Bailouts Should Not Be the Norm
During the pandemic, the U.S. mortgage market avoided collapse without any bailouts. Here's how.

When COVID-19 sent waves through our financial markets in March 2020, I was the regulator overseeing most of America's mortgage market. When the usual calls for Wall Street bailouts came, others, such as the Federal Reserve, responded generously with the public's money. I was an exception. Despite the dire warnings that our mortgage market would collapse if I did not give in, we gave no bailout—and our mortgage market continued to function well.
The American economy lost 22 million jobs from February through April of 2020. As in 2008, these historic job losses posed significant risks to our mortgage market, as the ability of borrowers to pay came into question. The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which I headed, and which supervises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, reacted quickly to establish programs to assist borrowers and renters. We expected to be repaid any deferred mortgage payments. Many private lenders voluntarily established programs similar to ours.
These assistance programs did put additional stress on large segments of the mortgage industry—particularly servicers, those entities that collected payments and forwarded them along to the ultimate mortgage investors. Despite having paid these mortgage servicers ahead of time to shoulder this risk, many in the mortgage industry demanded the federal government take over these payments. After all, everyone else, such as the airlines, were being rescued.
I had the advantage of having financial statements for all the servicers that did business with Fannie and Freddie. We knew their financial state. We knew they had liquidity and did not need a public rescue. The decision was ultimately up to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, but he relied heavily on the FHFA's analysis.
Not surprisingly, these Wall Street firms began a campaign to attack me specifically. A columnist at the Financial Times warned that I would bring down the entire U.S. mortgage market and should be run out of Washington for everyone's safety. He wasn't alone. Calls were made to the president to remove me. If you are ever the one standing between Wall Street and a bailout, the heat will be intense.
Private equity and hedge funds were major investors in a few of the troubled servicers. Now, I am a big believer in the net positive role played by both. I am certainly not hostile to that industry. But I do object to the idea that investors can spend years pulling money out of a company and then, when that company needs funds, request that the government provide them.
Fortunately, when investors came to realize that we would transfer the servicing rights of these companies—their main assets—and that they would have almost no value left, those investors decided to inject funding sufficient to protect their investments. A win all around, without a single penny of taxpayer assistance.
We helped keep just under 3 million families in their homes during a pandemic. In comparison, the federal response to 2008 provided permanent assistance to 1.5 million borrowers, and about a third of those eventually defaulted. The rollout was slow: A year into the program, just over half a million borrowers had received permanent assistance, whereas we helped almost six times that number in the first year of COVID. But the sluggishness didn't keep it from being expensive—it cost taxpayers well over $20 billion.
I have now written a book, Shelter From the Storm, about my experiences at FHFA, in hopes of establishing a model for future responses. My approach was certainly far preferable to the endless subsidies and bailouts that have become the norm. During the 2008 financial crisis, President George W. Bush proclaimed that he had "abandoned free market principles to save the free market system." That premise was continued under President Barack Obama. Both presidents were badly mistaken. There is a better way.
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Reason campaigned for The New Norm, which includes bailouts.
Never forget.
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You know what I would like to see? A side by side comparison of the names of the uninsured depositors at SVB and Signature Bank, compared to the political contribution lists of the Republican and Democrat parties, and/or membership in NGOs who make political campaign contributions.
The overlap between those groups will be illuminating. And it will tell us instantly whether this was a bailout of wealthy silicon valley millionaires (Hint, hint – we bailed them the fuck out). I have no doubt the phone lines between silicon valley and Washington DC nearly melted between Thursday and Sunday.
We just bailed out the wealthiest of society. And the poorest of society will pay for it in the form of higher bank fees.
Thanks Joe.
https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/silicon-valley-bank-collapse-heres-who-benefitted-executive-pac-donations
Those are the true defenders of democracy.
Yeah, good cite. It is a start. I am hoping some enterprising reporters really take the time to put this all together in a neat package.
Those are employee donations. We’ll have to see whether they get charged with insider trading for dumping their stock and for theft for paying them bonuses hours before the bank went belly up. My guess is not.
