Was Dodd- Frank Act: A Cart Before the Horse?

In terms of sequence of events, seems so!

Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, dates July 21, 2010

To promote the financial stability of the United States by improving accountability and transparency in the financial system, to end ‘‘too big to fail’’, to protect the American taxpayer by ending bailouts, to protect consumers from abusive financial services practices, and for other purposes.

THE FINANCIAL CRISIS INQUIRY COMMISSION REPORT dates January 2011

(Adopted by 6/10 Members)

CONCLUSIONS OF THE

FINANCIAL CRISIS INQUIRY COMMISSION

“The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission has been called upon to examine the financial

and economic crisis that has gripped our country and explain its causes to the

American people. We are keenly aware of the significance of our charge, given the

economic damage that America has suffered in the wake of the greatest financial crisis

since the Great Depression.

Our task was first to determine what happened and how it happened so that we

could understand why it happened. Here we present our conclusions. We encourage

the American people to join us in making their own assessments based on the evidence

gathered in our inquiry. If we do not learn from history, we are unlikely to fully

recover from it. Some on Wall Street and in Washington with a stake in the status quo

may be tempted to wipe from memory the events of this crisis, or to suggest that no

one could have foreseen or prevented them. This report endeavors to expose the

facts, identify responsibility, unravel myths, and help us understand how the crisis

could have been avoided. It is an attempt to record history, not to rewrite it, nor allow

it to be rewritten.

To help our fellow citizens better understand this crisis and its causes, we also present

specific conclusions at the end of chapters in Parts III, IV, and V of this report.

The subject of this report is of no small consequence to this nation. The profound

events of  and  were neither bumps in the road nor an accentuated dip in

the financial and business cycles we have come to expect in a free market economic

system. This was a fundamental disruption—a financial upheaval, if you will—that

wreaked havoc in communities and neighborhoods across this country.

As this report goes to print, there are more than  million Americans who are

out of work, cannot find full-time work, or have given up looking for work. About

four million families have lost their homes to foreclosure and another four and a half

million have slipped into the foreclosure process or are seriously behind on their

mortgage payments. Nearly  trillion in household wealth has vanished, with retirement

accounts and life savings swept away. Businesses, large and small, have felt

the sting of a deep recession. There is much anger about what has transpired, and justifiably

so. Many people who abided by all the rules now find themselves out of work

and uncertain about their future prospects. The collateral damage of this crisis has

been real people and real communities. The impacts of this crisis are likely to be felt

for a generation. And the nation faces no easy path to renewed economic strength.

Like so many Americans, we began our exploration with our own views and some

preliminary knowledge about how the world’s strongest financial system came to the

brink of collapse. Even at the time of our appointment to this independent panel,

much had already been written and said about the crisis. Yet all of us have been

deeply affected by what we have learned in the course of our inquiry. We have been at

various times fascinated, surprised, and even shocked by what we saw, heard, and

read. Ours has been a journey of revelation.

Much attention over the past two years has been focused on the decisions by the

federal government to provide massive financial assistance to stabilize the financial

system and rescue large financial institutions that were deemed too systemically important

to fail. Those decisions—and the deep emotions surrounding them—will be

debated long into the future. But our mission was to ask and answer this central question:

how did it come to pass that in  our nation was forced to choose between two

stark and painful alternatives—either risk the total collapse of our financial system

and economy or inject trillions of taxpayer dollars into the financial system and an

array of companies, as millions of Americans still lost their jobs, their savings, and

their homes?

In this report, we detail the events of the crisis. But a simple summary, as we see

it, is useful at the outset. While the vulnerabilities that created the potential for crisis

were years in the making, it was the collapse of the housing bubble—fueled by

low interest rates, easy and available credit, scant regulation, and toxic mortgages—

that was the spark that ignited a string of events, which led to a full-blown crisis in

the fall of . Trillions of dollars in risky mortgages had become embedded

throughout the financial system, as mortgage-related securities were packaged,

repackaged, and sold to investors around the world. When the bubble burst, hundreds

of billions of dollars in losses in mortgages and mortgage-related securities

shook markets as well as financial institutions that had significant exposures to

those mortgages and had borrowed heavily against them. This happened not just in

the United States but around the world. The losses were magnified by derivatives

such as synthetic securities.

