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COUNTRYWIDE
FINANCIAL CORPORATION AND THE FAILURE OF MORTGAGE SOCIALISM
by Eric Englund
January 28, 2008
Angelo Mozilo is the
Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer of the failed
Countrywide Financial Corporation. Mr. Mozilo co-founded this company,
nearly 40 years ago, in 1969. To be in business for almost forty years,
and to become America’s top private home-mortgage lender, are
testimonies to genuine business acumen. However, success can breed
arrogance, and a sense of supreme power, to the point where a corporate
chieftain believes his personal will can override the free market and
reshape society according to a grand vision – which, for Angelo Mozilo,
entailed making America a better country by bringing
home ownership within reach of all and sundry. For Countrywide
Financial, unfortunately, Mr. Mozilo’s dream of social engineering
demanded that sound credit-underwriting principles be abandoned. And
now, Countrywide Financial Corporation’s failure stands as a monument
as to how integrating egalitarianism and political correctness, into a
business plan, is downright poisonous.
February 4, 2003 marks
the day when Countrywide Financial’s shareholders should have dumped
every last share of their stock. For on this day Angelo Mozilo made a
presentation, at The Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard
University, titled The
American Dream of Homeownership: From Cliché to Mission. This
is the day that Mr. Mozilo revealed to the world that political
correctness had infected his mind. He openly declared that sound credit
underwriting was tantamount to judgmentalism and, therefore,
anti-egalitarian. How dare anyone judge anyone else – credit standards
be damned. Subprime mortgages, accordingly, were going to be a blessing
for America since everyone deserves a house. Oh how political
correctness feels so good. He worshiped the mortgage socialism hatched
in the New Deal along with every federal-housing program introduced in
the succeeding decades. A true credit professional would have been
horrified by this speech; which indubitably was met with approving
applause by the pseudo-intellectual, limousine liberals populating
Harvard University. February 4, 2003 is the day Countrywide
Financial’s Board of Directors should have fired Mr. Mozilo.
Over the years, Angelo
Mozilo has been handsomely
rewarded by Uncle Sam’s mortgage socialism. Here’s how it works.
Countrywide Financial makes a conforming home loan, sells it to Fannie
Mae or Freddie Mac (both are government sponsored enterprises), and has
its coffers replenished in doing so; hence, allowing Countrywide to keep
churning out loans. Countrywide, in turn, remains the mortgage servicer
on each loan and earns a fee for doing so. These fees most certainly add
up when you are servicing $1.5
trillion in home loans (not all of which are Fannie and Freddie
loans). Needless to say, Countrywide had other sources of revenues but
mortgage servicing was top-shelf when it came to profitability.
Thus, it is no wonder
why Mr. Mozilo waxed fondly, in his Harvard speech, regarding
America’s foray into mortgage socialism. After all, it made him very
wealthy. Here is an excerpt:
Our
Nation took another important step in 1938 – in fact, 65 years ago
this week – when Fannie Mae was created to buy those FHA loans, and
as a result, the secondary mortgage market was born. We took a few
more giant steps in the 1940s with the G.I. Bill in 1944 and the
Housing Act of 1949, which stated the goal of "a decent home and
a suitable living environment for every American family." We
witnessed the Fair Housing Act in the 60s, the creation of Freddie Mac
in 1970, the expansion of Fannie Mae’s activities, the Community
Reinvestment Act in the 70s, the introduction of adjustable-rate
mortgages in the 80s, and more recently, the National Affordable
Housing Act of 1990.
We
have traveled so far – thanks to a mortgage-finance system that
remains the envy of the world; thanks to a constant stream of creative
and innovative mortgage products, and efforts directed at encouraging
the offering of loans to those who have been previously shut out; and
simply put, thanks to housing being an enduring public policy
objective and the lasting commitment to that objective symbolized by
our partnership.
We
have transformed from a Nation of renters to a Nation of homeowners.
The overall U.S. homeownership rate, which was at 44 percent in 1940,
hit 68 percent by the end of the third quarter of 2002.
