📄 Extracted Text (419 words)
27 March 2015
US Fixed Income Weekly
Figure 4: Weak household formation, until recently
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of surveyed banks tightening but not the precise magnitude (Figure 5). There's
also the Qualified Mortgage and Ability to Repay standards introduced last
year by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Special questions in the
Fed's loan officer survey last July showed that the QM and ATR rules had put a
drag on all types of lending at all types of banks. And a review of bank lending
released by the OCC in December showed that mortgage lending was the only
area last year where more banks tightened than eased. And among banks that
tightened in the OCC survey, the main reason was regulatory. Concern about
put-backs from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and litigation from the FHA under
the False Claims act has led banks to limit lending even to agency borrowers.
Although the market seems to be clearing out the lingering housing supply and
the economy and the labor market look likely to repair demand, the availability
of credit could prove to be the lasting constraint. Today's lending standards
reflect limits designed to keep the last decade's boom and bust from
happening again. Borrowers today without the ability to repay will not get a
loan. But it looks like some borrowers with the ability to repay —but with low
FICO scores or with needs that keep them outside the agency or prime jumbo
markets —will also not get a loan. The market is reducing risk today to avoid
risk tomorrow. But it also is likely reducing housing growth today to avoid a
downturn tomorrow. Who should make that tradeoff and how is an open
question.
Page 34 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc,
CONFIDENTIAL — PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e) DB-SDNY-0116638
CONFIDENTIAL SDNY_GM_00262822
EFTA01457200
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