The crisis reached seismic proportions in September  with the failure of

Lehman Brothers and the impending collapse of the insurance giant American International

Group (AIG). Panic fanned by a lack of transparency of the balance sheets of major

financial institutions, coupled with a tangle of interconnections among institutions

perceived to be “too big to fail,” caused the credit markets to seize up. Trading ground

to a halt. The stock market plummeted. The economy plunged into a deep recession.

The financial system we examined bears little resemblance to that of our parents’

generation. The changes in the past three decades alone have been remarkable. The

financial markets have become increasingly globalized. Technology has transformed

the efficiency, speed, and complexity of financial instruments and transactions. There

is broader access to and lower costs of financing than ever before. And the financial

sector itself has become a much more dominant force in our economy.

From  to , the amount of debt held by the financial sector soared from

 trillion to  trillion, more than doubling as a share of gross domestic product.

The very nature of many Wall Street firms changed—from relatively staid private

partnerships to publicly traded corporations taking greater and more diverse kinds of

risks. By , the  largest U.S. commercial banks held  of the industry’s assets,

more than double the level held in . On the eve of the crisis in , financial

sector profits constituted  of all corporate profits in the United States, up from

 in . Understanding this transformation has been critical to the Commission’s

analysis.

Now to our major findings and conclusions, which are based on the facts contained

in this report: they are offered with the hope that lessons may be learned to

help avoid future catastrophe.

We conclude this financial crisis was avoidable. The crisis was the result of human

action and inaction, not of Mother Nature or computer models gone haywire. The

captains of finance and the public stewards of our financial system ignored warnings

and failed to question, understand, and manage evolving risks within a system essential

to the well-being of the American public. Theirs was a big miss, not a stumble.

While the business cycle cannot be repealed, a crisis of this magnitude need not have

occurred. To paraphrase Shakespeare, the fault lies not in the stars, but in us.

Despite the expressed view of many on Wall Street and in Washington that the

crisis could not have been foreseen or avoided, there were warning signs. The tragedy

was that they were ignored or discounted. There was an explosion in risky subprime

lending and securitization, an unsustainable rise in housing prices, widespread reports

of egregious and predatory lending practices, dramatic increases in household

mortgage debt, and exponential growth in financial firms’ trading activities, unregulated

derivatives, and short-term “repo” lending markets, among many other red

flags. Yet there was pervasive permissiveness; little meaningful action was taken to

quell the threats in a timely manner.

The prime example is the Federal Reserve’s pivotal failure to stem the flow of toxic

mortgages, which it could have done by setting prudent mortgage-lending standards.

The Federal Reserve was the one entity empowered to do so and it did not. The

record of our examination is replete with evidence of other failures: financial institutions

made, bought, and sold mortgage securities they never examined, did not care

to examine, or knew to be defective; firms depended on tens of billions of dollars of

borrowing that had to be renewed each and every night, secured by subprime mortgage

securities; and major firms and investors blindly relied on credit rating agencies

as their arbiters of risk. What else could one expect on a highway where there were

neither speed limits nor neatly painted lines?

We conclude widespread failures in financial regulation and supervision

proved devastating to the stability of the nation’s financial markets. The sentries

were not at their posts, in no small part due to the widely accepted faith in the selfcorrecting

nature of the markets and the ability of financial institutions to effectively

police themselves. More than 30 years of deregulation and reliance on self-regulation

by financial institutions, championed by former Federal Reserve chairman Alan

Greenspan and others, supported by successive administrations and Congresses, and

actively pushed by the powerful financial industry at every turn, had stripped away

key safeguards, which could have helped avoid catastrophe. This approach had

opened up gaps in oversight of critical areas with trillions of dollars at risk, such as

the shadow banking system and over-the-counter derivatives markets. In addition,

the government permitted financial firms to pick their preferred regulators in what

became a race to the weakest supervisor.

Yet we do not accept the view that regulators lacked the power to protect the financial

system. They had ample power in many arenas and they chose not to use it.