One can only imagine
Mr. Mozilo’s broad smile as he delivered these words. Between his
compensation and stock sales, Angelo has made hundreds of millions of
dollars. Socialism certainly can be beneficial for an elite few.
Do you remember
President George W. Bush’s initiatives
to increase homeownership in the United States? His administration
definitely played a role in creating America’s housing bubble. When
speaking about housing assistance, President Bush evoked the emotion of
envy and declared that the U.S. had a "homeownership gap."
Angelo Mozilo, being a kingpin of political correctness, couldn’t
resist playing the envy-card to an approving Harvard audience. He
stated:
It
started with the New Deal, and now, we’re in a new century. But
through it all, one thing has remained, more or less, constant. This
constant is our challenge. And this challenge is to increase the
access to affordable housing. And in order to do this, we must close
the homeownership gap that still exists.
As
President Bush said last October:
"Two
thirds of all Americans own their homes, yet we have a problem here
in America because fewer than half of the Hispanics and half of the
African Americans own their home. That’s a homeownership gap.
It’s a gap that we’ve got to work together to close for the good
of our Country, for the sake of a more hopeful future. We’ve got
to work to knock down the barriers..."
While
the number of minority homeowners has advanced recently, climbing from
9.5 million in 1994 to 13.3 million in 2001 – an increase of 40
percent – the fact remains that it is still not at a level equal to
that of white homeownership. And as President Bush pointed out, the
homeownership rate for African Americans is 47 percent and for
Hispanic Americans it is 48 percent, a stark contrast to the
homeownership rate of 75 percent for white American households. That
means there is currently a homeownership gap of over 25 points when
comparing white households with African Americans and Hispanics. My
friends, that gap is obviously far too wide. It has been far too wide
for far too long. And when adding new factors into the equation –
like an influx of new immigrants or continued reduction in the supply
of affordable housing – it has the potential to become far worse.
Credit underwriting has
nothing to do with race, creed, skin color, gender, or religion. Sound
credit underwriting has everything to do with the "Five
Cs" of credit – i.e., character, capacity, capital,
collateral, and conditions. Under pure capitalism, a credit underwriter
is not concerned about making people happy by lending money regardless
of a person’s creditworthiness. An underwriter’s primary objective
is to make profitable loans and this demands nothing less than
effectively assessing risk on a case-by-case basis. This, undeniably,
requires underwriters to exercise learned judgment. Ah, but to say this
in the cradle of political correctness (Harvard) would have been met
with resounding "boos."
To be sure, Mr. Mozilo
did not disappoint his fellow limousine liberals. He goes on the attack
and smears credit underwriters as being judgmental – the antithesis of
political correctness. Considering that Countrywide had become the
largest private mortgage lender in the U.S., the following words depict
a man who had taken leave of his senses:
I
have two issues with our industry’s current underwriting
methodology. The first is that the automated underwriting systems kick
far too many applicants down to the manual underwriting process,
thereby implying these borrowers are not creditworthy; and the second
issue is that once arriving in the hands of a manual underwriter, the
applicant is subject to basic human judgment that can be influenced by
the level of a borrower’s credit score.
Let’s
address my first issue. I acknowledge that credit scoring uses proven
statistical methods to provide lenders with the ability to quantify
the risk of extending credit. And there is little question that the
technique effectively and efficiently separates those with very good
credit from those with questionable credit.
However,
far too many borrowers are being referred to an arduous manual and
cumbersome underwriting process. To me, that is clear proof that the
level deemed to be an acceptable risk by our automated underwriting
systems is much too high. While many of these borrowers may ultimately
be approved, it is because the manual process, or human underwriter,
has analyzed non-traditional factors such as the borrower’s rent and
utility payment history, which should be imbedded in the automated
underwriting process.
Now,
let me address my second issue, and that is the manual underwriting
process itself. While Countrywide’s own internal evidence supports
the notion that manual underwriters are approving a good majority of
the loan applications that get referred, the fact of the matter
remains that a human is involved in this step of the process thereby
creating the possibility that a decision is made based upon the level
of the borrower’s FICO score.
