Friday, July 19, 2013


Subprime Loans and the Risk
            Investopedia, a Forbes Media Company, defines a subprime loan as a type of loan offered at a rate above prime to individuals who do not qualify for prime rate loans.  Loan qualification is based on several factors including income, credit rating and assets.  Often, subprime borrowers are turned away from traditional lenders because of low credit ratings or other factors that suggest they have a chance of defaulting on the debt payment. One type, but not the only type, of subprime loan is a home mortgage (Gilbert, 2011).
            During the housing boom, subprime mortgage originations increased from $120 billion in 2001 to $625 billion in 2005 (Gilbert, 2011). According to Gilbert, as of 2005, only 16 percent were used for home purchases. The rest were used for either second mortgages or home refinancing. More than two- thirds of subprime mortgage originations in 2006 were adjustable rate mortgages (ARM). These are mortgages with an initial rate that changes (often upward) after a specified period of time, resulting in higher monthly payments for the borrower (Gilbert, 2011).
            By the end of 2006, subprime delinquencies more than 60 days late jumped to almost 13 percent, compared to 8 percent a year earlier (Kratz, 2007). Foreclosure proceedings were started on about 1.5 million homes during 2007 and this was 53 percent higher than in 2006. While the number of foreclosures continued to increase dramatically in 2008 and 2009, most economic analysis identify the beginning of the long recession as starting with the increase in mortgage failures in 2007 (Gilbert, 2011).
            Before the housing bust, a sprawling business arose in subprime mortgages were issued to people who had decent credit but did not have to prove their income (Reckard, 2013). The explosion of mortgage defaults that began in late 2006 vaporized an entire industry of subprime specialists. The Wall Street firms that had bundled the loans into securities soon began to implode and loans for the credit- challenged disappeared (Reckard, 2013). All of these factors have led to a major decline in stock markets and in the world economy. 
 
Role of leadership Decision Making in the Subprime Loan
            There were many levels of participants in the subprime mortgage lending process which help create the current crises. The policies of lenders and government certainly helped the current crises, but ultimately do not absolve borrowers of responsibility for their debts (Lehrer, 2008). The government tax system encouraged Americans to take out very large mortgages to receive large federal tax benefits. Who is responsible for the current mortgage crisis? Possible culprits include the following (Gilbert, 2011):
1.      Borrowers, who may or may not have lied to lenders in their applications;
2.      Mortgage brokers and lenders, who may or may not have asked the right questions or enough of the right questions or checked on the answers to these questions to justify the loans that they made;
3.      Securitizers (institutions, including commercial banks and investment banks) that combine individual mortgage loans into bundles, divide the bundles into tranches, and sell the resulting collateralized mortgage obligations to investors;
4.      Rating agencies that somehow managed to turn subprime mortgages into prime investments by giving a much higher rating to the collateralized mortgage obligation that the individual mortgages might achieve; and
5.      Investors who purchased these instruments without really knowing what they were buying.
 
Who is responsible for the subprime crisis? According to Benson (2008), the mortgage salespeople and brokers received commissions, but they are not responsible for the crises. The interest and repayment terms of mortgages must, by law, be clearly stated. The initial lenders who securitized the mortgages benefited but are not guilty of causing the whole crises. The agencies that gave securitizations too high ratings were responsible, but the investors should have been more skeptical (Benson, 2008). Borrowers are not responsible for the crises, but are not necessarily victims either. They were given the terms of the loans upfront and willingly signed the documents.

Subprime Loan and Social Responsibility
            According to Watkins (2011), subprime mortgages offered an opportunity to tap a new source of profits, namely, the increase in housing prices. The Goldman Rule, pursue profitable opportunities regardless the effects of other, rests on the assumption that increases in profitable opportunities increase the opportunity cost of ethical behavior (Watkins, 2011). Subprime loans offered the opportunity for financial institutions gain hefty profits. The opportunity offered from issuing subprime loans proved too great a temptation and passing off the risks to others provided an even greater temptation (Watkins, 2011).
Ethics is defined as a system of rules or standards governing the conduct of a person or group. There is no generally agreed upon body of ethical rules or interpretations as there is for law (Gilbert, 2011). Possible rules or standards as defined by Gilbert (2011) that would apply in business settings include the following:
1.      Treat others fairly;
2.      Observe the rights of others and the duties they impose;
3.      Do not hurt others, directly or indirectly;
4.      Follow the law;
5.      Treat others as you wish to be treated;
6.      Treat others as you have been treated;
7.      Be merciful; and
8.      Be just. 
 
 
Goldman Sachs engaged in ethically questionable activities when the company successfully persuaded AIG to sell credit default swaps for which it earned $14 billion (Watkins, 2011). With the courtesy of U.S. tax payers, Goldman Sachs securitized the subprime mortgages and sold them to unsuspected investors. In April 2010, the Securities and Exchange Commission claimed Goldman Sachs sold investors a subprime mortgage investment that was secretly designed to lose value (Watkins, 2011).
            In the aftermath of the subprime loans crisis, new lending rules and regulations were put into place to address subprime mortgage lending. Mortgage defaults that began in 2006 have vaporized an entire industry of subprime lending. Today’s high-risk lenders differ from those during the housing boom in key ways (Reckard, 2013). Subprime lenders care because they are holding loans on their books rather than selling them to investors (Reckard, 2013). Subprime mortgage lenders now care about borrowers’ collateral, down payments, income, and ability to pay the mortgage. Today there are borrowers who can make a big down payment, have documents that prove they have the income to pay the loan, and have a good recent job history- but have a credit score that would make it impossible to receive a loan (Reckard, 2013).

 References
Benson, G. (2008). Collaborative Fiasco. Bloomberg Business Week. Retrieved on 19
Finger, R. (2012). Meet The New Subprime: It Will Cost Us Billions. Forbes. Retrieved on
Gilbert, J. (2011). Moral Duties in Business and Their Societal Impacts: The Case of the Subprime
            Lending Mess. Business and Society Review, 116:1 87-107.
Kratz, E. (2007). The Risk in Subprime. CNN Money. Retrieved on 18 July 2013  from: http://money.cnn.com/2007/02/28/magazines/fortune/subprime.fortune/
Lehrer, E. (2008). Willing Customers. Bloomberg Business Week. Retrieved on 19 July 2013 from:        http://www.businessweek.com/debateroom/archives/2008/03/subprimeborrowersnotinnocents.html
Paletta, D. & Enrich, D. (2008). Crises Deepens and Big Bank Fails. The Wall Street Journal.
            Retrieved 20 July 2013 from http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121581435073947103.html
Pulliam, S., Scannell, K., Lucchetti, A., & Ng, S. (2010). Wall Street Probe Widens. The Wall
            Street Journal. Retrieved 19 July 2013 from:
Reckard, S. (2013). Lenders venturing back into subprime market. LA Times. Retrieved on 19              July 2013 from:
Thiel, C., Harkrider, L. & Mumford, M. (2012). Leader Ethical Decision- Making in
            Organizations: Strategies for Sensemaking. Journal of Business Ethics, 107, 49-64.
Watkins, J. (2011). Banking Ethics and the Goldman Rule. Journal of Economic Issues, Vol.
            XLV, No. 2, pp. 363-371.