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Reader Questions on "Credit-Worthiness": Did Banks Give Mortgages to Non-Creditworthy Borrowers? Posted: 14 Jul 2012 02:01 PM PDT I received several emails from readers regarding Can Bernanke Force Banks to Lend by Halting Interest on Excess Reserves? Here are the specific sentences in question: Banks lend if and only if both of the following are true.
Reader Gil writes .... Hello MishMeaning of "Credit-Worthy" For starters let's quickly discard the notion the Fed forced banks to lend. The Fed has no such power. If the Fed did, there would be more lending now. My statement of lending conditions above are accurate. It all depends on the meaning of "Credit-Worthy". All I meant is banks thought they would be repaid. More accurately, banks extend credit if they think loans will result in profits. Did Banks Give Mortgages to Non-Creditworthy Borrowers? Certainly banks do not lend if they expect losses. Recall that banks did not believe that people would walk-away! It had never happened before. People historically paid their mortgage before paying credit card bills. There was much discussion of this before it happened. I predicted mass "walk-aways", banks certainly didn't. Five Reasons Banks Extended Credit in Housing Bubble Years
If any of those conditions were true, then banks were indeed making loans to "credit-worthy" borrowers. Subprime borrowers did pay a huge penalty rate. Multiple combinations of the above five points are likely. Huge Mistakes Coupled With Greed Banks made huge mistakes because all five conditions above failed, far sooner than banks or the Fed expected. Recall that Bernanke did not believe there was a housing bubble at all! Thus, at the time, banks thought they were making creditworthy loans. They thought wrong, in a big way, and they were very greedy as well. Greed coupled with poor thinking is a very bad combination. What About Now? Banks are not lending now for three reasons
Stunning Change in Attitudes Another way of looking at the five points pertaining to the "housing bubble years" is there has been a stunning change in attitudes regarding how banks perceive "credit-worthiness" as well as a stunning change in willingness of consumers to go deeper in debt. Conclusion: Then as now, banks only lend to customers they think are credit-worthy. However, Attitudes on what it takes to be "credit-worthy" have changed. Attitudes are the key to understanding this apparent conundrum. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 13 Jul 2012 11:32 PM PDT Corn, soybean and wheat prices have soared lately due to poor crop estimates amid extreme drought conditions in 26 states. Let's take a look at those conditions, followed by charts of agricultural commodities The Atlantic Wire reports U.S. Declares the Largest Natural Disaster Area Ever Due to Drought The New York Times reports Drought Worsens for Farmers and Ranchers. USDA Announces Disaster Areas The USDA announces Streamlined Disaster Designation Process with Lower Emergency Loan Rates July 11, 2012—Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced a package of program improvements that will deliver faster and more flexible assistance to farmers and ranchers devastated by natural disasters. ....USDA Drought "Fast-Track" Map Please consider the USDA Drought "Fast Track" Map Fast-Track means farmers and ranchers will be able to access "faster and more flexible assistance". Actual drought conditions are worse than the above map indicates as shown by the following map. U.S. Drought Monitor Click here for a very nice 12-week time-lapse drought animation of the above chart. Alabama Drought The Gadsen Times reports Drought emergency declared in 33 Alabama counties Eastern Iowa in 'severe drought' The USDA reports Eastern Iowa in 'severe drought' An eastern Iowa triangle from the Quad Cities and Dubuque extending west to Cedar Rapids and near Waterloo has joined Illinois, Indiana and Missouri as places in "severe drought."Ranchers Sell Herds as Feed Costs Skyrocket Reuters reports Ranchers Sell Herds as Feed Costs Skyrocket Ranchers are rushing to sell off some of their cattle as the worst drought in nearly 25 years dries up pastures, thins hay supplies and sends feed costs sky-rocketing.Corn click on any chart for sharper image Soybeans Wheat Going long agricultural commodities in early June was a winner. However, I cannot divine the weather. The thing that amazes me in all of this is the USDA still expects the third biggest corn harvest ever. If the drought in Iowa worsens, that is not going to happen. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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