To give just three examples: the Securities and Exchange Commission could have required

more capital and halted risky practices at the big investment banks. It did not.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York and other regulators could have clamped

down on Citigroup’s excesses in the run-up to the crisis. They did not. Policy makers

and regulators could have stopped the runaway mortgage securitization train. They

did not. In case after case after case, regulators continued to rate the institutions they

oversaw as safe and sound even in the face of mounting troubles, often downgrading

them just before their collapse. And where regulators lacked authority, they could

have sought it. Too often, they lacked the political will—in a political and ideological

environment that constrained it—as well as the fortitude to critically challenge the

institutions and the entire system they were entrusted to oversee.

Changes in the regulatory system occurred in many instances as financial markets

evolved. But as the report will show, the financial industry itself played a key

role in weakening regulatory constraints on institutions, markets, and products. It

did not surprise the Commission that an industry of such wealth and power would

exert pressure on policy makers and regulators. From  to , the financial

sector expended . billion in reported federal lobbying expenses; individuals and

political action committees in the sector made more than  billion in campaign

contributions. What troubled us was the extent to which the nation was deprived of

the necessary strength and independence of the oversight necessary to safeguard

financial stability.

We conclude dramatic failures of corporate governance and risk management

at many systemically important financial institutions were a key cause of this crisis.

There was a view that instincts for self-preservation inside major financial firms

would shield them from fatal risk-taking without the need for a steady regulatory

hand, which, the firms argued, would stifle innovation. Too many of these institutions

acted recklessly, taking on too much risk, with too little capital, and with too

much dependence on short-term funding. In many respects, this reflected a funda

mental change in these institutions, particularly the large investment banks and bank

holding companies, which focused their activities increasingly on risky trading activities

that produced hefty profits. They took on enormous exposures in acquiring and

supporting subprime lenders and creating, packaging, repackaging, and selling trillions

of dollars in mortgage-related securities, including synthetic financial products.

Like Icarus, they never feared flying ever closer to the sun.

Many of these institutions grew aggressively through poorly executed acquisition

and integration strategies that made effective management more challenging. The

CEO of Citigroup told the Commission that a  billion position in highly rated

mortgage securities would “not in any way have excited my attention,” and the cohead

of Citigroup’s investment bank said he spent “a small fraction of ” of his time

on those securities. In this instance, too big to fail meant too big to manage.

Financial institutions and credit rating agencies embraced mathematical models

as reliable predictors of risks, replacing judgment in too many instances. Too often,

risk management became risk justification.

Compensation systems—designed in an environment of cheap money, intense

competition, and light regulation—too often rewarded the quick deal, the short-term

gain—without proper consideration of long-term consequences. Often, those systems

encouraged the big bet—where the payoff on the upside could be huge and the downside

limited. This was the case up and down the line—from the corporate boardroom

to the mortgage broker on the street.

Our examination revealed stunning instances of governance breakdowns and irresponsibility.

You will read, among other things, about AIG senior management’s ignorance

of the terms and risks of the company’s  billion derivatives exposure to

mortgage-related securities; Fannie Mae’s quest for bigger market share, profits, and

bonuses, which led it to ramp up its exposure to risky loans and securities as the housing

market was peaking; and the costly surprise when Merrill Lynch’s top management

realized that the company held  billion in “super-senior” and supposedly

“super-safe” mortgage-related securities that resulted in billions of dollars in losses.

We conclude a combination of excessive borrowing, risky investments, and lack

of transparency put the financial system on a collision course with crisis. Clearly,

this vulnerability was related to failures of corporate governance and regulation, but

it is significant enough by itself to warrant our attention here.

In the years leading up to the crisis, too many financial institutions, as well as too

many households, borrowed to the hilt, leaving them vulnerable to financial distress

or ruin if the value of their investments declined even modestly. For example, as of

, the five major investment banks—Bear Stearns, Goldman Sachs, Lehman

Brothers, Merrill Lynch, and Morgan Stanley—were operating with extraordinarily

thin capital. By one measure, their leverage ratios were as high as  to , meaning for

every  in assets, there was only  in capital to cover losses. Less than a  drop in

asset values could wipe out a firm. To make matters worse, much of their borrowing

was short-term, in the overnight market—meaning the borrowing had to be renewed

each and every day. For example, at the end of , Bear Stearns had . billion in

equity and . billion in liabilities and was borrowing as much as  billion in

the overnight market. It was the equivalent of a small business with , in equity

borrowing . million, with , of that due each and every day. One can’t

really ask “What were they thinking?” when it seems that too many of them were

thinking alike.

