FHFA: Statement of Director Mark A. Calabria

Investor Update
September 10, 2019

Source: FHFA

Chairman Crapo, Ranking Member Brown, and distinguished members of the Committee, thank you for the invitation to appear at this morning’s hearing. I can think of few issues in our financial system more in need of our attention.

Our nation’s housing finance system is in urgent need of reform. The status quo poses significant risk to taxpayers, homeowners, renters, and the entire financial system.

I want to thank Secretary Mnuchin and Secretary Carson for their efforts to develop comprehensive housing finance reform plans. They lay out a responsible roadmap to build a more resilient housing finance system that protects taxpayers and mortgage access. I also thank Secretary Mnuchin for the opportunity to have offered commentary on Treasury’s plan during its development.

These plans are broadly consistent with my top priorities, which are to cement FHFA as a world-class regulator and to restore Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (“the Enterprises”) to safe and sound condition by building capital to match their risk profiles. Building capital would also begin the process to end the Enterprise conservatorships, which have lasted more than 11 years, far longer than any other conservatorship.

A root cause of the 2008 financial crisis was imprudent mortgage credit risk backed by insufficient capital. This fundamental problem remains unresolved today. While borrower average credit scores have modestly improved, the Enterprises’ shares of low-down-payment and high debt-to-income mortgages are back to 2004 levels. Fueling rapidly rising home prices with easy mortgage credit from under-capitalized entities is a mistake. We should not repeat it.

In their current financial condition, the Enterprises are not equipped to withstand a downturn in the housing market. The Enterprises own or guarantee a combined $5.5 trillion in single and multifamily mortgages out of a $12 trillion combined market. Yet with just $6 billion in allowable capital reserves, the Enterprises’ combined leverage ratio is nearly a thousand to one.

In comparison, the nation’s largest financial institutions have an average leverage ratio of roughly ten to one.[1]

The 2019 Dodd-Frank Act Stress Test (DFAST) demonstrated the consequences of inaction. In the last crisis, from the market peak in the summer of 2006 to the bottom in 2012, housing prices declined by 27 percent. The 2019 DFAST modeled a scenario where residential real estate prices decline by 25 percent. Under such conditions, the Enterprises forecasted combined total losses of $43.3 billion during the stress-test period.

Given that housing supply appears to have become more inelastic since the crisis, we should expect greater price volatility going forward.

Our housing finance system also undercuts sustainable homeownership. The Enterprises have expanded with the economy recently yet maintained risk and capital levels that ensure they will fail in a downturn. This pro-cyclical pattern harms low-income borrowers, making it easier to buy homes beyond their means when the economy is strong and harder to keep those homes when the economy is weak.

Our housing finance system is supposed to serve homeowners and renters while protecting taxpayers. Currently, it fails on both counts. The Administration’s plans aim to address these problems.

Only Congress, however, can enact the structural reforms needed to fix today’s broken model.

Compared to the duopoly of the Enterprises, a fair and competitive secondary mortgage market would better serve borrowers and renters and promote long-term stability by ensuring that inefficient firms do not survive and that no institution is “too big to fail.” We have witnessed in one industry after another that the best guarantee for delivering lower prices to consumers is an open, competitive market, not a monopoly or duopoly.

Some argue reform should wait for a crisis. This shortsighted thinking fueled the last housing market collapse. As we learned then, it is impossible to solve complex problems in the middle of a crisis.

To paraphrase President Kennedy, the time to repair the roof is when the sun is shining. Now is the time for bold reforms because our economy and housing market are strong. This will not always be the case.

I am not forecasting a downturn. Rather, as a prudential regulator, I believe my job is to hope for the best and prepare for the worst.

Therefore, I intend, fulfilling my statutory duties, to strengthen FHFA, enable the Enterprises to build capital to match their risk profiles, and end the Enterprise conservatorships.

These reforms are critical to building a resilient mortgage finance system that protects taxpayers and delivers a diverse range of housing options at market-affordable prices. In the interim, modest reforms can improve FHFA’s ability to do its job.

For example, in June, I asked Congress for the authority, similar to other financial regulators, to develop capital standards for the Enterprises and to charter new enterprises. This common-sense proposal need not wait for broader reform.

