Posts Tagged ‘tax credits’

The State of the Markets – 11/3/2009

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

This post first appeared in the November edition of Cirios Trends: Getting to the Bottom of the Housing Market

Of the myriad debates ongoing at a time when economics and
politics are seemingly two heads of the same freakish snake, the role government should play in directing economic actions dominates an already ideologically charged arena.

And nowhere is the issue argued more hotly than in the trenches of the housing market.

Government, some say, should come to the rescue of Main Street, vindicating the evils of Wall Street greed and excess run amok. Who else will look out for the little guy if not our elected representatives?

Others disagree, fingering Washington as one of the primary culprits in an economic landscape characterized by artificially low interest rates, lax regulation and a political class that was in bed with the corporations it claimed to be policing.

In housing, it’s no secret that government involvement in the market has reached new heights. Virtually every mortgage written today is backed by some branch of the federal government, be it via the FHA, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Tax credits to first time buyers spurred a flurry of purchase transactions this summer and fall, and inventory levels have been kept low by ongoing foreclosure moratoria.

Interest rates remain stubbornly low, despite fears of inflation and a collapsing US currency.

As a result, in some of the hardest hit real estate markets, prices seem to have stabilized, as supply has dropped to, in some cases, less than a month of inventory.

At the heart of the debate, and a point which is widely under-reported in the mainstream press, is the effect of decades of aggressive policies aimed at encouraging lower income Americans to buy homes.

These directives created a deeply liquid and profitable arena into which Wall Street moved, seized upon, and ultimately cannibalized. That Congress is now actively leading a witch hunt to track down the “guilty” is highly ironic since only with the implicit blessing of Washington could Wall Street have committed its crimes.

Look at the graph in the top right corner of this page. Taxpayers are increasingly being asked to cover losses which Washington is unloading from the private sector onto the public balance sheet. This liability will be a drag on the economy for years to come.

One unfortunate result of this crisis is that Americans with less than ideal credit are seeing access to banking services stripped away at an alarming rate. And while justified in some cases, there is a place in our economy for non-prime lending, if done right.

As big banks withdraw from this arena, smarting from losses of a similar shape to the graph above, small, niche lenders can step in and fill the void. Opportunities abound, if you just know where to look.