And the leverage was often hidden—in derivatives positions, in off-balance-sheet

entities, and through “window dressing” of financial reports available to the investing

public.

The kings of leverage were Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two behemoth government-

sponsored enterprises (GSEs). For example, by the end of , Fannie’s

and Freddie’s combined leverage ratio, including loans they owned and guaranteed,

stood at  to .

But financial firms were not alone in the borrowing spree: from  to , national

mortgage debt almost doubled, and the amount of mortgage debt per household

rose more than  from , to ,, even while wages were

essentially stagnant. When the housing downturn hit, heavily indebted financial

firms and families alike were walloped.

The heavy debt taken on by some financial institutions was exacerbated by the

risky assets they were acquiring with that debt. As the mortgage and real estate markets

churned out riskier and riskier loans and securities, many financial institutions

loaded up on them. By the end of , Lehman had amassed  billion in commercial

and residential real estate holdings and securities, which was almost twice

what it held just two years before, and more than four times its total equity. And

again, the risk wasn’t being taken on just by the big financial firms, but by families,

too. Nearly one in  mortgage borrowers in  and  took out “option ARM”

loans, which meant they could choose to make payments so low that their mortgage

balances rose every month.

Within the financial system, the dangers of this debt were magnified because

transparency was not required or desired. Massive, short-term borrowing, combined

with obligations unseen by others in the market, heightened the chances the system

could rapidly unravel. In the early part of the th century, we erected a series of protections—

the Federal Reserve as a lender of last resort, federal deposit insurance, ample

regulations—to provide a bulwark against the panics that had regularly plagued

America’s banking system in the th century. Yet, over the past -plus years, we

permitted the growth of a shadow banking system—opaque and laden with shortterm

debt—that rivaled the size of the traditional banking system. Key components

of the market—for example, the multitrillion-dollar repo lending market, off-balance-

sheet entities, and the use of over-the-counter derivatives—were hidden from

view, without the protections we had constructed to prevent financial meltdowns. We

had a st-century financial system with th-century safeguards.

When the housing and mortgage markets cratered, the lack of transparency, the

extraordinary debt loads, the short-term loans, and the risky assets all came home to

roost. What resulted was panic. We had reaped what we had sown.

We conclude the government was ill prepared for the crisis, and its inconsistent

response added to the uncertainty and panic in the financial markets. As part of

our charge, it was appropriate to review government actions taken in response to the

developing crisis, not just those policies or actions that preceded it, to determine if

any of those responses contributed to or exacerbated the crisis.

As our report shows, key policy makers—the Treasury Department, the Federal

Reserve Board, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York—who were best positioned

to watch over our markets were ill prepared for the events of  and .

Other agencies were also behind the curve. They were hampered because they did

not have a clear grasp of the financial system they were charged with overseeing, particularly

as it had evolved in the years leading up to the crisis. This was in no small

measure due to the lack of transparency in key markets. They thought risk had been

diversified when, in fact, it had been concentrated. Time and again, from the spring

of  on, policy makers and regulators were caught off guard as the contagion

spread, responding on an ad hoc basis with specific programs to put fingers in the

dike. There was no comprehensive and strategic plan for containment, because they

lacked a full understanding of the risks and interconnections in the financial markets.

Some regulators have conceded this error. We had allowed the system to race

ahead of our ability to protect it.

While there was some awareness of, or at least a debate about, the housing bubble,

the record reflects that senior public officials did not recognize that a bursting of the

bubble could threaten the entire financial system. Throughout the summer of ,

both Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson

offered public assurances that the turmoil in the subprime mortgage markets

would be contained. When Bear Stearns’s hedge funds, which were heavily invested

in mortgage-related securities, imploded in June , the Federal Reserve discussed

the implications of the collapse. Despite the fact that so many other funds were exposed

to the same risks as those hedge funds, the Bear Stearns funds were thought to

be “relatively unique.” Days before the collapse of Bear Stearns in March , SEC

Chairman Christopher Cox expressed “comfort about the capital cushions” at the big

investment banks. It was not until August , just weeks before the government

takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, that the Treasury Department understood

the full measure of the dire financial conditions of those two institutions. And just a

month before Lehman’s collapse, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York was still

seeking information on the exposures created by Lehman’s more than , derivatives

contracts.

