The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com

The history of American mortgage lending in pretty colors

Who dominates the U.S. mortgage market? Well, depends when you're asking. I spent some time today playing with the Federal Reserve's Flow of Funds data on home mortgage lending. Here's what I found. First, the long-term picture:

mortgage_longview.gif
Graphic by Feilding Cage/TIME.com

As you can see, thrifts (savings & loan companies and savings banks) were the biggest mortgage lenders until the early 1980s, when their troubles paved the way for the rise of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (a.k.a. the government-sponsored enterprises, or GSEs). Fannie and Freddie remained dominant until about five years ago. For a better view of that, here's the picture over the past decade:

mortgage_shortview.gif
Graphic by Feilding Cage/TIME.com

The quarterly data are a little noisy, I realize (it's actually significantly more work to get the annual numbers, and I don't have time for that right now). That huge mirror movement--banks up, thrifts down--in the fourth quarter of 2006, for example, was the result of several thrifts becoming banks. (For example: Wachovia swallowed up Golden West that quarter and switched it to a bank charter.) But the basic picture is pretty clear: Fannie and Freddie have dominated U.S. mortgage lending since the early 1980s--except from 2004 through 2006, when the asset-backed securities issuers, a.k.a. Wall Street, took over. And that's when the craziest excesses of the mortgage boom happened.

The thing that's most amazing in retrospect is the fact that alarm bells didn't go off all over the place when private securitizers began muscling Fannie and Freddie (and the FHA) aside in 2004. Because of their formerly implicit government guarantee, the GSEs can usually easily outbid their private ABS competitors for mortgages. That's always been the complaint--that the guarantee makes it impossible for truly private companies to compete against them. So when a bunch of private companies were suddenly able to steal market share from the GSEs right and left, shouldn't everybody have been able to sense that something was terribly wrong in mortgageland?


advertisement

About Curious Capitalist

Justin Fox

Justin Fox is TIME's business and economics columnist. This is his blog. Read more

Barbara Kiviat

Barbara Kiviat just celebrated her 5 1/2-year anniversary covering business and economics for TIME magazine. Read more

Feed Icon RSS Feed

AddThis Feed Button

Daily Email

Get The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com in your inbox and never miss a day:
 
Delivered by   FeedBurner

The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com Archives

July 2008
Choose a day to view headlines.

< Previous Month
> Next Month

S M T W T F S
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    

More TIME Blogs

  • Swampland
    A blog about politics by TIME's Karen Tumulty, Joe Klein, Ana Marie Cox, and Jay Carney
  • The China Blog
    Daily detours through the world's fastest changing nation by TIME correspondents
  • Tuned In
    A blog about all things television from TIME's TV critic, James Poniewozik
  • Looking Around
    Reflections on art and architecture by TIME critic Richard Lacayo
  • The Middle East
    TIME correspondents blog about life in the hottest and holiest region in the world
  • Nerd World
    Geek culture blog by TIME's Lev Grossman and The Simpsons' Matt Selman
  • Work In Progress
    A blog about life on the job and the job of life by TIME's Lisa Takeuchi Cullen
advertisement