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Lost your Home?....Blame Ayn Rand !

BORROWED OPINIONS
Blindly Into the Bubble

When announcing Japan’s surrender in 1945, Emperor Hirohito famously explained his decision as follows: “The war situation has developed not necessarily to Japan’s advantage.”

There was a definite Hirohito feel to the explanation Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, gave this week for the Fed’s locking-the-barn-door-after-the-horse-is-gone decision to modestly strengthen regulation of the mortgage industry: “Market discipline has in some cases broken down, and the incentives to follow prudent lending procedures have, at times, eroded.”

That’s quite an understatement. In fact, the explosion of “innovative” home lending that took place in the middle years of this decade was an unmitigated disaster.

But maybe Mr. Bernanke was afraid to be blunt about just how badly things went wrong. After all, straight talk would have amounted to a direct rebuke of his predecessor, Alan Greenspan, who ignored pleas to lock the barn door while the horse was still inside — that is, to regulate lending while it was booming, rather than after it had already collapsed.

I use the words “unmitigated disaster” advisedly.

Apologists for the mortgage industry claim, as Mr. Greenspan does in his new book, that “the benefits of broadened home ownership” justified the risks of unregulated lending.

But homeownership didn’t broaden. The great bulk of dubious subprime lending took place from 2004 to 2006 — yet homeownership rates are already back down to mid-2003 levels. With millions more foreclosures likely, it’s a good bet that homeownership will be lower at the Bush administration’s end than it was at the start.

Meanwhile, during the bubble years, the mortgage industry lured millions of people into borrowing more than they could afford, and simultaneously duped investors into investing vast sums in risky assets wrongly labeled AAA. Reasonable estimates suggest that more than 10 million American families will end up owing more than their homes are worth, and investors will suffer $400 billion or more in losses.

So where were the regulators as one of the greatest financial disasters since the Great Depression unfolded? They were blinded by ideology.

“Fed shrugged as subprime crisis spread,” was the headline on a New York Times report on the failure of regulators to regulate. This may have been a discreet dig at Mr. Greenspan’s history as a disciple of Ayn Rand, the high priestess of unfettered capitalism known for her novel “Atlas Shrugged.”

In a 1963 essay for Ms. Rand’s newsletter, Mr. Greenspan dismissed as a “collectivist” myth the idea that businessmen, left to their own devices, “would attempt to sell unsafe food and drugs, fraudulent securities, and shoddy buildings.” On the contrary, he declared, “it is in the self-interest of every businessman to have a reputation for honest dealings and a quality product.”

It’s no wonder, then, that he brushed off warnings about deceptive lending practices, including those of Edward M. Gramlich, a member of the Federal Reserve board. In Mr. Greenspan’s world, predatory lending — like attempts to sell consumers poison toys and tainted seafood — just doesn’t happen.

But Mr. Greenspan wasn’t the only top official who put ideology above public protection. Consider the press conference held on June 3, 2003 — just about the time subprime lending was starting to go wild — to announce a new initiative aimed at reducing the regulatory burden on banks. Representatives of four of the five government agencies responsible for financial supervision used tree shears to attack a stack of paper representing bank regulations. The fifth representative, James Gilleran of the Office of Thrift Supervision, wielded a chainsaw.

Also in attendance were representatives of financial industry trade associations, which had been lobbying for deregulation. As far as I can tell from press reports, there were no representatives of consumer interests on the scene.

Two months after that event the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, one of the tree-shears-wielding agencies, moved to exempt national banks from state regulations that protect consumers against predatory lending. If, say, New York State wanted to protect its own residents — well, sorry, that wasn’t allowed.

Of course, now that it has all gone bad, people with ties to the financial industry are rethinking their belief in the perfection of free markets. Mr. Greenspan has come out in favor of, yes, a government bailout. “Cash is available,” he says — meaning taxpayer money — “and we should use that in larger amounts, as is necessary, to solve the problems of the stress of this.”

Given the role of conservative ideology in the mortgage disaster, it’s puzzling that Democrats haven’t been more aggressive about making the disaster an issue for the 2008 election. They should be: It’s hard to imagine a more graphic demonstration of what’s wrong with their opponents’ economic beliefs.

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I don't know about blame-saying and finger pointing. One thing I do know fer shur? "Atlas Shrugged" was one damned long novel. The story was entertaining enough, but DAMN AYN, GET TO THE FRIGGEN POINT!!!!    SHEESH!!!!  ~Tracy~

Vaughn Tolle said:
 
As was "The Fountainhead". It is hard to be concise when the author is busy espousing her (in this case) philosophy within a novel (or two).

Mr. Greenspan's comments in 1963 reflected at best a naive view. This is shown quite starkly by the relatively unregulated financial markets which led to the Great Depression; speculation by any other name equals the subprime mortgage mess. The FDA exists not because no businessman would sell unsafe food and drugs; rather, it exists because prior generations of businessmen did. The SEC and state "Blue Sky" laws exist because fraudulent securities were indeed sold. Ask the numerous vets after WWII about "shoddy buildings", many of which were homes financed by the government indirectly through the VA home loan program.