In addition, the government’s inconsistent handling of major financial institutions

during the crisis—the decision to rescue Bear Stearns and then to place Fannie Mae

and Freddie Mac into conservatorship, followed by its decision not to save Lehman

Brothers and then to save AIG—increased uncertainty and panic in the market.

In making these observations, we deeply respect and appreciate the efforts made

by Secretary Paulson, Chairman Bernanke, and Timothy Geithner, formerly president

of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and now treasury secretary, and so

many others who labored to stabilize our financial system and our economy in the

most chaotic and challenging of circumstances.

We conclude there was a systemic breakdown in accountability and ethics. The

integrity of our financial markets and the public’s trust in those markets are essential

to the economic well-being of our nation. The soundness and the sustained prosperity

of the financial system and our economy rely on the notions of fair dealing, responsibility,

and transparency. In our economy, we expect businesses and individuals

to pursue profits, at the same time that they produce products and services of quality

and conduct themselves well.

Unfortunately—as has been the case in past speculative booms and busts—we

witnessed an erosion of standards of responsibility and ethics that exacerbated the financial

crisis. This was not universal, but these breaches stretched from the ground

level to the corporate suites. They resulted not only in significant financial consequences

but also in damage to the trust of investors, businesses, and the public in the

financial system.

For example, our examination found, according to one measure, that the percentage

of borrowers who defaulted on their mortgages within just a matter of months

after taking a loan nearly doubled from the summer of  to late . This data

indicates they likely took out mortgages that they never had the capacity or intention

to pay. You will read about mortgage brokers who were paid “yield spread premiums”

by lenders to put borrowers into higher-cost loans so they would get bigger fees, often

never disclosed to borrowers. The report catalogues the rising incidence of mortgage

fraud, which flourished in an environment of collapsing lending standards and

lax regulation. The number of suspicious activity reports—reports of possible financial

crimes filed by depository banks and their affiliates—related to mortgage fraud

grew -fold between  and  and then more than doubled again between

 and . One study places the losses resulting from fraud on mortgage loans

made between  and  at  billion.

Lenders made loans that they knew borrowers could not afford and that could

cause massive losses to investors in mortgage securities. As early as September ,

Countrywide executives recognized that many of the loans they were originating

could result in “catastrophic consequences.” Less than a year later, they noted that

certain high-risk loans they were making could result not only in foreclosures but

also in “financial and reputational catastrophe” for the firm. But they did not stop.

And the report documents that major financial institutions ineffectively sampled

loans they were purchasing to package and sell to investors. They knew a significant

percentage of the sampled loans did not meet their own underwriting standards or

those of the originators. Nonetheless, they sold those securities to investors. The

Commission’s review of many prospectuses provided to investors found that this critical

information was not disclosed.

THESE CONCLUSIONS must be viewed in the context of human nature and individual

and societal responsibility. First, to pin this crisis on mortal flaws like greed and

hubris would be simplistic. It was the failure to account for human weakness that is

relevant to this crisis.

Second, we clearly believe the crisis was a result of human mistakes, misjudgments,

and misdeeds that resulted in systemic failures for which our nation has paid

dearly. As you read this report, you will see that specific firms and individuals acted

irresponsibly. Yet a crisis of this magnitude cannot be the work of a few bad actors,

and such was not the case here. At the same time, the breadth of this crisis does not

mean that “everyone is at fault”; many firms and individuals did not participate in the

excesses that spawned disaster.

We do place special responsibility with the public leaders charged with protecting

our financial system, those entrusted to run our regulatory agencies, and the chief executives

of companies whose failures drove us to crisis. These individuals sought and

accepted positions of significant responsibility and obligation. Tone at the top does

matter and, in this instance, we were let down. No one said “no.”

But as a nation, we must also accept responsibility for what we permitted to occur.