Unfortunately, we don’t know about most uninsured depositors. We do know that Oprah has $590 million in SVB.
I think there’s a list in Silicon Valley of thousands of future dictated “climate” bans - products that will be replaced by new GReeN products. A majority of these startups are jobs programs and the piece of shit non functioning products that working middle class people will be forced to buy.
#VoteDemocratforBansMandates
If the problem was failing stress tests (which is what it sounds like if the issue is rising interest rates and asset/liability mismatch), then it ain't Biden. Dodd-Frank regs were repealed in 2018 for 'small banks' (eg SVB, Signature, and Silvergate).
Cash sweep facilities retard
It isn’t primarily regulators that are supposed to keep banks honest, it is supposed to be customers. (Of course, regulators failed to do their job here as well: they were fully aware of what SVB was doing and didn’t intervene. They didn’t need any “stress tests” for that.)
That is, people like Oprah and Silicon Valley companies are supposed to do their due diligence before putting hundreds of millions of dollars into bank accounts insured for only up to $250000. But they did that because they liked the worthless promises SVB made to them.
But instead of letting these people lose their money because of their irresponsible behavior, tax payers are now bailing them out.
"...If the problem was failing stress tests (which is what it sounds like if the issue is rising interest rates and asset/liability mismatch), then it ain’t Biden..."
It wasn't JAsshole. Stuff your PANIC flag up your ass.
Most VC forms advised their portfolio companies to take out SVB deposits. That was the direct source of the run – and would include most of the Bitcoin whales
"Most VC forms advised their portfolio companies to take out SVB deposits. That was the direct source of the run – and would include most of the Bitcoin whales..."
Cite, JAsshole?
I'm just wondering how much of the venture capital boom that SVB had were subsidies for "Green Energy" and "Green Jobs," as well as the payroll subsidies during COVID-19.
Is it now time to buy banking stocks? Seems like there would be some deals out there now
No. The time to short selected bank stocks came and went. You missed it.
Buy when "blood in the streets." Any suggestions on which bank stocks to buy?
Bailouts Should Not Be the Norm
Should not be, but is. Thank god the Adults are Back In Charge and we've Returned To Normal.
I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier.
Here’s what I do……………>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
https://twitter.com/profstonge/status/1635605314669035521?t=4LsXpArcmLEy9RGi6xWMwQ&s=19
.@kevinolearytv nails it: Biden effectively nationalized the banking system, meaning innocent taxpayers and dollar-holders are on the hook for all of it.
"Now you have no risk at any bank at any time and you as the taxpayer bear that going forward."
[Link]
https://twitter.com/wesyang/status/1635518778992721920?t=AJpk1KtiuDJxVqRYfkX28w&s=19
I am not claiming or insinuating any causal relation here — they are doing this at solvent and failed banks alike. Just a fun glimpse into what the key capitalist institution is like these days. Trans ideology is is not radical. It constitutes the mainstream.
[Link]
During the 2008 financial crisis, President George W. Bush proclaimed that he had "abandoned free market principles to save the free market system."
Oh look. Another hit piece on Republicans. Reason is never critical of Democrats. Ever. Fucking leftists.
Poor sarc.
Just sad.
Another example of sarc not being able to criticize democrats.
The irony being everyone he calls conservatives here criticized the bailout then.
Save The Wealthy
For some time, the mantra in the federal government has been "Save the wealthy; soak the middle class." Whence come the funds to save the wealthy? From the government. Whence come the funds to the government? Taxes and debt.
As asked by many others, who comprise the wealthy being saved? Mainly, they are the money-manipulators on Wall Street masquerading as capitalists. When the context is favorable, they act like capitalists, taking high risks in finance. When the tide turns, they act like socialists, whining to a corrupt government all too willing to save them.
The likely scenario in this current farce is that interest rates will drop to save the wealthy. The consequence of decreasing the interest-rates will be an increase in inflation. Paying debt with more debt is a certain formula for ultimate disaster. Few among our youth have little appreciation of the disaster about to befall them. It is called Fascism — not Communism — Fascism.
https://www.nationonfire.com/communism-v-fascism/ ,
“Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” -Galatians VI:7
You’re damn right it’s called fascism. Younger generations don’t seem to care. The banning and mandating climate products adds an entirely new dimension to fascism.
“Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” -Galatians VI:7"
Citing a claim from a book of myths ain't helping you.
You had to know bailouts were coming. This was an easy case to argue as "systemic". With such a large number of silicon valley businesses and startups using SVB for its operations such as payroll and the like, you had this massive # of depositors with far greater than the FDIC protected $250,000. Easy to argue a domino effect of Silicon Valley collapse by NOT bailing them out. Plus empowered women.
get broke, go woke.
These Silicon Valley companies should go out of business: the fact that they kept billions in SVB alone tells you that they weren’t doing anything useful.
Of course they should, but you know it won't happen with both parties-- especially the Democrats have 'too big to fail' in their DNA.
The fact that twitter can function much better with 70 percent of its work force cut, shows that these tech InVEStors are fucking idiots.
Plenty of growing, profitable, well-run, consumer-serving companies are going to have more than $250,000 in deposits in their bank at any one time, more just before bi-weekly payday or weekly payments to vendors. What is needed is private insurance that guarantees deposits over $250K so that a company doesn't need to keep its funds in six or twelve banks.
Wow professor! The fact that you’ve never heard of cash sweep facilities is astonishing. Let me guess, you’re a legacy admission California trust funder.
You don’t need “private insurance” for more than $250000, you can simply purchase bonds, options, and other instruments yourself. A good bank will even offer that to you.
The reason these companies kept so much money in SVB accounts rather than other instruments is because SVB offered conditions that the market didn’t justify. That is, SVB customers transferred interest rate risk to SVB, they lost, and now the taxpayer is supposed to bail them out.
I believe it’s been scrubbed from YouTube, ehhh if anyone can find the Signature Bank commercial, it’s a woke dream utopian spot.
No meritocracy
No free markets
Payroll is the only legitimate type of bank account that creates a systemic problem and can't really be an FDIC limit.
But a post office Bank that is 100% backed by T-bills (so no asset liability mismatch) would solve that problem. No bank run, no FDIC need, no systemic risk. And it would also allow total failure by those who want to play with risk.
The justification for FDIC insurance was that regular, small customers lack the financial acumen to make such evaluations themselves. It wasn’t supposed to protect all bank customers.
Large bank customers are supposed to do due diligence on their banks. If a company lets its payroll be handled by a bank that is irresponsible with their money, that is their problem and they deserve to go out of business.
That is irrelevant to the payroll problem. The payroll problem is that accounts can get very large for one day every couple of weeks. Payroll accounts are not speculating on yield curve or mortgage payments. They are purely transactional and short term and banks LIE about their accounts and their risk.
What payroll accounts need is what a Treasury account (or a PO bank account) would offer but CAN'T because the the Fed and banks don't let that happen.
"...They are purely transactional and short term and banks LIE about their accounts and their risk..."
Cite missing, JAsshole
JAsshole to pitch his new PANIC flag! Fuck off and die.
Not true. When the interest rate goes up, the value of the T-Bills goes down. For very short term treasuries, you're OK as long as you have cash reserves to carry you over until the T-Bill matures. If you're forced to sell before maturity, you lose your shirt or more accurately, your customer's shirt.
SVB held long term treasuries and could not wait 10 or 30 years to pay their customers. It was abysmal risk management, in fact, they had no risk management officer for over a year.
Bailouts aren’t the norm. Do you think SVB would have been bailed out if it was Trump Jr and a bunch of conservatives who kept billions in that bank, instead of Oprah and lots of other Democrats donors and Silicon Valley luminaries? Do you think it would have been bailed out if oil companies, rather than useless Internet startups, kept “their” money there?
And I put “their money” in quotes, because this money wasn’t real investments, it was the money the government has been handing out to these people. We get to pay it twice.
Oh, and for good measure, the employees of SVB sold their stock just before it went belly up and we’re paying themselves bonuses hours before the FDIC took it over. Now they get to stay with a 50% raise to “wind down operations.”
