Personal Finances
A House Is Not a Piggy Bank: A Few Lessons from the Subprime Crisis
Learning Objectives
- Discuss the trend in the U.S. savings rate.
- Define a subprime loan and explain the difference between a fixed-rate mortgage and an adjustable-rate mortgage.
- Discuss what can go wrong with a subprime loan at an adjustable rate. Discuss what can go wrong with hundreds of thousands of subprime loans at adjustable rates.
- Define risk and explain some of the risks entailed by personal financial transactions.
Joe
isn't old enough to qualify, but if his grandfather had deposited
$1,000 in an account paying 7 percent interest in 1945, it would now be
worth $64,000. That's because money invested at 7 percent compounded
will double every ten years. Now, $64,000 may or may not seem like a
significant return over fifty years, but after all, the money did all
the heavy lifting, and given the miracle of compound interest, it's
surprising that Americans don't take greater advantage of the
opportunity to multiply their wealth by saving more of it, even in
modest, interest-bearing accounts. Ironically, with $790 billion in
credit card debt, it's obvious that a lot of American families are
experiencing the effects of compound interest - but in reverse.
As a matter of fact, though Joe College appears to be on
the right track when it comes to saving, many people aren't. A lot of
Americans, it seems, do indeed set savings goals, but in one recent
survey, nearly 70 percent of the respondents reported that they fell
short of their monthly goals because their money was needed elsewhere.
About one-third of Americans say that they're putting away something but
not enough, and another third aren't saving anything at all. Almost
one-fifth of all Americans have net worth of zero - or less.
As we indicated in the opening section of
this chapter, this shortage of savings goes hand in hand with a surplus
in spending. "My parents," says one otherwise gainfully employed
American knowledge worker, "are appalled at the way I justify my
spending. I think, ‘Why work and make money unless you're going to enjoy
it?' That's a fine theory," she adds, "until you're sixty, homeless,
and with no money in the bank". And indeed, if she doesn't intend to alter her
personal-finances philosophy, she has good reason to worry about her
"older adult" years. Sixty percent of Americans over the age of
sixty-five have less than $100,000 in savings, and only 30 percent of
this group have more than $25,000; 45 percent have less than $15,000. As
for income, 75 percent of people over age sixty-five generate less than
$35,000 annually, and 30 percent are in the "poverty to near-poverty"
range of $10,000 to $20,000 (as compared to 12 percent of the
under-sixty-five population).
Disposing of Savings
Figure 14.11 "U.S. Savings Rate" shows the U.S. savings rate - which measures the percentage of disposable income devoted to savings for the period 1960 to 2010. As you can see, it suffered a steep decline from 1980 to 2005 and remained at this negligible savings rate until it started moving up in 2008. The recent increase in the savings rate, however, is still below the long-term average of 7 percent".
Figure 14.11 U.S. Savings Rate

Now,
a widespread tendency on the part of Americans to spend rather than
save doesn't account entirely for the downward shift in the savings
rate. In late 2005, the Federal Reserve cited at least two other
(closely related) factors in the decline of savings:
- An increase in the ratio of stock-market wealth to disposable income
- An increase in the ratio of residential-property wealth to disposable income
Assume, for example, that, in addition to your personal savings, you own some stock and have a mortgage on a home. Both your stock and your home are (supposedly) appreciable assets - their value used to go up over time. (In fact, if you had taken out your mortgage in 2000, by the end of 2005 your home would have appreciated at double the rate of your disposable personal income.) The decline in the personal savings rate during the mid-2000s, suggested the Fed, resulted in part from people's response to "long-lived bull markets in stocks and housing"; in other words, a lot of people had come to rely on the appreciation of such assets as stocks and residential property as "a substitute for the practice of saving out of wage income".
Subprime Rates and Adjustable Rate Mortgages
Let's
assume that you weren't ready to take advantage of the boom in mortgage
loans in 2000 but did set your sights on 2005. You may not have been
ready to buy a house in 2005 either, but there's a good chance that you
got a loan anyway. In particular, some lender might have offered you a
so-called subprime mortgage loan. Subprime loans are made to borrowers
who don't qualify for market-set interest rates because of one or more
risk factors - income level, employment status, credit history, ability
to make only a very low down payment. As of March 2007, U.S. lenders had
written $1.3 trillion in mortgages like yours.
Granted, your terms might not have
been very good. For one thing, interest rates on subprime loans may run
from 8 percent to 10 percent and higher". In addition, you probably had to settle
for an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) - one that's pegged to the
increase or decrease of certain interest rates that your lender has to
pay. When you signed your mortgage papers, you knew that if those rates
went up, your mortgage rate - and your monthly payments - would go up,
too. Fortunately, however, you had a plan B: with the value of your new
asset appreciating even as you enjoyed living in it, it wouldn't be long
before you could refinance it at a more manageable and more predictable
rate.