In far too many areas of our Nation, we face a housing affordability crisis. Too often this has been the result of misguided local land-use and building regulations. In other areas, housing supply remains limited due to a lack of construction labor. For the Enterprises to play an important role in addressing this crisis, they themselves must be fixed.  Adding more weight to an already cracked foundation is to invite collapse.

Thank you again for the opportunity to testify today. I look forward to answering your questions.

Contacts:

Media: Stefanie Johnson (202) 649-3030 / Corinne Russell (202) 649-3032
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CEO

Alan Jaffa

Alan Jaffa is the Chief Executive Officer for Safeguard Properties, steering the company as the mortgage field services industry leader. He also serves on the board of advisors for SCG Partners, a middle-market private equity fund focused on diversifying and expanding Safeguard Properties’ business model into complimentary markets.

Alan joined Safeguard in 1995, learning the business from the ground up. He was promoted to Chief Operating Officer in 2002, and was named CEO in May 2010. His hands-on experience has given him unique insights as a leader to innovate, improve and strengthen Safeguard’s processes to assure that the company adheres to the highest standards of quality and customer service.

Under Alan’s leadership, Safeguard has grown significantly with strategies that have included new and expanded services, technology investments that deliver higher quality and greater efficiency to clients, and strategic acquisitions. He takes a team approach to process improvement, involving staff at all levels of the organization to address issues, brainstorm solutions, and identify new and better ways to serve clients.

In 2008, Alan was recognized by Crain’s Cleveland Business in its annual “40-Under-40” profile of young leaders. He also was named a NEO Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Of The Year® Award finalist in 2013.

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Esq., General Counsel and EVP

Linda Erkkila

Linda Erkkila is the General Counsel and Executive Vice President for Safeguard Properties, with oversight of legal, human resources, training, and compliance. Linda’s broad scope of oversight covers regulatory issues that impact Safeguard’s operations, risk mitigation, strategic planning, human resources and training initiatives, compliance, insurance, litigation and claims management, and counsel related to mergers, acquisition and joint ventures.

Linda assures that Safeguard’s strategic initiatives align with its resources, leverage opportunities across the company, and contemplate compliance mandates. She has practiced law for 25 years and her experience, both as outside and in-house counsel, covers a wide range of corporate matters, including regulatory disclosure, corporate governance compliance, risk assessment, compensation and benefits, litigation management, and mergers and acquisitions.

Linda earned her JD at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. She holds a degree in economics from Miami University and an MBA. Linda was previously named as both a “Woman of Influence” by HousingWire and as a “Leading Lady” by MReport.

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COO

Michael Greenbaum

Michael Greenbaum is the Chief Operating Officer of Safeguard Properties, where he has played a pivotal role since joining the company in July 2010. Initially brought on as Vice President of REO, Mike’s exceptional leadership and strategic vision quickly propelled him to Vice President of Operations in 2013, and ultimately to COO in 2015. Over his 14-year tenure at Safeguard, Mike has been instrumental in driving change and fostering innovation within the Property Preservation sector, consistently delivering excellence and becoming a trusted partner to clients and investors.

A distinguished graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, Mike earned a degree in Quantitative Economics. Following his graduation, he served in the U.S. Army’s Ordnance Branch, where he specialized in supply chain management. Before his tenure at Safeguard, Mike honed his expertise by managing global supply chains for 13 years, leveraging his military and civilian experience to lead with precision and efficacy.

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CFO

Joe Iafigliola

Joe Iafigliola is the Chief Financial Officer for Safeguard Properties. Joe is responsible for the Control, Quality Assurance, Business Development, Marketing, Accounting, and Information Security departments. At the core of his responsibilities is the drive to ensure that Safeguard’s focus remains rooted in Customer Service = Resolution. Through his executive leadership role, he actively supports SGPNOW.com, an on-demand service geared towards real estate and property management professionals as well as individual home owners in need of inspection and property preservation services. Joe is also an integral force behind Compliance Connections, a branch of Safeguard Properties that allows code enforcement professionals to report violations at properties that can then be addressed by the Safeguard vendor network. Compliance Connections also researches and shares vacant property ordinance information with Safeguard clients.

Joe has an MBA from The Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University, is a Certified Management Accountant (CMA), and holds a bachelor’s degree from The Ohio State University’s Honors Accounting program.

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Business Development

Carrie Tackett

Business Development Safeguard Properties