The Credit Crisis Explained
The Credit Crisis Explained
The Credit Crisis Explained
Roots
Many assume that the global economic crisis is the result
of a credit crisis that began in July 2007 but the roots reach far beyond. The causes of the crisis are various
and in some manners obscure. Unlike past economic crises, despite what has been conveyed by the media,
the culprits are many: mortgage bankers and brokers enticed unqualified purchasers to over-extend
themselves financially; realtors profited by promoting the perception of an ever-appreciating market.
The government failed to intervene when provided the opportunity; rating agencies failed to provide an
accurate valuation of risk; the financial sector profited via the negligent and abusive use of risky instruments
and the public succumbed to the enticement of greed and self entitlement. Professor Willem Buiter
described it best by using the cliché, the “perfect storm” (2008).
In September 2005, the State of Florida experienced the unfortunate Hurricane Wilma that cost $29billion of
physical damage and 63 lives. What most failed to mention is that Wilma was also responsible for bringing
Florida’s ever appreciating property market to a grinding halt. Floridian realtors claimed that the market
would shortly recover but savvy analysts such as Nouriel Roubini and nobel prize winner Paul Krugman
knew better – this was the beginning of the inevitable. Property owners responded in the obvious manner –
in anticipation of a promised short-term recovery, they held on to their pricing. Shortly thereafter, in what
EquityBridge Managing Director Eric Jafari calls the “Four Horsemen”, Florida, Arizona, California and
Nevada, began to experience a comparable decline in absorption in 2006.
Consequently, resulting from the lack of absorption and inability to resell properties within the anticipated
periods of time they were previously able to, speculative flippers commenced walking away from their
mortgage obligations. Thus 2006 experienced a sudden increase in sub-prime mortgages delinquencies
and foreclosures. Despite popular opinion, these initial sub prime delinquencies were not mortgage
delinquencies resulting from lower income families unable to service their mortgage obligations. These were
predominantly speculators who had purchased homes through “100% financing” sub prime mortgage
facilities and no longer had reason to continue to servicing such obligations. It was shortly thereafter that
the snowball of events took its course.
MBS
Two forms of MBS’s were issued. The first type was issued by agencies. These were either US government
agencies (Ginnie Mae) or government-sponsored agencies (Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac). With the backing
of the government, these mortgages had the guarantee of credit and were therefore perceived as relatively
default free. The second type of MBS was considered a non-agency issuance or “private label” mortgage
security.
This type was backed by a private institution, a brokerage firm, bank or homebuilder due to the borrower’s
inability to meet all agency classification requirements. In the run-up to the financial crisis, non-agency MBS
issuance experienced a sudden increase in popularity. Unsurprisingly, this increase in non-agency MBS’s
also corresponded with the increase in below prime loans.
The ease at which MBS’s were issued was, to a certain extent, a result of technological and structural
innovation. Automation, for example, impeded the scrutiny of the screening process.
The introduction of FICO scores replaced the need for an extensive background investigation by “point
system” credit scoring systems that forecast a credit user’s likelihood of default. Curbing the time and
procedure associated with obtaining a mortgage strengthened its widening accessibility.
OBSV
Another mechanism that encouraged irresponsible lending practices was the advancement and growing
popularity of off-balance sheet activity. The Off-balance sheet vehicle (OBSV) involved a financial structure
providing financial institutions and banks the ability to invest without the obligation to report daily investment
activity and therefore removing the activity from their balance sheets.
The most common OBSV included special purpose vehicles (SPVs), structured investment vehicles (SPVs
that invested in long-term securitized financial instruments and fund themselves in short-term wholesale
markets) and conduits (SIVs that were closely affiliated to a particular bank). These financial institutions
were, in many cases, motivated by regulatory arbitrage and tax avoidance. They were distinctly typified by
negligible 1) capital requirements, 2) liquidity requirements, 3) constraints on liabilities and assets, 4)
reporting requirements and 5) government requirements. OBSV’s provided financial institutions the ability to
maintain limited amounts of capital, display little transparency and possess scarce governance.