The Meltdown
Now imagine your dismay when housing
prices started to go down in 2006 and 2007. As a result, you weren't
able to refinance, your ARM was set to adjust upward in 2008, and
foreclosures were already happening all around you - 1.3 million in 2007
alone, one in every 519
American households had received a foreclosure notice. By August,
9.2 percent of the $12 trillion in U.S. mortgage loans was delinquent or
in foreclosure.
The repercussions? Banks and other
institutions that made mortgage loans were the first sector of the
financial industry to be hit. Largely because of mortgage-loan defaults,
profits at more than 8,500 U.S. banks dropped from $35 billion in the
fourth quarter of 2006 to $650 million in the corresponding quarter of
2007 (a decrease of 89 percent). Bank earnings for the year 2007
declined 31 percent and dropped another 46 percent in the first quarter
of 2008.
Losses in this sector were soon felt by two
publicly traded government-sponsored organizations, the Federal National
Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (Freddie Mac). Both of these institutions are authorized to
make loans and provide loan guarantees to banks, mortgage companies, and
other mortgage lenders; their function is to make sure that these
lenders have enough money to lend to prospective home buyers. Between
them, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac backed approximately half of that $12
trillion in outstanding mortgage loans, and when the mortgage crisis
hit, the stock prices of the two corporations began to drop steadily. In
September 2008, amid fears that both organizations would run out of
capital, the U.S. government took over their management.
Freddie
Mac also had another function: to increase the supply of money available
for mortgage loans and new home purchases, Freddie Mac bought mortgages
already written by lenders, pooled them, and sold them as
mortgage-backed securities to investors on the open market. Many major
investment firms did much the same thing, buying individual subprime
mortgages from original lenders (such as small banks), pooling the
projected revenue - payments made by the original individual home buyers
- and selling securities backed by the pooled revenue.
But when
their rates went too high and home buyers couldn't make these payments,
these securities plummeted in value. Institutions that had invested in
them - including investment banks - suffered significant losses. In September 2008, one of these
investment banks, Lehman Brothers, filed for bankruptcy protection;
another, Merrill Lynch, agreed to sell itself for $50 billion. Next came
American International Group (AIG), a giant insurance company that
insured financial institutions against the risks they took in loaning
and investing money. As its policyholders buckled under the weight of
defaulted loans and failed investments, AIG, too, was on the brink of
bankruptcy, and when private efforts to bail it out failed, the U.S.
government stepped in with a loan of $85 billion. The U.S. government also agreed to buy up
risky mortgage-backed securities from teetering financial institutions
at an estimated cost of "hundreds of billions".
Subprime Directives: A Few Lessons from the Subprime Crisis
If
you were one of the millions of Americans who took out subprime
mortgages in the years between 2001 and 2005, you probably have some
pressing financial problems. If you defaulted on your subprime ARM, you
may have suffered foreclosure on your newly acquired asset, lost any
equity that you'd built up in it, and taken a hit in your credit rating.
(We'll assume that you're not one of the people whose eagerness to get
on the subprime bandwagon caused fraudulent mortgage applications to go
up by 300 percent between 2002 and 2006).
On the other hand, you've probably
learned a few lessons about financial planning and strategy. Let's
conclude with a survey of three lessons that you should have learned
from your hypothetical adventure in the world of subprime mortgages.
Lesson
1: All mortgages are not created equal. Despite (or perhaps because of)
the understandable enticement of home ownership, your judgment may have
been faulty in this episode of your financial life cycle. Generally
speaking, you're better off with a fixed-rate mortgage - one on which
the interest rate remains the same regardless of changes in market
interest rates - than with an ARM. As we've explained at length in this chapter,
planning is one of the cornerstones of personal-finances management, and
ARMs don't lend themselves to planning. How well can you plan for your
future mortgage payments if you can't be sure what they're going to be?
In
addition, though interest rates may go up or down, planning for them to
go down and to take your mortgage payments with them doesn't make much
sense. You can wait around to get lucky, and you can even try to get
lucky (say, by buying a lottery ticket), but you certainly can't plan to
get lucky. Unfortunately, the only thing you can really plan for is
higher rates and higher payments. An ARM isn't a good idea if you don't
know whether you can meet payments higher than your initial payment. In
fact, if you have reason to believe that you can't meet the maximum
payment entailed by an ARM, you probably shouldn't take it on.
Lesson
2: It's risky out there. You now know - if you hadn't suspected it
already - that planning your personal finances would be a lot easier if
you could do it in a predictable economic environment. But you can't, of
course, and virtually constant instability in financial markets is
simply one economic fact of life that you'll have to deal with as you
make your way through the stages of your financial life cycle.
In
other words, any foray into financial markets is risky. Basically, risk
is the possibility that cash flows will be variable. Unfortunately, volatility in the overall economy
is directly related to just one category of risks. There's a second
category - risks related to the activities of various organizations
involved in your financial transactions. You've already been introduced
to the effects of these forms of financial risk, some of which have
affected you directly, some of which have affected you indirectly, and
some of which may affect you in the future:
- Management risk is the risk that poor management of an organization with which you're dealing may adversely affect the outcome of your personal-finances planning. If you couldn't pay the higher rate on your ARM, managers at your lender probably failed to look deeply enough into your employment status and income.
