It’s Easy to Get Mixed Up Over Mortgage Risks

Most voters aren’t going to get hot under the collar about battles in Washington, DC, over bank capital requirements, but they definitely relate to stories about home loans becoming more expensive or less available. That doesn’t mean debate is straightforward, especially once each side starts throwing numbers around.

It’s no surprise that mortgages quickly became a flashpoint in the Federal Reserve’s proposal to overhaul regulation. The immediate fight is over the tougher treatment of loans with smaller down payments, which could make life much harder for low-income and first-time homebuyers. However, there’s another side to this scrap, which exposes both the scale of changes in how risk is measured under the Fed’s proposal and how easy it is to misinterpret what those changes mean.

I need to take you on a brief, slightly geeky trip into the weeds of how banks work out their capital needs, but it’s worth a look because the same story is likely to crop up in credit card debt or auto loans, too. Essentially, the new rules appear to mean that banks have to hold far more capital when they create a mortgage and sell it to federal funding agencies like Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac than if they keep it on their own balance sheet. That would throw a huge spanner in the works of US banking. The two government-sponsored enterprises are cornerstones of the market: Fannie and Freddie hold nearly 50% of outstanding loans for one- to four-family residences.

The problem comes from the risk weighting of banks’ assets and activities: That is the balance sheet measure used to say how much capital a bank needs. Currently, under the Fed’s standardized approach, a mortgage with a down payment of 10% to 20% of the home’s value attracts a risk-weighting of 50% on the loan, plus a 20% addition derived from the Fed’s stress tests on average. So a total of 70%.

That means every $100 of mortgages gets measured as $70 of risk-weighted assets. A bank with a minimum capital requirement of 10% must have at least $7 of equity to back those loans, while they are on its balance sheet.

But things aren’t so simple under the new rules, according to a recent analysis by the Bank Policy Institute, a lobby group. First, that initial 50% risk-weighting gets bumped up to 60%, but on top of that banks also have to add extra protection against operational risks, which are the losses they could suffer from IT failures or having to cough up lawsuit settlements and fines.