Friday, September 26, 2008

A Modest Proposal


to prevent the hoboing of America

The real problem, as it was tol’t to me by the village elders, is with securitized mortgages. Mortgages often cut hastily and predatorily, bundled together and sold and resold as if they have some actual, measurable value.

“Passed around like a bottle of Crown.” as one saying goes.

“…passed around like a dirty postcard…” as Tennessee Williams once said.

Collectively they form a true fiscal black hole at the bottom of an economic gravity well, and the problem is, no one know how big the hole is, so no one knows where the event horizon – the area surrounding the hole from which nothing escapes and inside of which external events no longer have any effect – begins or ends.

Time Magazine puts it less geekishly:
The dollar estimate of this bailout is just that — an estimate. Think of it as that bubble that slides up or down inside a level: it keeps moving, and where it ends up depends on who's talking. Some optimists think the mortgages the Treasury will buy are basically sound, and that the ultimate loss to the government after it sells them could be as little as $100 billion. Others point to a drop in housing prices of nearly 20% since mid-2006 and say the government's eventual loss could approach $1 trillion.
Which, to this citizen's ears, sure as hell sounds like the Very First Thing the federal government needs to figure out.

First. Thing.

Like NASA, before space stations, satellites and “One small step…” came a lot of hard work and heavy lifting to figure out how to make the rockets less explody.

Which, admittedly

is sometimes still a problem.

But it’s not throwing a lit Zippo into a retention pond full of napalm and hoping for the best. There is actual science to it. And science begins with data, which is exactly what is lacking up at the Hank Paulson’s International House of Bailout.

So, how do we measure how far down the hole goes while every Master of the Universe on Wall Street is now cowering in fear, moaning out the same piteous mantra that “nobody knows” how deep the ocean or high the sky?

It starts with telling the people who caused the problem to STFU, because correctly diagnosing any problem of this type down to a useful level of detail is hardly impossible.

As far as I can see, getting that data has been dismissed as “impossible” merely because it would involve a lot of really brutal mop-and-bucket number crunching by the people who have been paid tens of millions of dollars every year to fill their company's coffers with sand, sawdust and snake oil. So because they don’t have a sufficiently sophisticated computer model to spit out the answers for them, as far as the pampered elite are concerned, it must therefor be completely beyond the limits of human knowledge.

Well fuck that.

Part I: Laying a foundation.

Building a reasonably reliable database would be grueling, fussy, boring work, but hardly impossible. And what’s more, there are thousands of people available right this minute to do the job.

So suppose tonight Barack Hussein Obama went on the teevee machine and announced that, as President, he would call upon every business school and economics study program in the nation – from Harvard to Prairie State – to come together in this time of grave national crisis and help America by digging into the Big Shitpile (h/t Atrios.)

Senator Obama tells financial capitals of the world that, starting one week from today, America will turn its youngest and brightest loose on solving the real riddle of the catastrophe that is now upon us: What is all this paper really worth?

That as part of a National Class Project ™ for the semester upcoming, the component parts of the toxic “securitized investment vehicles” would be divvied up and sent to colleges and universities from coast to coast (and, where possible, would involve “home town” mortgages in the same locale as the school), along with a relatively simple analytical framework based on pre-bubble housing prices, income guidelines, etc.

The task of the students in the National Class Project would not be to solve the crisis: their job would be to conduct fast, basic research upon which a stable solution would be built. Students would populate a national and publicly-transparent database containing the quick-and-dirty “Analyzed Market Value” (AMV) ™ for each property, and then divide mortgages into three, broad categories (with as many substrata as you’d like):
1. Solid. The AMV roughly corresponds to the mortgage value, and the income of the home owner is such that paying off the mortgage is highly likely.

2. Shaky. The AMV is “off” by, say, 15-20% (let Paul Krugman pick the range.) The mortgage is too high for the real value, and/or the income of the home owner is too low. This is the category on which the vast majority of bailout money would be focused (see the “New American Homestead Act” (NAHA) ™ below.)

3. Shit. There is no way on Earth this mortgage should have been written. The owner will not have access to the FRA (see below) and will probably lose their property, but will receive some form of boilerplate bankruptcy protection. The lender of record will be fined for predatory and deceptive practices.
At the end of the exercise we will have a close-enough-for-government-work answer to “What is all this paper worth?”

Next step: What to do about it?
Part II: A New American Homestead Act
For every single dollar proposed by the federal government to backstop failing Wall Street plutocrats, three dollars must go into a Federal Refinancing Authority (FRA).