- Business risk is the risk associated with a product that you've chosen to buy. The fate of your mortgagor, who issued the original product - your subprime ARM - and that of everyone down the line who purchased it in some form (perhaps Freddy Mac and Merrill Lynch) bear witness to the pitfalls of business risk.
- Financial risk refers to the risk that
comes from ill-considered indebtedness. Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, and
several investment banks have felt the repercussions of investing too
much money in financial instruments that were backed with shaky assets
(namely, subprime mortgages).
In your own small way, of course, you, too, underestimated the pitfalls of all three of these forms of risk.
Lesson
3: Not all income is equally disposable. Figure 14.13 "Debt-Income
Ratio" shows the increase in the ratio of debt to disposable income
among American households between 1985 and 2007. As you can see, the
increase was dramatic - from 80 percent in the early 1990s to about 130
percent in 2007". This rise was made possible by greater
access to credit - people borrow money in order to spend it, whether on
consumption or on investments, and the more they can borrow, the more
they can spend.
In the United States, greater access to credit in
the late 1990s and early 2000s was made possible by rising housing
prices: the more valuable your biggest asset, the more lenders are
willing to lend you, even if what you're buying with your loan - your
house - is your biggest asset. As the borrower, your strategy is
twofold: (1) Pay your mortgage out of your wage income, and (2) reap the
financial benefits of an asset that appreciates in value. On top of
everything else, you can count the increased value of your asset as
savings: when you sell the house at retirement, the difference between
your mortgage and the current value of your house is yours to support
you in your golden years.
Figure 14.13 Debt-Income Ratio

As
we know, however, housing prices had started to fall by the end of
2006. From a peak in mid-2006, they had fallen 8 percent by November
2007, and by April 2008 they were down from the 2006 peak by more than
19 percent - the worst rate of decline since the Great Depression. And
most experts expected it to get worse before it gets better, and
unfortunately they were right. Housing prices have declined by 33
percent from the mid-2006 peak to the end of 2010.
So where do you stand? As you know, your house is worth no
more than what you can get for it on the open market; thus the asset
that you were counting on to help provide for your retirement has
depreciated substantially in little more than a decade. If you're one of
the many Americans who tried to substitute equity in property for
traditional forms of income savings, one financial specialist explains
the unfortunate results pretty bluntly: your house "is a place to live,
not a brokerage account". If it's any consolation, you're not alone: a recent
study by the Security Industries Association reports that, for many
Americans, nearly half their net worth is based on the value of their
home. Analysts fear that many of these people - a significant proportion
of the baby-boom generation - won't be able to retire with the same
standard of living that they've been enjoying during their wage-earning
years.
Key Takeaways
- Personal saving suffered a steep decline from 1980 to 2005 and remained at this negligible savings rate until it started moving up in 2008. The recent increase in the savings rate, however, is still below the long-term average of 7 percent.
- In addition to Americans' tendency to spend rather than save, the Federal Reserve observed that a lot of people had come to rely on the appreciation of such assets as stocks and residential property as a substitute for the practice of saving out of wage income.
- Subprime loans are made to would-be home buyers who don't qualify for market-set interest rates because of one or more risk factors - income level, employment status, credit history, ability to make only a very low down payment. Interest rates may run from 8 percent to 10 percent and higher.
- An adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) is a home loan pegged to the increase or decrease of certain interest rates that the lender has to pay. If those rates go up, the mortgage rate and the home buyer's monthly payments go up, too. A fixed-rate mortgage is a home loan on which the interest rate remains the same regardless of changes in market interest rates.
- In the years between 2001 and 2005, lenders made billions of dollars in subprime ARM loans to American home buyers. In 2006 and 2007, however, housing prices started to go down. Homeowners with subprime ARM loans weren't able to refinance, their mortgage rates began going up, and foreclosures became commonplace.
- In 2006 and 2007, largely because of mortgage-loan defaults, banks and other institutions that made mortgage loans began losing huge sums of money. These losses carried over to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, publicly traded government-sponsored organizations that make loans and provide loan guarantees to banks and other mortgage lenders.
- Next to be hit were major investment firms that had been buying subprime mortgages from banks and other original lenders, pooling the projected revenue - payments made by the original individual home buyers - and selling securities backed by the pooled revenue. When their rates went too high and home buyers couldn't make their house payments, these securities plummeted in value, and the investment banks and other institutions that had invested in them suffered significant losses.
- Risk is the possibility that cash flows will be variable. Three types of risk are related to the activities of various organizations that may be involved in your financial transactions:
- Management risk is the risk that poor management of an organization with which you're dealing may adversely affect the outcome of your personal-finances planning.
- Business risk is the risk associated with a product that you've chosen to buy.
- Financial risk refers to the risk that comes from ill-considered indebtedness.
Exercise
(AACSB) Analysis
Write a report giving your opinion on how we got into the subprime mortgage crisis and how we'll get out of it