Issue highlights need for better disclosures in lending
Monday, May 02, 2005
By Jack Guttentag
Inman News
"I understand that in pending federal legislation
aimed at predatory lending, lenders will be prohibited from refinancing a
mortgage unless there is a 'tangible net benefit' to the borrower...Is this a
good rule?"
It is not
a good rule because it would make lenders responsible for something over which
they have little or no control.
All or
virtually all refinanced mortgages provide tangible benefits, otherwise
borrowers wouldn't do them. A borrower who closes a refinance, only to find
that there is no benefit, has three days to rescind. Even predatory lenders,
who are the focus of the proposed legislation, provide a benefit to the
refinancing borrower.
The
problem is that in exchange for the benefit, the predator extracts a pound of
flesh. That's why the proposed legislation requires a "net" benefit,
meaning that the benefit outweighs the cost. Unfortunately, there is no way
that a lender can determine this. Whether the benefit outweighs the cost in any
particular case depends heavily on what is in the borrower's head.
This will
become clear from looking at the four main reasons that borrowers refinance: to
reduce costs, raise cash, reduce monthly payments, and reduce interest-rate
risk.
- Reduce
costs: A cost-reduction refinance is one in which the new interest rate or
mortgage insurance premium is lower than the existing one. In most cases,
however, the borrower incurs costs upfront. If there is to be a "net
benefit," therefore, the future savings must outweigh the upfront costs.
But future
savings depend, among other things, on how long the borrower expects to have
the mortgage. This critical piece of information, if it is anywhere, is in the
borrower's head.
: Some of the
worst market abuses arise on "cash-out" refinances, where the motive
is to raise cash. Suppose that in raising $5,000 this way, Doe has to accept a
7 percent loan as replacement for his current 6 percent loan, and $5,000 in
refinance costs that are tacked on to his loan balance. The tangible benefit of
$5,000 in cash is clear, but is it a net benefit?
There is
no objective way for the lender to answer the question. The price seems high,
but maybe the borrower needs the $5,000 to pay for life-saving medicine for his
children? Again, the answer is in the head of the borrower.
It could
be argued that whether there is a net benefit also should depend on the
borrower's options. If the borrower could raise the $5,000 elsewhere at a much
lower cost, the finding should be that there is no net benefit. It is neither
feasible nor fair, however, to make lenders responsible for assessing their
customers' options.
- Reduce
Monthly Payments: Some borrowers are willing to pay a stiff price, in the
form of wealth reduction in the future, in order to reduce their monthly
payments now. Frequently this involves converting a fixed-rate loan into an
adjustable carrying a lower rate, often with an interest-only option, for a
limited period. Costs are usually tacked on to the balance.
Whether
there is a net benefit depends in good part on how critical it is to the
borrower to lower the payment. Perhaps the alternative to a payment reduction
is default. Only the borrower knows.
- Avoid
Risk of Rising Rates on an ARM
: With interest rates widely expected to rise, many holders of
adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) are considering converting them to fixed-rate
mortgages. The borrowers making the switch are willing to pay a higher rate now
in exchange for future rate certainty. On this issue, lenders are in no
position to substitute their judgment for the borrowers'.
In sum,
regardless of why borrowers refinance, the question of whether they receive a
net benefit from it is for borrowers alone to answer. Lenders do not have the
information needed to second-guess them.
On the
other hand, borrowers often make their decisions on the basis of incomplete and
sometimes misleading information. Instead of requiring lenders to assume
responsibility for borrowers' decisions, let's make them responsible for
providing borrowers with the information they need to make their own decisions.
The formulation
of disclosure rules has long been viewed as a proper responsibility of
government, since this is the only way to assure uniformity of disclosures
across the market. But the federal government has proven it is not up to this
task. The existing mandatory disclosure rules are obsolete and shamefully
inadequate. Every attempt to fix them gets bogged down in political infighting.
It is time to try another approach. Keep tuned.
The
writer is Professor of Finance Emeritus at the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania. Comments and questions can be left at www.mtgprofessor.com.
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Copyright 2005 Jack Guttentag