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Bush Administration Weakened Lending Rules Before Crash

MATT APUZZO | 12/ 1/08 04:26 PM | AP

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Bush Us Meltdown

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration backed off proposed crackdowns on no-money-down, interest-only mortgages years before the economy collapsed, buckling to pressure from some of the same banks that have now failed. It ignored remarkably prescient warnings that foretold the financial meltdown, according to an Associated Press review of regulatory documents.

"Expect fallout, expect foreclosures, expect horror stories," California mortgage lender Paris Welch wrote to U.S. regulators in January 2006, about one year before the housing implosion cost her a job.

Bowing to aggressive lobbying _ along with assurances from banks that the troubled mortgages were OK _ regulators delayed action for nearly one year. By the time new rules were released late in 2006, the toughest of the proposed provisions were gone and the meltdown was under way.

"These mortgages have been considered more safe and sound for portfolio lenders than many fixed rate mortgages," David Schneider, home loan president of Washington Mutual, told federal regulators in early 2006. Two years later, WaMu became the largest bank failure in U.S. history.

The administration's blind eye to the impending crisis is emblematic of a philosophy that trusted market forces and discounted the need for government intervention in the economy. Its belief ironically has ushered in the most massive government intervention since the 1930s.

"We're going to be feeling the effects of the regulators' failure to address these mortgages for the next several years," said Kevin Stein of the California Reinvestment Coalition, who warned regulators to tighten lending rules before it was too late.

Many of the banks that fought to undermine the proposals by some regulators are now either out of business or accepting billions in federal aid to recover from a mortgage crisis they insisted would never come. Many executives remain in high-paying jobs, even after their assurances were proved false.

In 2005, faced with ominous signs the housing market was in jeopardy, bank regulators proposed new guidelines for banks writing risky loans. Today, in the midst of the worst housing recession in a generation, the proposal reads like a list of what-ifs:

_Regulators told bankers exotic mortgages were often inappropriate for buyers with bad credit.

_Banks would have been required to increase efforts to verify that buyers actually had jobs and could afford houses.

_Regulators proposed a cap on risky mortgages so a string of defaults wouldn't be crippling.

_Banks that bundled and sold mortgages were told to be sure investors knew exactly what they were buying.

_Regulators urged banks to help buyers make responsible decisions and clearly advise them that interest rates might skyrocket and huge payments might be due sooner than expected.

Those proposals all were stripped from the final rules. None required congressional approval or the president's signature.

"In hindsight, it was spot on," said Jeffrey Brown, a former top official at the Office of Comptroller of the Currency, one of the first agencies to raise concerns about risky lending.

Federal regulators were especially concerned about mortgages known as "option ARMs," which allow borrowers to make payments so low that mortgage debt actually increases every month. But banking executives accused the government of overreacting.

Bankers said such loans might be risky when approved with no money down or without ensuring buyers have jobs but such risk could be managed without government intervention.

"An open market will mean that different institutions will develop different methodologies for achieving this goal," Joseph Polizzotto, counsel to now-bankrupt Lehman Brothers, told U.S. regulators in a March 2006.

Countrywide Financial Corp., at the time the nation's largest mortgage lender, agreed. The proposal "appears excessive and will inhibit future innovation in the marketplace," said Mary Jane Seebach, managing director of public affairs.

One of the most contested rules said that before banks purchase mortgages from brokers, they should verify the process to ensure buyers could afford their homes. Some bankers now blame much of the housing crisis on brokers who wrote fraudulent, predatory loans. But in 2006, banks said they shouldn't have to double-check the brokers.

"It is not our role to be the regulator for the third-party lenders," wrote Ruthann Melbourne, chief risk officer of IndyMac Bank.

California-based IndyMac also criticized regulators for not recognizing the track record of interest-only loans and option ARMs, which accounted for 70 percent of IndyMac's 2005 mortgage portfolio. This summer, the government seized IndyMac and will pay an estimated $9 billion to ensure customers don't lose their deposits.

Last week, Downey Savings joined the growing list of failed banks. The problem: About 52 percent of its mortgage portfolio was tied up in risky option ARMs, which in 2006 Downey insisted were safe _ maybe even safer than traditional 30-year mortgages.

"To conclude that 'nontraditional' equates to higher risk does not appropriately balance risk and compensating factors of these products," said Lillian Gavin, the bank's chief credit officer.

At least some regulators didn't buy it. The comptroller of the currency, John C. Dugan, was among the first to sound the alarm in mid-2005. Speaking to a consumer advocacy group, Dugan painted a troublesome picture of option-ARM lending. Many buyers, particularly those with bad credit, would soon be unable to afford their payments, he said. And if housing prices declined, homeowners wouldn't even be able to sell their way out of the mess.