Any homeowner in the “Shaky” category with a single residence who has taken out a mortgage in the last ten years and is willing to promise (within reason) to hold onto and live in that property for the next five years can apply to refinance down to the Analyzed Market Value.

The FRA will pick up half the cost of the reduction and the lender will eat the other half. Homeowners will see the value of their property drop, but not to an unreasonable level. Lending institutions will take a small but sustainable hit. And taxpayers will shoulder a fraction of the burden they would otherwise have to.

The FRA will come with a sunset provision and will disappear two years from inception.
Part III. The Ownership Equity Society.
For every dollar that goes towards backstopping a bank or Wall Street firm, that institution will issue one dollar’s worth of non-voting preferred stock to be held in trust for the citizens of the United States and used to help fund national infrastructure projects.
Part IV: Capitalize and Trade.
The federal government is in the driver's seat here and should damn well act like it. The Fed will make a one-time offer buy the “Shit” properties at their Analyzed Market Value plus 5%, take it or leave it. Firms that bought and sold that iron pyrite as if it were gold can hold it and take their chances, or take the loss for some cash on the barrelhead.

The properties the government ends up owning will be parceled up and sold off, where possible, to individuals and institutions that can demonstrate a reasonable plan for putting them to work for the public good (schools, community organizations, research parks, after-school/career academy programs, social enterprise programs, etc.)

All proceeds from the program will go towards public investments in alternative energy research and incubation.
Part V: Regulate, regulate, regulate.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm down with it. If I can drive you to Washington, Drifty, just say the word.

Anonymous said...

Drifty for motherfucking President!!!!1!!

Anonymous said...

There. That wasn't so hard was it? Actually it was pretty simple and straightforward. A truly reasonable first step in the right direction.

I'll just bet that there's at least 100 people out there as bright as Driftglass and in a position to write something like this up and present it to Congress.

Anonymous said...

Presidenting is hard work.

NOT.

Naturally, that is too reasonable a plan to even be considered.

Anonymous said...

good stuff, the more of this stuff (reality oriented empirically based thinking) flying around in the ether the better

hopefully it starts to corrode the vast quantities of stoopid and evil

Anonymous said...

DG,

WOW.

WOW!

Now, how can something this simple and elegant be put into Dodd's hands and turned into law?

SP

Chris in Seattle said...

I hope this plan has been e-mailed to Dodd and Frank and every member of their committees as well as to Obama. (Sending it to McCain would be as big a waste of time as say... sending Dubya to Harvard Business School for an MBA) My only problem with it is step IV. I think this is to a large degree what the movers and shakers and great speculators have been after all along: The chance to grab vast numbers of properties at pennies on the dollar, and screw the homelessness and bankruptcies <== opps, we don't have those after Refuckyoucan "reform" ... they cause.

Anyone else hear that sales of yachts over 100 ft long have hit records? The super rich are too busy wallowing in their, whatever they wallow in, to shed tears for poverty and misery. But hey...

Don't get me wrong. This is idea far superior than anything else I've heard of so far.

Anonymous said...

drifty:

Just brilliant. Great plan. Too bad it goes over the head of most of our politicians in DC. Made more sense than anything I've heard yet.

By the way, "from Harvard to Prairie State", are those meant to be extremes? Is that Prairie State in "da Heights" you speak of? I grew up, many years ago, about a mile from there. Got a real laugh from that.

Just keep it coming...

Anonymous said...

Very well thought out and I commend you. The cynical commie in me says it will never happen, but if something resembling this is done your last three words are paramount.
Don't we the people own an insurance company now? I'd really love to play with that toy...

Cirze said...

Well said (and thought out), Dg,

Unfortunately (in reverse) you have hit the proverbial whatever upside the head (as they say in crackerville).

What is all this paper really worth?

And no one wants to know that (or wants Y O U to know that). Do you really believe they don't have a few economists to run these numbers? Ha! That's all they do is run numbers.

You have, however, brilliantly exposed this exposé.

Very, very smart guys are pretending that no one knows the extent of the problem when the actuality is that they first determined the numbers (in all your nifty categories) and then decided exactly how to deal with them:

Through you (us), er, your/our money.

Nice analysis though. Heck, I thought about sending one to D.C. myself, but then remembered (before I put a lot of effort into it) that Dennis had Michael Hudson on his economic team, and therefore, mine would be superfluous.

Not that anyone thinks Dennis knows anything (although my 78-year-old Mother tonight said she saw him on TV and he sounded like the smartest guy in the room - but I digress) - certainly not enough to be a serious candidate for P R E S I D E N T.

(As are you - but I've said it before and cannot be naysayed now.)

Carry on.

Suzan