We are way beyond “bailouts shouldn’t be the norm”.
We’re not sure on the rings of InVEStoRs shorting the stock. I’ll go out on a limb that they all live in the Bay area and NYC.
Yeah, that’s an additional group of corrupt cronies.
And Biden gladly pays off all of them without consequences because they are his donors.
interesting, money apparently flows up.
>>President George W. Bush proclaimed that he had "abandoned free market principles to save the free market system."
I still can't even.
Bailouts Should Not Be the Norm
So if you eject yourself from your own country because it's crashing, is that not a bailout? If you get old and can't support yourself and someone offers you something like a social security check, haven't they bailed you out?
Bailouts shouldn't even be the exception but Reason has a policy of frequently not just refusing to question their normalization but expanding them as normal(ized).
This is a GREAT article and it shows that even within the Nanny State, and despite the questionable narrative that the public can be, should be and has been protected by Federal regulations of everything from soup to nuts, there are better regulators and policies and disastrous regulators and policies. This is clearly one of those better regulators and policies. Of course the message here will fall upon deaf ears, but it's nice to know that some people are still aware of the "unseen hand" and the "law of unintended consequences."
^+1
Bailouts Should Not Be
the NormFTFY
I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier.
Here’s what I do……………>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
... because GUNS don't make sh*t.
And government isn't anything but a monopoly of Gun-Force.
During the pandemic, almost all companies faced problems. Companies have been forced to adapt and change, even to simply continue to exist. However, only negative factors cannot be taken into account. Under the pressure of the situation, many companies have invested in the development of technology, and some types of business have even received a boost to development.
I do not think that it is necessary to talk only about the negative factors of the pandemic for business. Under the pressure of the situation, many companies invested in the development of technology, new types of business appeared, some companies began to develop. Our company is no exception. We reviewed business processes and came to the conclusion that it is expedient to cooperate with outsourcing companies. In particular, CHI software development company in usa https://chisw.com/ provided us with a full range of software development services. Now we have a great mobile application with which we receive new orders and improve customer service
Were you one SVB’s clients? You’ve got a shitty business model if it requires you to promote it here.
And that has to do with SVB's questionable management exactly how?
Government should never get into the insurance business. It almost always becomes a POLITICALLY-driven program, with no relationship between "premiums" and the risk -- or the payouts. This is true for Social Security, hurricane insurance, fire insurance, FDIC insurance, etc. etc.
Biden has unilaterally decided to provide a HUGE FDIC giveaway to his allies -- big woke businesses and their owner/donors.
The FDIC $250,000/person cap on bank account coverage has gone away. Or not -- depending on what Biden has for breakfast tomorrow.
Private insurance companies try to balance premiums with risk. If they get it wrong, they might go out of business. But government insurance is backed by taxpayers -- and by the money "printing press" of the Federal Reserve.
If there is a serious run on the banks, the FDIC fund will be quickly drained, and WE will pay for the shortfall -- either through taxes or (more likely) more inflation from the Fed increasing the money supply to make the payouts.
This is the type of raw, naked corporate subsidy that the left normally rails against. Let's see their response to this giveaway to their Big Money donors.
So what! FDIC insurance has been around for generations. And politically motivated bailouts have been around that entire time. It ain’t gonna be got rid of because some libertarian has some aha philosophy moment. It can be got rid of when there is an actual alternative that addresses the systemic risk.
"So what!..."
Because it means *I* get to pay for some politician's fave business, JAsshole.
You like it? YOU fund it.
We live in a country where the loudest voices are at the extremes of the political spectrum. A bank fails we have to protect the people with accounts. A train derails we have to make all those people in the nearby town whole again. We need the voices of people in the middle to say let us look at the problem and work out the best solution. A solution that does not always mean government money. Is the voice of the middle coming soon, I doubt it and who will hear it over the shouting from the far left and far right.
BTW - the middle voices like the author here are likely experts and so not to be trusted. Better to get the real story from some media person who doesn't believe what they are saying.
The Iron Law of Bailouts: The probability of a bailout is directly proportional to the number of lobbyists employed by the companies involved.