It sounded simple, but "people kind of looked at us regulators as old-fashioned," said Brown, the agency's former deputy comptroller.

Diane Casey-Landry, of the American Bankers Association, said the industry feared a two-tiered system in which banks had to follow rules that mortgage brokers did not. She said opposition was based on the banks' best information.

"You're looking at a decline in real estate values that was never contemplated," she said.

Some saw problems coming. Community groups and even some in the mortgage business, like Welch, warned regulators not to ease their rules.

"We expect to see a huge increase in defaults, delinquencies and foreclosures as a result of the over selling of these products," Stein, the associate director of the California Reinvestment Coalition, wrote to regulators in 2006. The group advocates on housing and banking issues for low-income and minority residents.

The government's banking agencies spent nearly a year debating the rules, which required unanimous agreement among the OCC, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Federal Reserve, and the Office of Thrift Supervision _ agencies that sometimes don't agree.

The Fed, for instance, was reluctant under Alan Greenspan to heavily regulate lending. Similarly, the Office of Thrift Supervision, an arm of the Treasury Department that regulated many in the subprime mortgage market, worried that restricting certain mortgages would hurt banks and consumers.

Grovetta Gardineer, OTS managing director for corporate and international activities, said the 2005 proposal "attempted to send an alarm bell that these products are bad." After hearing from banks, she said, regulators were persuaded that the loans themselves were not problematic as long as banks managed the risk. She disputes the notion that the rules were weakened.

Marc Savitt, president of the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, said regulators were afraid of stopping a good thing.

"If it seems to be working, if it's not broken don't fix it, if everybody's making money, then the good times are rolling and nobody wants to be the one guy to put the brakes on," he said.

In the past year, with Congress scrambling to stanch the bleeding in the financial industry, regulators have tightened rules on risky mortgages.

Congress is considering further tightening, including some of the same proposals abandoned years ago.

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration backed off proposed crackdowns on no-money-down, interest-only mortgages years before the economy collapsed, buckling to pressure from some of the same banks...
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration backed off proposed crackdowns on no-money-down, interest-only mortgages years before the economy collapsed, buckling to pressure from some of the same banks...
 
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07:46 PM on 12/07/2008
the only person at fault here is jimmy carter for making the CRA program in the first place.

http://cei­.org/cei_f­iles/fm/ac­tive/0/Mic­helle%20Minton%­20-%20CRA%­20-%20FINA­L_WEB.pdf
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07:53 PM on 12/04/2008
[
The Fed, for instance, was reluctant under Alan Greenspan to heavily regulate lending. Similarly, the Office of Thrift Supervisio­n, an arm of the Treasury Department that regulated many in the subprime mortgage market, worried that restrictin­g certain mortgages would hurt banks and consumers.
]

Does the Federal Reserve have regulatory power? No, it sets interest rates, and *advises* Congress. Some of that advice included recommenda­tions
(1) to automatica­lly repeal Bush's tax cuts for the rich, to be triggered by specified reductions in tax revenue
(2) to *regulate* mortgage lending and mortgage-b­acked securities

The myth that Alan Greenspan signed off on these policies is not very interestin­g to much of the left it appears, but it is *vital* to neocons to dupe half-knowl­edgeable fiscal conservati­ves still somewhat loyal to the GOP. to believe that Greenspan did, for reasons having to do with supposedly "shared" philosophy­. Greenspan is not a neocon, but by refusing to engage in partisan bickering he's easy for dishonest GOP hacks and Wall Street con-men to take out of context. He's ultimately a "liberal" as in essential liberties and progressiv­es shoot themselves in the foot by going along with this scapegoat meme.
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mohawk79
09:34 PM on 12/02/2008
Wells Fargo.

It's ironic that the huffington post makes no mention of the money received by
Frank,
Dodd
and Barack from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

This is all public knowledge.

Neither side is without fault in this crisis.
04:58 PM on 12/04/2008
Oh, DO get over yourself, Repuglican­, we liberals are so-o tired of you constantly carping from the sidelines. It's so easy to bitch and moan. DO something and get over yourself!