AAA
In 2005 and 2006, a troubling 80% of subprime mortgages were converted into pools rated AAA . How?
The loans were spliced and restructured with the objective of mitigating the perceived risk. Sinclair
described the lack of transparency in the following manner, calling it “the Vesuvius Condition”.
Unfortunately, credit rating trends became increasingly loose in an attempt to compete. Standard and
Poor’s reported 77,294 credit rating downgrades from 2006 to 2008 (Bloomberg data), predominantly
resulting an initial mis-rating. The feasibility of the mortgage market was founded on the ideal of linear
history and an era of economic prosperity. The blame therefore was not that of credit rating agencies alone
but the entire chain of agents.
The “Vesuvius Condition” blinded the majority of participants within the chain. As the saying goes, “I can
only but assume that which I have seen”. Consequently, skewed incentives, amidst the complexity of
pooling, tranching and securitization techniques, rendered the market increasingly more opaque. An
unchallenged belief briefly upheld the house of cards.
In many ways, the dot-com disaster signified the end of returns from the Internet age. Bouleau describes the
“property bonanza” as the US Federal Reserve’s “master plan” in an attempt to avoid recession. The
methods utilized by the Federal Reserve to avoid recession included the following: 1) Reduced interest rates
to encourage spending and 2) Reduced 30-year bond issues to increase the prices.
The ensuing confidence in the economy, encouraged increased spending and declining yields and mortgage
costs, resulted in propelling property demand. This plan was designed to avoid a recession through the
stimulation of spending. What came of it however was an enormous property boom.
Wealth Effect
Let us now turn to the height of the property boom, and what
it meant to live through it. Reckless regulatory abandonment
globally provided markets the ability to assume a “wisdom” of
its own. As an example, Asian capital inflow made for new
elements of a modern global economy. In hindsight,
economists now call this phenomenon the “New Era”
syndrome; a belief that superior knowledge and production
provide the appearance of a “new decade of growth” .
The Wealth Effect commonly fosters an environment where people’s choice of whether to spend or save can
often be influenced by the euphoric belief that future prices will continue to rise. As an example, this can
encourage the emotional purchase of a second home with the sale of stock and withdrawal of a new
mortgage. The capital outlay is not perceived as an expenditure. The reason is that the amount is not
deducted from earnings accordingly creating no visible change to the consumer’s balance sheet. However,
in reality, the cavity is heavily imprinted.
Total assets increase, debt increases and thus the consumer’s risks are greater. Less risky investors may
re-mortgage with a larger loan and those that are risk-averse would utilize stock profits to repay outstanding
debt. The problem with all three instances, however, is that people, consumed by the Wealth Effect, expect
prices to continue to inexhaustibly rise.
Unemployment, tax rises, pay cuts and universal uncertainty about the future collectively haunt the general
economy creating an equitable opportunity that most recognize will not reoccur during our lifetimes. Analysts
and economists globally project the largest transfer of wealth to takes its course in the next five to ten years,
the majority of which resulting from the market stabilization of acquired distressed assets.
Much like the Wall Street Stock Market Crash in 1929, the Japanese asset bubble in 1980, the Asian
Financial Crisis in 1970, the Dot Com bubble in 2000 and the US Savings and Loan Crisis of 1989, this
$30trillion transfer of wealth will accrue to the pockets of those that are disciplined enough to embrace the
Warren Buffett principle that the profit is generated by the purchase price, not the sell. The number of
mortgage delinquencies, the liquidity crunch, bank regulatory requirements to shore up capital and the
financial sector’s need for operating capital has forced banks and financial institutions to dispose of assets
at discounts historically unavailable.
Authors
Eric Jafari is the Chief Executive Officer of BridgePoint Ventures, LLC, Vertical Realty Advisors, LLC and
Managing Director of EquityBridge Capital, Ltd