When the Senate Banking Committee holds its hearings today on regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, members should keep foremost in mind the determination by a December Federal Reserve study that the secondary mortgage giants provide little or no benefit to homebuyers, while costing taxpayers billions.
The agenda here is a demand for credit on easy terms for areas and households which are, in the liberal imagination, uniformly victims of an unjust economic system -- rather than being seen as individuals, some of whom deserve credit on favorable terms, some of whom don't. With HUD pressure to meet the affordable housing goals, and high-interest loans castigated as predatory, both the banks -- which want to sell mortgages to Fannie and Freddie -- and the secondary giants themselves, which want to retain government support, have reason to let easy credit flow, willy-nilly, to target populations.
Therein lies the real danger of the affordable housing goals. They provide a powerful incentive to say yes to mortgage applications to which it might be better for lenders to say no. It is, after all, better to say no when a household has not saved a sufficient down payment or lacks a reliable income stream. "No," under such circumstances -- and said with an explanation -- is a way of saying, If you improve your creditworthiness, you can get a mortgage. Saying no is also a protection for those who already own homes in a neighborhood. Foreclosures -- the bitter fruit of easy credit -- are bad news for neighboring homeowners who are making their mortgage payments and hoping the value of their home will increase. This is the virtuous circle that arises from traditional credit criteria, and is threatened by "affordable housing goals."
That's been the story with another easy-credit mortgage program, that of the Federal Housing Administration, notable for their "flexible qualifying guidelines" designed to help low-income households. Down payments are 3% or less, with loans insured by the federal government. The delinquency rates for FHA loans runs over 12%, more than four times the 2.93% rate for prime rate loans. And problematic FHA loans have been shown to be concentrated in lower-income urban neighborhoods.
The Fed has found that higher-than-conventional foreclosure rates also typify so-called Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) "special lending programs" -- a geographically targeted program which banks adopt to fulfill the Act's lending mandates. Like the Fannie and Freddie affordable housing goals, the CRA is built on the false premise of an anti-poor conspiracy by the financial industry; and it allows non-profit mortgage lenders like the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America to gain the right to administer huge pools of mortgage money on behalf of fearful banks.
It's true that the delinquency rates for sub-prime mortgages are also high (11+%); but at least these loans hold the prospect of encouraging households to learn from their mistakes and qualify for better credit rates next time. The easy credit of the Fannie and Freddie affordable housing goals breaks the link between personal habits and creditworthiness. Public subsidy for Fannie and Freddie merely gives those who would pervert mortgage markets the chance to make credit seem like an entitlement.
O crédito imobiliário não só cresce com vigor neste início de ano como também voltou a beneficiar diretamente os compradores. No primeiro trimestre, cresceu 74% em comparação com o mesmo período de 2005 e atingiu R$ 1,574 bilhão. Desse total, 62% foram emprestados aos mutuários e 38% para as construtoras, de acordo com informações da Associação Brasileira das Instituições de Crédito Imobiliário e Poupança (Abecip). No ano passado, os grandes beneficiários dos recursos foram as construtoras, que receberam 58,3% dos recursos disponíveis.
Os banqueiros obtiveram várias conquistas em 2005. De um lado, o número de clientes de setor alcançou seu recorde histórico, a solvência do sistema, a eficiência e as transações também alcançaram indicadores máximos, e os empréstimos voltaram a crescer, segundo o Superintendente de Bancos, Gustavo Arriagada, ao nível anterior à crise asiática.
SÃO PAULO - O número de internautas residenciais ativos superou, em março, a marca dos 14 milhões pela primeira vez desde setembro 2000, quando o Ibope NetRatings começou a fazer essa medição.
Os números preliminares de abril sinalizam que a inadimplência dos consumidores permanece em um patamar ainda confortável. Segundo estimativas da RC Consultores, com base nos dados da Associação Comercial de São Paulo (ACSP) referentes à primeira quinzena do mês, a taxa de inadimplência deve fechar abril em 6%, valor inferior ao de abril de 2005: 7,7% e aos 7,3% de março deste ano.
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