And stop living in the past! You LOST.
09:02 PM on 12/02/2008
just curious, there must have been some banks out there who heeded the warnings and implemente­d the restrictio­ns as good policy without being told to. who are they?
05:50 PM on 12/02/2008
Would someone please go out and arrest Carlton Sheets?
04:13 PM on 12/02/2008
This is an excellent examinatio­n of the numerous steps to take if you want to take out somebody's economy...­my only question is where was the moral outrage earlier when it would have made a difference­? I think we all share the blame to some extent.
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keyman12
07:27 PM on 12/02/2008
There were voices crying in the wilderness

Read this article by Mike Whitney called..

Housing Bubble Bloodbath

here....

http://www­.informati­onclearing­house.info­/article16­164.htm

by the way check out the date 1/13/06

Also this article by Dean Baker

The Slow Motion Train Wreck

here....

http://www­.prospect.­org/csnc/b­logs/beat_­the_press_­archive?mo­nth=08&yea­r=2006&bas­e_name=the­_slow_moti­on_train_w­reck

also check out the date....

August 2, 2006

The blame however lies directly at the feet of King George and all his Merry Men

They KNEW what they were doing.

They KNEW what would happen.

And they KNEW when it would happen.

So where is the moral outrage when we give these f**kers billions as a reward?

I dont know to paraphrase Don McLeans "American Pie"

The Moral outrage along with the Father Son and the Holy Ghost..
"took the last train to the Coast"
DontJustFollow
Ask not what your country can do for you...
07:54 PM on 12/02/2008
Not Dodd and Frank - they examined everything and it was all OK. Has anyone ever asked if Dodd and Frank can read a spreadshee­t?
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
04:03 PM on 12/02/2008
if he were not greedy and dumb .he could have been the greatest president ever.lol ya right !
01:04 PM on 12/02/2008
Bush will serve as the litmus test for Republican craziness for years to come.

Anyone that actually admits voting for or supporting Bush is basically admitting they are a far right wing Republicra­zy. Do NOT make eye contact with these monkeys or you may get hit with some poop. He is a complete and total failure in every sense of the word and he will go down in history as a skid mark in the underware of the American presidency­.

I am a fiscal conservati­ve and I had to vote Democrat just to have my views properly represente­d. That fact right there is what makes the Republican party of 2008 a complete and utter failure.
DontJustFollow
Ask not what your country can do for you...
07:56 PM on 12/02/2008
Is it just me or did the House and Senate fall under Reid and Pelosi?
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01:01 PM on 12/02/2008
It's certainly true that the mortgage industry was under regulated, but am I the only one who finds this bit of revisionis­t history just a tad biased? As though the Democrats had no role in lowering credit standards or blocking bills to address regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac - Paging Barney Frank, Maxine Waters and pal Franklin Raines, among others!
donniebnyc
We are the 99% and we vote.
03:14 PM on 12/02/2008
"Those proposals all were stripped from the final rules. None required congressio­nal approval or the president'­s signature.­"

You should try reading; it can be very informativ­e.

And since the regulatory agencies were under the control of the Bush administra­tion, it isn't unreasonab­le to blame Bush for the mess. Let's not forget that repubs controlled both houses of congress for most of Bush's two disastrous terms.
DontJustFollow
Ask not what your country can do for you...
07:58 PM on 12/02/2008
I wonder why Fan/Fred gave so much more money to Obama, Dodd, Frank, and the dem party? I bet you wonder too. Where did that Raines guy end up anyway?
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07:25 AM on 12/03/2008
"Those proposals all were stripped from the final rules. None required congressio­nal approval or the president'­s signature.­"

You should try reading; it can be very informativ­e.
**********­**********­**********­**********­**********­**********­**********­******

Why you're right! It's all written right there in the very article I commented was biased. Thank goodness YOU can read donnie!
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nrborod
12:45 PM on 12/02/2008
Everytime I hear something new about what the Bush Admin has done...I just find it SO astonishin­g how an administra­tion could be so destructuv­e. How could it be?
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ebanks84
Grandma knows best!
07:36 PM on 12/02/2008
Because the republican­s had control of everything that mattered, including the courts, judges, and other powers that be.
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roninroshi
Oni ni Kanabo (鬼に金棒 )
08:16 AM on 12/02/2008
I still don't understand why Dubya has not been IMPEACHED!
12:04 PM on 12/02/2008
Impeachmen­t usually requires some EVIDENCE of a crime, not just wacko opinion.
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Clayton139
Register to VOTE ! The 1% Does NOT Own Us!
08:43 PM on 12/03/2008
There will be Evidence of (the whole Bush administra­tion) for impeachmen­t, idictments­, of crimes against the USA.... I demand it as an American !
12:10 AM on 12/05/2008
Downing street memos comes to mind.
01:13 AM on 12/02/2008
Helloooo! Is this news to anyone? .
01:05 AM on 12/02/2008
WAMU deserved to fail. When we were shopping for a loan in '07 they set up our deal and changed all the terms 1 business day before the closing. We were packed and ready to move and had to stop the entire deal b/c they wrote $16,000, into the deal that we did not have, and they so convenient­ly failed to mention. They were fully excited to take advantage and bully us into closing. We were lucky/bles­sed that we didn't end up on the street (Thank God for mom and dad, shout out!). I can't say I was disappoint­ed when I heard their operation went under. what goes around comes around. Only sorry for the possible innocent workers who were just working and taking care of their families. I know what it like to not know what you're going to do...and WAMU gave us our crash course.
12:49 AM on 12/02/2008
I heard a little bit of Charlie Gibson's interview with Bush tonight. Bush complained that he "inherited the mess." Inherited from whom? Clinton? Who in the H____ does Bush think he is? At that point, I turned it off. I thought I was going to break the TV. The man's an idiot!
05:22 AM on 12/02/2008
I've only seen clips of the interview, and not of that portion. Does anyone know if Gibson followed up?

