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Chapter 5. Modern Residential Finance. Chapter 5 Learning Objectives. Understand the major forces that have changed and shaped the residential mortgage market since the end of World War II
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Chapter 5 Modern Residential Finance
Chapter 5Learning Objectives • Understand the major forces that have changed and shaped the residential mortgage market since the end of World War II • Understand how changes in the inflationary environment forced changes in the types of institutions that originated mortgages and in the types of mortgages they offered
History Of Real Estate Finance • 1940s • Preoccupied with World War Two • Veterans Administration created • 1950s • Decade of S&L expansion and stability • Maturity mismatch because of the wide acceptance of the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage • Increased interest rate risk because of fixed-rate mortgages
History Of Real Estate Finance • 1960s • Creeping inflation • Disintermediation • Maturity mismatch • Expansion of secondary mortgage market • Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) created in 1968
History Of Real Estate Finance • 1970s • Inflation increased from 6% to 13% • Interest rate increases decreased housing affordability • Development of Adjustable-Rate Mortgages • Creation of Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) in 1970 • Approval of new mortgage designs: VRM, GPM, and RAM
History Of Real Estate Finance • 1980s • Regulatory and tax law changes • Economic Recovery Act in 1981 produces the Accelerated Cost Recovery System (ACRS) of depreciation • Tax Reform Act in 1986 created the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS)
History Of Real Estate Finance • 1980s • S&L debacle • Due-on-sale and creative financing • Zombie theory • Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA) in 1989
History of Real Estate Finance • An Era of Creative Financing • Late 1970s and early 1980s • Advantages of FHA and VA Loans • Assumable loans • Wraparound financing • Owner financing
History Of Real Estate Finance • 1990s • Subsiding inflation resulted in lower mortgage rates • Refinancing craze • Baby boomers trading up increasing demand for up-scale housing • Internet made mortgage lending national in scope
History Of Real Estate Finance • 1990s • Rapid growth of secondary mortgage market, primarily Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac • Tax Act of 1993 eased passive loss rules and extended non-residential depreciation from 31.5 years to 39 years • Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 set long-term capital gains tax rate at 20% and maximum depreciation recovery rate at 25%
History Of Real Estate Finance • 2000s • Housing craze – Single-family homes entered the speculative investment market • Rapid rise in house prices through first half of decade • 2006 house prices up 87% from 2000 level • Mortgage lending standards relaxed • Rapid growth of secondary mortgage market through Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Wall Street • Massive bailouts of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Wall Street
History Of Real Estate Finance • 2000s • Housing bust of 2007 resulted in deluge of mortgage defaults • September 2008 U.S. Treasury took control of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac • Changing market as house prices fell and lenders tightened standards • Borrowers began to show willingness to walk away from speculative housing investments • S&P downgraded large number of residential mortgage securities as toxic mortgage debt poisoned the global financial system