tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2098432983500045934.post3176155334561389013..comments2024-03-12T22:19:32.339-04:00Comments on The New Arthurian Economics: Household borrowing hit a hard limit four years before the bottom fell outThe Arthurianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16501331051089400601noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2098432983500045934.post-33621436184077355682016-08-29T17:51:54.545-04:002016-08-29T17:51:54.545-04:00As you pointed out the actual amount borrowed is h...As you pointed out the actual amount borrowed is higher than the increase in debt. This was particularly true just before the 2008 crash.<br />Most of the increased borrowing was being financed by loans funded by private investors through private (non-govt backed) mortgages conduits.<br /><br />http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-DW279_RMBS_G_20140728130506.jpg<br /><br />What is shocking is the degree to which these loans were being liquidated (i.e. paid off). <br /><br />From the late 90's to 2007 there were over $5 trillion in home mortgages financed through private mortgage conduits, but by the time this lending channel stopped lending there were less than $2.4 trillion of those loans outstanding. The rest were already liquidated<br /><br />https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fredgraph.png?g=4t8u<br /><br />Almost all of rest of the mortgages were paid off either by selling the house (at a profit) or by refinancing based on a new higher appraised value of the house. <br /><br />I doubt that the prepayment and liquidation of a mortgage counts towards debt service costs. If it it did count there would have been a <br />huge jump in the debt service cost that was comparable to the increase in debt you see in the years before the crash.jimnoreply@blogger.com