Thus,
the current protocol intentionally creates an environment where
borrowers with lower FICO scores are subject to being
disproportionately affected by the manual underwriting process. I say
we need to amend these systems to do more than just approve the
"cream of the crop," by creating a system that says
"no" only to those deemed unwilling to make their mortgage
payments.
We
must understand that the credit scoring system we have built is still
imperfect, and that if we are to have any chance at closing the
homeownership gap, we must make a serious investment in improving its
capacity and capabilities. We must do this through improved automated
underwriting models that take into account more variables, and measure
true indicators of risk and willingness to pay. We need an ongoing
educational process, not only at the primary market level, but also in
the secondary markets and with mortgage insurers to help lead this
effort to recalibrate the scoring system. And finally, it must be
recognized that borrowers with credit scores below what is currently
defined as "creditworthy" levels can still be acceptable
credit risks. Thus, the credit score bar dividing creditworthy from
high-risk borrowers, must be substantially lowered by the GSEs, the
secondary market in general, and with bank regulators. The GSEs have
made good progress over the last few years in expanding their credit
criteria, but I encourage them to become much more aggressive in this
regard.
What Angelo Mozilo
desires to accomplish is to replace human underwriters with computers.
He never mentions the Five Cs of credit because sound credit
underwriting requires human judgment; which can be aided with, yet never
replaced by, technology. In Mr. Mozilo’s daffy world of credit
progressivism, he may as well distill the mortgage application down to a
one-page document containing a single question: Are you willing to
make your mortgage payment? If the answer is "yes" then
the loan is approved and if the answer is "no" then it is
declined. Under such circumstances, a computer would work perfectly.
As I have asserted before,
political correctness is an enfeebling infection of the mind. Mr.
Mozilo’s vision of politically-correct, and "enlightened,"
credit underwriting was nothing short of daffy. Yet, one can only
imagine how approvingly this pabulum was met by his Harvard chums.
Angelo Mozilo had no
intention of disappointing his fellow travelers. There was hope as to
closing the homeownership gap. It was something called the subprime
mortgage. In his bizarre mind, the more subprime mortgage originations
there were, the better off America would be. To wit:
Historically
low interest rates along with new, creative and flexible underwriting
techniques are continuing to fuel a record period of growth for our
industry. According to the Federal Reserve, the amount of overall
mortgage debt outstanding is nearly $6 trillion. And, increasingly,
the sub-prime market is boosting that number and the industry as a
whole. During the first nine months of 2002, sub-prime originations
rose an estimated 26 percent over the same period in 2001 –
outpacing the overall market.
Had Mr. Mozilo
delivered this speech today, he would have immediately been fitted into
a straightjacket and then driven to the nearest loony bin.
Countrywide Financial
and many other financial institutions ended up throwing all credit
standards out the window in order to package and sell as many subprime
mortgage-backed securities as possible. To be sure, many did not do so
sharing Mozilo’s politically-correct and egalitarian hallucination –
they just wanted to make a fast buck.
An important
distinction to convey here pertains to the fact that Countrywide and
others were not selling all of their loans to Freddie and Fannie. The
aforementioned mortgage-backed securities were purely packaged and sold
under private labels. When America’s housing bubble was expanding,
buyers of such subprime securities obviously felt there was no downside.
Such are the delusions that materialize when central bankers flood the
world with the opiates of easy money and credit.
Regrettably, by
completely ignoring underwriting fundamentals, Countrywide and its ilk
have set up so many borrowers for failure (as have the king and queen of
mortgage socialism, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae; both of whom, by the
way, may be on the brink of their own financial
meltdowns). The pain and anguish of losing a home, and having
one’s family displaced, will be visited upon countless families. Of
course, such borrowers must look in the mirror when the urge, to pass
around the blame, emerges. Nonetheless, Angelo Mozilo’s dream has
transmuted into a nightmare for millions.
My, oh my, aren’t
political correctness, egalitarianism, and social engineering wonderful?
You be the judge.

© 2008 Eric Englund
Editorial Archives
Eric
Englund has
an MBA from Boise State University and lives in the state of Oregon.
He is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You are
invited to visit his website.
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