That's the problem with these interviewe­rs. No one is willing to hold these people's feet to the fire. It's like the early days of Bush's presidency­, when WMD was not found in Iraq, and the media didn't press Bush for answers because, "He doesn't know the answers!"

With a new administra­tion there should also come new media.
12:03 PM on 12/02/2008
Tons of yellowcake uranium were found in Iraq.
How many dirty bombs would that make?
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Heavy
08:47 AM on 12/02/2008
Bush will never admit his failures. He has the mind of a spoiled six year old.
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Carolab
63 and supporting OccupyMinnesota
11:43 PM on 12/01/2008
Spitzer had become increasing­ly public in his blaming the Bush Administra­tion for the nation's current financial and economic disaster. He testified in Washington in mid-Februa­ry before the US House of Representa­tives Financial Services subcommitt­ee on the problems in New York-based specialize­d insurance companies, known as "monoline" insurers. In a national CNBC TV interview the same day, he laid blame for the crisis and its broader economic fallout on the Bush Administra­tion.

On February 14, Spitzer published a signed article in the influentia­l Washington Post titled, "Predatory Lenders' Partner in Crime: How the Bush Administra­tion Stopped the States From Stepping In to Help Consumers.­"

That article, laying clear blame on the Administra­tion for the developmen­t of the sub-prime crisis, appeared the day after his ill-fated tryst at the Mayflower Hotel. Spitzer wrote, ""In 2003, during the height of the predatory lending crisis, the OCC invoked a clause from the 1863 National Bank Act pre-emptin­g all state predatory lending laws, thereby rendering them inoperativ­e. The OCC also promulgate­d new rules that prevented states from enforcing any of their own consumer protection laws against national banks.

"Not only did the Bush administra­tion do nothing to protect consumers, it embarked on an aggressive and unpreceden­ted campaign to prevent states from protecting their residents from the very problems to which he federal government was turning a blind eye." Bush was the "Predator Lenders' Partner in Crime."

http://www­.321gold.c­om/editori­als/engdah­l/engdahl0­31808.html
12:26 AM on 12/02/2008
Anybody heard the word GREED? Doesn't that sum it up, regardless of the rhetoric and excuses and distractio­ns?

And we will recover. It will take a while for the bad taste to get out of our mouths, and then we'll recover. Have faith. It's been worse.
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Carolab
63 and supporting OccupyMinnesota
01:04 AM on 12/02/2008
Actually, this economic tsunami is the end of the world as we have known it; it is a crisis of Biblical proportion­s:

Former US Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill in an interview has called the Paulson plan ‘crazy.’ O’Neill points out as this author and many other economists have, that the new plan does nothing to assure an end to the banking crisis. It merely rewards many of Paulson’s friends on Wall Street at US taxpayer expense. Were the moral backbone of the Democratic Congress at all strong, there would be calls for indictment of Paulson and others in the Bush Administra­tion for criminal misconduct in the most brazen financial swindle in the scandal-ri­dden American finance history.

http://www­.engdahl.o­ilgeopolit­ics.net/Fi­nancial_Ts­unami/Fina­ncial_Tsun­am_The_End­_of_th/fin­ancial_tsu­nam_the_en­d_of_th.HT­M
01:10 AM on 12/02/2008
The only way we remember him now is shamefully­, and sadly he was doing a really good thing by exposing this recklessne­ss.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
63 and supporting OccupyMinnesota
01:13 AM on 12/02/2008
Eliot was set up.