There would not be "strict liability in tort" if businessmen did not build "shoddy products". The first case of strict liability involving a manufactured product to my knowledge was McPherson v. Buick Motor Car Co., a 1916 case involving the issue of liability for wheels coming off automobiles. The development of the legal theory took another fifty years or so before it was recognized under section 402A, Restatement of Torts, Second as a legal principle of general application. This was all going on in the time Dr. Greenspan was coming of age, and to a head about the time he authored the referenced essay. Some might draw the conclusion that Dr. Greenspan's essay was not naive, but rather disingenuous. I leave that to the reader to determine for him/herself.

The ultimate cost of the subprime mortgage mess will, IMO, eclipse the cost to the country of the S&L meltdown of the 1980s. In both cases, it seems to me, the parties who will reap the benefits of the "bail out" are those who invested in collateral backed obligations (in the case of the subprime mortgage mess) and those who were invested in activities financed by the S&Ls which led to the bailout thereof in the 1980s. Interestingly, in both cases, the market, if left to its own devices, would have rectified the situation; but in so doing, the investors would have been the ones hurt. In both cases, the "free market capitalists" led/are leading the call for government intervention.

I will not deny that there are many pension funds which invested in CBOs (a fact often cited by those who call for government intervention). Well, in those cases, the Pension fund Trustees (or their sureties) should be held responsible for the losses incurred. The fact that the losses would be substantial is another proof of the axiom "No one minds a little pig, but hogs get slaughtered". Kind of like no honest person has ever been swindled.
 
posted 701 days ago
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Vaughn Tolle said:
 
(Hit post too soon)

It is not possible to swindle an truly honest person. Victims of confidence schemes (to use the polite term) generally are those who are greedy. The existence of the "too good to be true" promises by the con artists is masked by the underlying desire to make more money held by the person being "conned" than s/he could realize from legitimate investments. The fact that occasionally one or two of these work out is reflected in what securities lawyers laughingly refer to as the "good deal" exemption from the securities laws. Even if the security isn't properly registered, is not marketed with the requisite disclosures, etc., if the end result of the investment is a "good deal" for the investor, s/he will not complain, notwithstanding the underlying failure to comply with the law by the offeror. It is only when these deals go bad that investors complain, often the same investors who are quite aware of the irregularities underlying the sale of the security at the time the investment is made.

Apologies for the "Long and Winding Road" posts. I've a long way to go before I feel mediocre today.
 
posted 701 days ago
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Vaughn Tolle said:
 
And, lest I forget, "Who killed John Galt?".
 
posted 701 days ago
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Vaughn Tolle said:
 
Before Tracy has a chance to correct the above, the correct question is "Who is John Galt?". Those of you who have read "Atlas Shrugged" will recognize the question and the reference. Those of you who have not read it shouldn't do so just to find the answer; use Google to find out (it will save you a whole lot of time and frustration).

Told you I was a long way from mediocre today.
 
posted 701 days ago
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VeeTee, that's funny.
I was wanting to kill John Galt to end the damned story.
Dear Ayn was so full of herself.
'Course, I'm that kinda' get-to-the-point, what's the bottom line?, kinda' guy, kinda'.
I mean, ....I mean damn Ayn.
We get it already. Galt's a genius, and mob rule sucks, unions suck, govt kills creativity, etc etc, bla bla...aaaargh.

Hmmmm.....maybe that's why this was the last NOVEL I read.
 
posted 701 days ago
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Vaughn Tolle said:
 
And it came to pass in those days that a carnival was in Wellington as part of the Wheat Festival. Upon a building one morning appeared the question "Who is John Galt?", writ by an unknown hand on a can of spray paint.

It became the business of the Chief of Police to ascertain who might have been responsible for the defacing of the building. He was made aware of the source of the question, and upon further investigation, it was determined I was the sole person in the history of the Wellington Public Library to have checked out "Atlas Shrugged". With Caesar's servants in attendance, I was interviewed concerning any involvement in the act, and was cleared of suspicion when it became readily apparent I could not afford a can of spray paint to waste in such endeavor, as well as being considered an all around good person who would not ever do such a thing. It was blamed (correctly, IMHO) upon a worker in the carnival.

Sometimes, wanting to expand the mind can back fire.
 
posted 701 days ago
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lindainks55 said:
 
Over about a ten-year period I began Atlas Shrugged annually and gave up after 100 or 200 pages. Finally on maybe the tenth try I got it done. Wayne listened to it on an audio book -- neither way was pleasant, but we've done that and can cross it off the list. I didn't find The Fountainhead as difficult.
 
posted 701 days ago
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Rox said:
 
Audio books make me sleepy, so would "Atlas Shrugged" be one for a Rip van Winkle sleep?
 
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Hank Price said:
 
I've read Atlas Shrugged three times and the Fountainhead twice.

I last read Atlas shrugged during a Christmas vacation in Bequia about five years ago. Enjoyed it immensely.

Of course, while in Bequia on vacation, although I never really get drunk, I do maintain a certain level of alcohol in my system just to stay cool on the beach.

Being a very conservative right wing nut I find it useful to read Ayn now and then to center myself.

 
posted 701 days ago
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lindainks55 said:
 
Rox, I have it on CD so you just let me know when you're ready for a long winter's nap and I'll get it right to you! You could edit out (at least) half the words and never lose a thing!
 
posted 700 days ago
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