Collectively, but certainly not unanimously, we acquiesced to or embraced a system,

a set of policies and actions, that gave rise to our present predicament.

* * *

THIS REPORT DESCRIBES THE EVENTS and the system that propelled our nation toward

crisis. The complex machinery of our financial markets has many essential

gears—some of which played a critical role as the crisis developed and deepened.

Here we render our conclusions about specific components of the system that we believe

contributed significantly to the financial meltdown.

We conclude collapsing mortgage-lending standards and the mortgage securitization

pipeline lit and spread the flame of contagion and crisis. When housing

prices fell and mortgage borrowers defaulted, the lights began to dim on Wall Street.

This report catalogues the corrosion of mortgage-lending standards and the securitization

pipeline that transported toxic mortgages from neighborhoods across America

to investors around the globe.

Many mortgage lenders set the bar so low that lenders simply took eager borrowers’

qualifications on faith, often with a willful disregard for a borrower’s ability to

pay. Nearly one-quarter of all mortgages made in the first half of  were interestonly

loans. During the same year,  of “option ARM” loans originated by Countrywide

and Washington Mutual had low- or no-documentation requirements.

These trends were not secret. As irresponsible lending, including predatory and

fraudulent practices, became more prevalent, the Federal Reserve and other regulators

and authorities heard warnings from many quarters. Yet the Federal Reserve

neglected its mission “to ensure the safety and soundness of the nation’s banking and

financial system and to protect the credit rights of consumers.” It failed to build the

retaining wall before it was too late. And the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

and the Office of Thrift Supervision, caught up in turf wars, preempted state

regulators from reining in abuses.

While many of these mortgages were kept on banks’ books, the bigger money came

from global investors who clamored to put their cash into newly created mortgage-related

securities. It appeared to financial institutions, investors, and regulators alike that

risk had been conquered: the investors held highly rated securities they thought were

sure to perform; the banks thought they had taken the riskiest loans off their books;

and regulators saw firms making profits and borrowing costs reduced. But each step in

the mortgage securitization pipeline depended on the next step to keep demand going.

From the speculators who flipped houses to the mortgage brokers who scouted

the loans, to the lenders who issued the mortgages, to the financial firms that created

the mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), CDOs

squared, and synthetic CDOs: no one in this pipeline of toxic mortgages had enough

skin in the game. They all believed they could off-load their risks on a moment’s notice

to the next person in line. They were wrong. When borrowers stopped making

mortgage payments, the losses—amplified by derivatives—rushed through the

pipeline. As it turned out, these losses were concentrated in a set of systemically important

financial institutions.

In the end, the system that created millions of mortgages so efficiently has proven

to be difficult to unwind. Its complexity has erected barriers to modifying mortgages

so families can stay in their homes and has created further uncertainty about the

health of the housing market and financial institutions.

We conclude over-the-counter derivatives contributed significantly to this

crisis. The enactment of legislation in 2000 to ban the regulation by both the federal

and state governments of over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives was a key turning

point in the march toward the financial crisis.

From financial firms to corporations, to farmers, and to investors, derivatives

have been used to hedge against, or speculate on, changes in prices, rates, or indices

or even on events such as the potential defaults on debts. Yet, without any oversight,

OTC derivatives rapidly spiraled out of control and out of sight, growing to  trillion

in notional amount. This report explains the uncontrolled leverage; lack of

transparency, capital, and collateral requirements; speculation; interconnections

among firms; and concentrations of risk in this market.

OTC derivatives contributed to the crisis in three significant ways. First, one type

of derivative—credit default swaps (CDS)—fueled the mortgage securitization

pipeline. CDS were sold to investors to protect against the default or decline in value

of mortgage-related securities backed by risky loans. Companies sold protection—to

the tune of  billion, in AIG’s case—to investors in these newfangled mortgage securities,

helping to launch and expand the market and, in turn, to further fuel the

housing bubble.

Second, CDS were essential to the creation of synthetic CDOs. These synthetic

CDOs were merely bets on the performance of real mortgage-related securities. They

amplified the losses from the collapse of the housing bubble by allowing multiple bets

on the same securities and helped spread them throughout the financial system.

