Fraudulent lenders blamed for US crisis
Friday, March 23, 2007
By Rupert Cornwell
American banking regulators defended their handling of the sub-prime
mortgage market yesterday, blaming abusive lending and fraud by unsupervised
lenders for the current surge in defaults that has sent tremors through
credit and financial markets.
Christopher Dodd, chairman of the Democrat-controlled Senate Banking
Committee, said: "Our nation's financial regulators were supposed to be
the cops of the beat, protecting Americans from unscrupulous financial
actors." Instead, "they were spectators for far too long".
Yesterday's hearing by the Committee came the day after the Federal Reserve
indicated it might cut interest rates in the months ahead. That move was
aimed in part at limiting the fallout of the crisis engulfing some banks and
other lenders specialising in loans to borrowers with low incomes or bad
credit ratings.
Among those testifying were top officials of four leading sub-prime lenders:
the American arm of HSBC, Countrywide Financial, WMC Mortgage and First
Financial. A notable absentee was New Century Financial, the second largest
lender and the worst hit by the crisis, which has been ordered to cease all
lending in its home state of California.
Mr Dodd accused the Fed of being aware three years ago that lending
standards were slipping amid the credit boom fuelled by historically low
interest rates. Yet the central bank encouraged the spread of precisely the
sort of adjustable mortgages whose rates are now jumping higher, forcing
overstretched borrowers into default and foreclosure.
"A sort of frenzy gripped the markets," the Connecticut Senator
said. "Many brokers and lenders started selling these complicated
mortgages to lower-income borrowers, many with less than perfect credit."
Both Mr Dodd and his opposite numbers in the House are drawing up new
legislation to clamp down on so-called predatory lending, but fierce
resistance is certain from the financial sector.
Federal regulators say the main problem is that about half of such loans are
issued by state-licensed and standalone mortgage brokers and finance
companies that largely escape federal supervision.
Roger Cole, head of the Fed's bank supervision department, told the
committee: "Given what we know now, yes, we could have done more sooner.
"