- Virus crisis upends efforts to dial back U.S. role in lending
- Pandemic stalls markets for private securities, risk transfers
The nascent market for private
Several firms that issue mortgage bonds without federal guarantees have laid off most of their staffs and stopped doing business as the economy grinds to a halt. And the once-burgeoning market for securities that shift risk from government-backed agencies to private investors has also stalled, with some traders saying they’ve had trouble even getting prices.
Unlike in the 2008 financial crisis, mortgages are collateral damage rather than the central cause of economic distress. But the pandemic has increased the
Between February and March the volume of loans sold on
“It’s OK to prune the bush, but if you cut it back too hard, it doesn’t come back at all,” said Decker, whose exchange deals mostly with jumbo mortgages that have high balances and no government backing.
In 2019, private-label securities represented merely $46 billion of the $2.38 trillion in mortgages issued, according to the
The 2008 crisis obliterated investor appetite for mortgage-credit risk, leaving the burden almost entirely on federal entities like
The Treasury Department, starting with the Obama administration and continuing under President
Treasury Encouragement
Treasury has also encouraged the development of new securities sold by Fannie and Freddie to offload credit risk to private investors. Those primarily consisted of credit-risk transfer securities, a form of debt whose returns depend on the performance of underlying pools of mortgages.
The government’s goal wasn’t to return to the risky lending of the past but to ensure that private investors rather than taxpayers would take losses in a housing downturn. Certain kinds of borrowers, like the self-employed, often don’t qualify for government mortgage programs. Officials hoped a revived private market could take care of such consumers.
Many of the companies that led growth in privately-backed mortgages aren’t doing business at all right now.
Part of the problem for private mortgage lenders is that their own banks, which give them short-term loans to fund mortgages, either cut their credit lines or made them significantly more expensive.
Without some sort of fix to keep the private market functioning, “it seems like you run the risk of turning back the clock on the private market for credit risk and undoing much of what’s happened over the last six or seven years,” said Jim Parrott, who served as a senior housing adviser to President
Government Reticence
So far, the government has been reluctant to help. Industry groups lobbied to make high-quality private mortgage bonds eligible for the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, which would let issuers pledge bonds in exchange for short-term loans. But the
Some credit-risk transfer security investors have also lobbied the
The investor acknowledged that such a move could seem counter to the point of transferring risk, which was to have private investors bear the risk of losses in downturns. But the person said the market is still so nascent and relatively illiquid that this crunch could drive some investors away permanently.
On top of that, some owners of private mortgage bonds say that they feel pressure to provide relief to homeowners. Congress passed a law requiring servicers to let borrowers delay payments on government-backed loans for as long as a year, but some lawmakers and affordable-housing advocates say the relief should extend to private mortgages as well. Unlike with government-backed loans, the investors would bear potential losses.
“I would not want to be in front of some members of Congress during a hearing to explain why I withheld the kind of forbearance that peers are providing,” said Eric Kaplan, a director at the
Of the private mortgage market, Kaplan said, “Right now, this is an exercise in getting to the other side and getting to the other side with as little damage as possible.”
--With assistance from
To contact the reporter on this story:
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Gregory Mott
© 2020 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
Learn more about Bloomberg Law or Log In to keep reading:
See Breaking News in Context
Bloomberg Law provides trusted coverage of current events enhanced with legal analysis.
Already a subscriber?
Log in to keep reading or access research tools and resources.