Goldman Sachs alone packaged and sold  billion in synthetic CDOs from July ,

, to May , . Synthetic CDOs created by Goldman referenced more than

, mortgage securities, and  of them were referenced at least twice. This is

apart from how many times these securities may have been referenced in synthetic

CDOs created by other firms.

Finally, when the housing bubble popped and crisis followed, derivatives were in

the center of the storm. AIG, which had not been required to put aside capital reserves

as a cushion for the protection it was selling, was bailed out when it could not

meet its obligations. The government ultimately committed more than  billion

because of concerns that AIG’s collapse would trigger cascading losses throughout

the global financial system. In addition, the existence of millions of derivatives contracts

of all types between systemically important financial institutions—unseen and

unknown in this unregulated market—added to uncertainty and escalated panic,

helping to precipitate government assistance to those institutions.

We conclude the failures of credit rating agencies were essential cogs in the

wheel of financial destruction. The three credit rating agencies were key enablers of

the financial meltdown. The mortgage-related securities at the heart of the crisis

could not have been marketed and sold without their seal of approval. Investors relied

on them, often blindly. In some cases, they were obligated to use them, or regulatory

capital standards were hinged on them. This crisis could not have happened

without the rating agencies. Their ratings helped the market soar and their downgrades

through 2007 and 2008 wreaked havoc across markets and firms.

In our report, you will read about the breakdowns at Moody’s, examined by the

Commission as a case study. From  to , Moody’s rated nearly ,

mortgage-related securities as triple-A. This compares with six private-sector companies

in the United States that carried this coveted rating in early . In 

alone, Moody’s put its triple-A stamp of approval on  mortgage-related securities

every working day. The results were disastrous:  of the mortgage securities rated

triple-A that year ultimately were downgraded.

You will also read about the forces at work behind the breakdowns at Moody’s, including

the flawed computer models, the pressure from financial firms that paid for

the ratings, the relentless drive for market share, the lack of resources to do the job

despite record profits, and the absence of meaningful public oversight. And you will

see that without the active participation of the rating agencies, the market for mortgage-

related securities could not have been what it became.

* * *

THERE ARE MANY COMPETING VIEWS as to the causes of this crisis. In this regard, the

Commission has endeavored to address key questions posed to us. Here we discuss

three: capital availability and excess liquidity, the role of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

(the GSEs), and government housing policy.

First, as to the matter of excess liquidity: in our report, we outline monetary policies

and capital flows during the years leading up to the crisis. Low interest rates,

widely available capital, and international investors seeking to put their money in real

estate assets in the United States were prerequisites for the creation of a credit bubble.

Those conditions created increased risks, which should have been recognized by

market participants, policy makers, and regulators. However, it is the Commission’s

conclusion that excess liquidity did not need to cause a crisis. It was the failures outlined

above—including the failure to effectively rein in excesses in the mortgage and

financial markets—that were the principal causes of this crisis. Indeed, the availability

of well-priced capital—both foreign and domestic—is an opportunity for economic

expansion and growth if encouraged to flow in productive directions.

Second, we examined the role of the GSEs, with Fannie Mae serving as the Commission’s

case study in this area. These government-sponsored enterprises had a

deeply flawed business model as publicly traded corporations with the implicit backing

of and subsidies from the federal government and with a public mission. Their

 trillion mortgage exposure and market position were significant. In  and

, they decided to ramp up their purchase and guarantee of risky mortgages, just

as the housing market was peaking. They used their political power for decades to

ward off effective regulation and oversight—spending  million on lobbying from

 to . They suffered from many of the same failures of corporate governance

and risk management as the Commission discovered in other financial firms.

Through the third quarter of , the Treasury Department had provided  billion

in financial support to keep them afloat.

We conclude that these two entities contributed to the crisis, but were not a primary

cause. Importantly, GSE mortgage securities essentially maintained their value

throughout the crisis and did not contribute to the significant financial firm losses

that were central to the financial crisis.

