Hubris

House Seeker, Not House Speaker

Dolors & Sense 

by Sanford Rose

KISSIMMEE Florida—(Weekly Hubris)—11/21/10—House Speaker John Boehner is de trop.*

We don’t need people who deny the basic principles of economics. Subject to much ridicule, the discipline has many flaws but also contains a modicum of wisdom.

The Speaker, however, subscribes to none of this. He says, for example, that the 2009 stimulus did not create jobs because it was based on borrowed money.

Boehner’s worn out his welcome at our House.
Boehner’s worn out his welcome at our House.

Apparently, the contention is that since a borrowed dollar comes out of the pocket of someone who would have spent it anyway, it does no net good. Just raises the public debt load.

That would be true if that dollar, unborrowed, would indeed have been spent. But the key point is that, in today’s environment, this is most unlikely. Corporations and banks have been squirreling away cash reserves for years. Eventually, that money will be either spent or lost. But not now.

An oversimplified but basically accurate example suffices to show what would have happened if the Federal government chose not to be a borrower of last resort.

Say that the country earns $100 in income, $90 of which is spent and the other $10 saved and put in a bank. The $90 goes directly back into the income stream.

But the status of the $10 in bank deposits is uncertain and depends on whether the bank can employ the funds in loans or bonds. If the bank cannot or chooses not to so employ the funds, they become excess bank reserves.

The amount going directly back into the income stream is not the $100 initially derived from it, but only $90. So the country can now spend only $90 in any subsequent round of production. It lost the $10 it thought it had. And the employment the $10 generated.

Theoretically, that reserve cash should serve to lower interest rates sufficiently to induce businesses or households to borrow it.

But that’s not happening.

Businesses show no disposition to borrow, even at rock-bottom rates. At least most businesses. And those who want to borrow are often deemed uncreditworthy by prospective lenders.

Households won’t borrow because they are paying down debt, to a great degree because people like Speaker Boehner keep telling them they are overleveraged.

Yes, the man is definitely de trop.

We can dispense with Speakers who outrage common sense; we need instead seekers of the bargains that are just starting to surface in some, though by no means all, of the country’s long-battered housing markets.

And because the Boehners of this world may survive and even flourish, vetoing sensible additional economic stimulus packages, prospective home buyers need a new type mortgage loan—one that contains an option feature enabling them to insure against the possible continued decline in housing values in any given geographic area. Such a vehicle in fact exists, though the market is unknown to, and neglected by, most mortgage lenders.

Editor’s Note: For the etymologically challenged, de trop is French for “not wanted, unwelcome.”

Sanford Rose, of New Jersey and Florida, served as Associate Editor of Fortune Magazine from 1968 till 1972; Vice President of Chase Manhattan Bank in 1972; Senior Editor of Fortune between 1972 and 1979; and Associate Editor, Financial Editor and Senior Columnist of American Banker newspaper between 1979 and 1991. From 1991 till 2001, Rose worked as a consultant in the banking industry and a professional ghost writer in the field of finance. He has also taught as an adjunct professor of banking at Columbia University and an adjunct instructor of economics at New York University. He states that he left gainful employment in 2001 to concentrate on gain-less investing. (A lifelong photo-phobe, Rose also claims that the head shot accompanying his Weekly Hubris columns is not his own, but belongs, instead, to a skilled woodworker residing in South Carolina.)

2 Comments

  • Jim Daley

    Sandy: you rascal! remember me from the ‘naught(y) Medici days? Yes, I understand gain-less investing now. Stumbled across your 2/21 “We Flunked” post (seems like Obama read it too) . I’m trying to get off the ground a venture that does debt-for-equity swaps of underwater mortgages. Besides developing a market for shared-equity paper the barriers to converting the underwater mortgage to a 100% LTV + an equity participation security are legion. Particularly when attempting this in mortgage pools (where most of the underwater mtgs sit) e.g.:
    1. servicer conflict of interest since they hold 2nds on many of the underwaters they service. How to allow banks & insurance cos holding MBSs to recognize the capital writedowns overtime
    2. the illegality of inducing borrowers to default in order to give the servicer the right to do a debt-for-equity modification under typical Pooling Servicing Agreement rules.
    3. tranche warfare
    Yet Ocwen financial, in your backyard, have started doing similar conversions! I still remember your series on servicing portfolio accounting & valuation published in the AB last century. My email is jqq@comcast.net – drop me an email with your contact and we can catch up.

    • srose

      Jim:
      Yes, obstacles are manifold. I remember complaining about banks’ use of accounting to avoid recognition of losses. But such is the macroeconomic emrgency that now I side with the banks. Loss deferral is the key to economic recovery. My first post on this blog was entitled “The Value of Mutual Can-Kicking.” I advocated the need to move quickly in order to go slowly. Sometimes paradox is not mere literary artifice.
      It sounds like you’re doing great work.
      Sandy