FHA Finances Collapse as Agency Leadership Insists Everything is Just Fine
As expected, an independent audit of the Federal Housing Administration, which currently insures more than $1 trillion worth of U.S. mortgages, released last Friday showed the agency in a massive financial trouble: Legally, the agency is required to keep capital reserves equal to 2 percent of the total book value of its single family mortgage insurance program, contained in the MMI Fund. But Friday's report indicates that reserves have in fact dropped below zero, to negative 1.44 percent.
The biggest factor? Bad loans made prior to 2010, and especially those made between 2007 and 2009, as the economy flailed and the housing market tanked. The volume of bad loans on the books is almost impressive: More than a quarter of the loans made in 2007 and 2008 were seriously delinquent as of this summer, as were 12 percent of 2009 loans. An independent estimate by Edward Pinto of the American Enterprise Institute says that more than 17 percent of all of the agencies loans were delinquent by the end of September.
It's not as if this news should come as a shock. Back in 2009, the agency's capital reserves were hovering near zero, and well below the statutory requirement, at just 0.53 percent. Since then, the total fund value has increased from $685 billion to $1.1 trillion. And reserves have dropped into negative territory.
Yet as The Wall Street Journal's editorial page reminds us, FHA leadership has been insisting all along that it's doing fine. Worries about its finances were "just plain wrong," according to Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan, who oversees the FHA. "I can say undoubtedly that the FHA fund is playing a key role in the housing recovery and poses no immediate risk to the American taxpayer," he declared in 2009.
It's certainly a risk now. The agency is raising premiums in an attempt to avoid asking the Treasury department for a bailout. A Secretary Donovan is still dismissing worries that a bailout is inevitable. The reserve balances, he writes, do not "directly imply the need for any assistance from the U.S. Treasury."
That's only because the report actually understates the FHA's balance sheet problems. As The Washington Post notes in an editorial:
The FHA's predicament is worse than the $16.3 billion figure suggests. If interest rates remain low, more high-quality loans will be refinanced out of the FHA's portfolio, leaving the agency with the dregs. No one can predict these flows with precision, since the FHA also has a program to retain good-quality, refinanced loans. But the actuarial report suggests that protracted low interest rates could drive the FHA's capital reserve shortfall above $30 billion.
Donovan is like the ship captain standing at the top of the mast who continues to assure passengers that even though the vessel has taken on more water than it was ever designed to handle, the boat is still afloat—when in fact, the leak in the hull is bigger than anyone's willing to admit.
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Not true. Shrike assured us all yesterday we are on the brink of another bull market.
It's not as if this news should come as a shock.
I'm shocked!!
What good does it do to have laws that the government is supposed to follow when nobody enforces those laws. If the FHA is supposed to maintain 2% reserves who is supposed to make them do it?
Ummmm.....Chief Justice John "Penaltax" Roberts and his army?
Naah. He's say Congress sort of intended that the reserve isn't important.
But the actuarial report suggests that protracted low interest rates could drive the FHA's capital reserve shortfall above $30 billion.
The Bernank & Company ZIRP creates another unintended consequence...who could have possibly known? Not even the Top Men!
Wow, looks like someone is without a chair as the music (finally) comes to a stop.
do we still get cake?
If by "cake" you mean "whatever we find in the dumbster" then yes.
Do we still get to pin the tail on the donkey?
Hmmm, The FHA is in charge of the Federal Student Loan program? This modus operandi seems awfully familiar...
since 2008 there has been only one lender stupid enough to make subprime loans, and they have made a lot of them: FHA.
Well, of course. You don't want the housing market to correct itself collapse, do you?
And being against subprime loans is racist.
Unless the loans are "predatory", in which case being FOR subprime loans is racist.
They're only predatory loans if a bank makes them.
If a government agency makes them, then subprime loans are an investment in the ownership society.
"But the actuarial report suggests that protracted low interest rates could drive the FHA's capital reserve shortfall above $30 billion."
$30 billion short? With $16 trillion in good credit why would one worry about such a paltry sum?
I think this scene captures the zeitgeist perfectly.
Except for the fact that Tim Robbins would be the last person alive to recognize the simple truth today.
One comical thing about that video is the number of proggie's cheerfully describing this as the reaction of Republicans to the rising sea levels given their willful ignorance of all the scientific evidence that the Earth is warming and the seas rising.
Of course the fact that sea level rise has been a consistent few mm per year over the past century, not accelerating and an order of magnitude below the cult's predictions is not in the proggies little heads. The high priests declare the seas are rising, and so they must be rising!
I swear, the internet has done wonders to solidify my tendency towards benign misanthropy.
I swear, the internet has done wonders to solidify my tendency towards benign misanthropy.
Mine's not so benign anymore. It's just not actively hostile yet.
I blame Bush "talking down the economy". Remember when that was a thing.
Of course, and the Republican controlled senate and house who allowed
this to go on in 2007-2011. That damned lying Republican Barnie Frank!!
Almost forgot about that.
DAMN YOU RETHUGLICANSZ AND YOUR TOTAL CONTROL OF THE UNITED STATES! YOU BASTARDS!
*shakes fist*
Is there a chance the track could bend?
The track was not....unresponsive.
580, unexpectedly, isn't a good enough credit score to maintain a decent balance sheet.
Let me guess: they still have a few checks left in the checkbook, right?
But Helicopter Ben will blame the banks.
But Helicopter Ben will blame the banks.
And then proceed to giving them even more billions.
I am sure Turbo Tax Tim will reiterate that he has no plan, he just knows he doesn't like any suggested.
Now that GM is back on it feet , maybe the auto workers union can bail out FHA.
The FED is printing ~$40B per month. What's the problem?
There is no problem other than it doesnt seem to be doing anything to the real economy. Carry on!