The GSEs participated in the expansion of subprime and other risky mortgages,

but they followed rather than led Wall Street and other lenders in the rush for fool’s

gold. They purchased the highest rated non-GSE mortgage-backed securities and

their participation in this market added helium to the housing balloon, but their purchases

never represented a majority of the market. Those purchases represented .

of non-GSE subprime mortgage-backed securities in , with the share rising to

 in , and falling back to  by . They relaxed their underwriting standards

to purchase or guarantee riskier loans and related securities in order to meet

stock market analysts’ and investors’ expectations for growth, to regain market share,

and to ensure generous compensation for their executives and employees—justifying

their activities on the broad and sustained public policy support for homeownership.

The Commission also probed the performance of the loans purchased or guaranteed

by Fannie and Freddie. While they generated substantial losses, delinquency

rates for GSE loans were substantially lower than loans securitized by other financial

firms. For example, data compiled by the Commission for a subset of borrowers with

similar credit scores—scores below —show that by the end of , GSE mortgages

were far less likely to be seriously delinquent than were non-GSE securitized

mortgages: . versus ..

We also studied at length how the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s

(HUD’s) affordable housing goals for the GSEs affected their investment in

risky mortgages. Based on the evidence and interviews with dozens of individuals involved

in this subject area, we determined these goals only contributed marginally to

Fannie’s and Freddie’s participation in those mortgages.

Finally, as to the matter of whether government housing policies were a primary

cause of the crisis: for decades, government policy has encouraged homeownership

through a set of incentives, assistance programs, and mandates. These policies were

put in place and promoted by several administrations and Congresses—indeed, both

Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush set aggressive goals to increase homeownership.

In conducting our inquiry, we took a careful look at HUD’s affordable housing

goals, as noted above, and the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). The CRA was

enacted in  to combat “redlining” by banks—the practice of denying credit to individuals

and businesses in certain neighborhoods without regard to their creditworthiness.

The CRA requires banks and savings and loans to lend, invest, and provide

services to the communities from which they take deposits, consistent with bank

safety and soundness.

The Commission concludes the CRA was not a significant factor in subprime lending

or the crisis. Many subprime lenders were not subject to the CRA. Research indicates

only  of high-cost loans—a proxy for subprime loans—had any connection to

the law. Loans made by CRA-regulated lenders in the neighborhoods in which they

were required to lend were half as likely to default as similar loans made in the same

neighborhoods by independent mortgage originators not subject to the law.

Nonetheless, we make the following observation about government housing policies—

they failed in this respect: As a nation, we set aggressive homeownership goals

with the desire to extend credit to families previously denied access to the financial

markets. Yet the government failed to ensure that the philosophy of opportunity was

being matched by the practical realities on the ground. Witness again the failure of

the Federal Reserve and other regulators to rein in irresponsible lending. Homeownership

peaked in the spring of  and then began to decline. From that point on,

the talk of opportunity was tragically at odds with the reality of a financial disaster in

the making.

* * *

WHEN THIS COMMISSION began its work  months ago, some imagined that the

events of  and their consequences would be well behind us by the time we issued

this report. Yet more than two years after the federal government intervened in an

unprecedented manner in our financial markets, our country finds itself still grappling

with the aftereffects of the calamity. Our financial system is, in many respects,

still unchanged from what existed on the eve of the crisis. Indeed, in the wake of the

crisis, the U.S. financial sector is now more concentrated than ever in the hands of a

few large, systemically significant institutions.

While we have not been charged with making policy recommendations, the very

purpose of our report has been to take stock of what happened so we can plot a new

course. In our inquiry, we found dramatic breakdowns of corporate governance,

profound lapses in regulatory oversight, and near fatal flaws in our financial system.

We also found that a series of choices and actions led us toward a catastrophe for

which we were ill prepared. These are serious matters that must be addressed and

resolved to restore faith in our financial markets, to avoid the next crisis, and to rebuild

a system of capital that provides the foundation for a new era of broadly

shared prosperity.

The greatest tragedy would be to accept the refrain that no one could have seen

this coming and thus nothing could have been done. If we accept this notion, it will

happen again.

This report should not be viewed as the end of the nation’s examination of this

crisis. There is still much to learn, much to investigate, and much to fix.

This is our collective responsibility. It falls to us to make different choices if we

want different results.”

Then came,

Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act, May 24, 2018

To promote economic growth, provide tailored regulatory relief, and enhance consumer protections, and for other purposes.

Leave a comment

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started