the borrower’s ability to pay and loans where the borrower paid back only interest leaving the principal to never be reduced. The documents also reveal that the companies were aware that the loan products were targeted “disproportionately” at minority communities, and were commonly perceived to represent “predatory lending” practices.
In one of the subpoenaed e-mails that was received by Syron of Freddie Mac, the writer warns that the No Income/No Asset loan product being sold in the early part of this decade “appears to target borrowers who would have trouble qualifying for a mortgage if their financial position were adequately disclosed.” The writer reports that 8 to 13 percent of such loans went into delinquency in the first year of the contract. The memo goes on to warn that these loans appear also to be “disproportionately targeted towards Hispanics.” The writer proposed that Freddie Mac discontinue to guarantee such loans, even though it would result annual losses of between 10 and 50 million dollars.
In his testimony, Syron argued that “Freddie needed to participate in order to carry out its public mission of promoting affordability” in the nation’s housing market.
The chairman of the committee, Rep Henry Waxman (D-CA) said that Fannie and Freddie’s “own risk managers raised warning after warning about the dangers of investing heavily in the subprime and alternative mortgage market. But these warnings were ignored. The company executive’s irresponsible decisions are now costing the taxpayers billions of dollars.”
cross posted at
redstateupdate.net
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