There’s always something to howl about.

The Mortgage Liquidity Crisis Is Over

The liquidity crisis in the mortgage industry is over. I don’t mean that we are going back to the lending guidelines of the go-go years of 2003-2006 but the non-conforming loan guidelines are coming back to a sense of normalcy.

Dan Green talked about the non-conforming home loan market being like the NFL Draft, six weeks ago:

As soon as the first buyer puts a “market value” on a specific type of sub-prime or Alt-A loan, a number of positive things will happen:

  1. Funds will re-value their holdings and begin allowing withdrawals again
  2. The sub-prime and Alt-A mortgage product menu will expand a bit
  3. Wall Street will relax a bit

Until that buyer shows up, though, mortgage money will stay out of the market like JaMarcus Russell stays out of training camp.

While the “top picks” were holding out, the “position players” went into training camp. The position players, in California, were the portfolio lenders. Banks like Downey Savings, First Federal Savings, and old skool Home Savings of America, stepped in and filled the void a little bit. They didn’t pick up all the slack but they did gain market share as Wall Street twiddled their thumbs.

Ponder Dan’s excellent sports analogy a second. August and September of 2007 was like the infamous 1994 baseball strike. Replacement players, far less talented than their striking counterparts, took the field for Spring Training in 1995. Major League Baseball took decisive action to insure that the game of baseball, admittedly watered-down in talent, would continue. That forced the MLB Players’ Union to deal with the prospect of being completely unnecessary.

The aforementioned portfolio lenders are the equivalent of the replacement players. They took market share from the superstars and actually started the get a bit greedy by raising their rates. When they started to get a significant portion of the cream-puff loans, the superstars on Wall Street stood up and took notice.

Flailing lender Countrywide was the first to cross the picket line. Desperation reigned in that house as they repositioned their warehouse lending capabilities away from the commercial paper market and into their federally-chartered bank. A risky move indeed. If you’re a .232 lifetime hitter, in danger of giving up a six figure salary for a career in welding, you take a few risks. Your commitment to lining the pockets of your millionaire brethren becomes less important when the prospect of an hourly wage is at hand.

IndyMac was the utility player who didn’t want to get left behind, They restored the alternative documentation loan products that put them on the map. Today, the e-mails were flying from all the big-money players, reinstating their commitment to jumbo loans, alternative documentation mortgages, and even sub prime loans. My guess is that we’ll see some bright new superstars emerge next year. While the marginal talent faced extinction like the Montreal Expos, the superstars just want to play the game; it’s no different in lending.

Residential lending, like baseball, will probably learn some lessons from the “work stoppage”. It will clean things up, start making sound lending decisions, and get back on its feet. Scandals, like the steroid epidemic, will permeate lending causing astericks to be placed next to many home loans. In the end, baseball and lending against real estate, will be century-spanning American traditions.

Jeff Brown summed up the panic best:

What we’ve been recently treated to, and will continue to observe in the coming months, is the axiom: Lenders lend.

Cuz when they aren’t lending, they aren’t lenders, they’re tin cans of cash in others’ backyards.

Everybody loves a hot dog at the ball game and a loan for every house.