[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 146 (2000), Part 18] [Extensions of Remarks] [Page 27284] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]THE DEATH OF MICHAEL P. MORTARA ______ HON. JAMES A. LEACH of iowa in the house of representatives Friday, December 15, 2000 Mr. LEACH. Mr. Speaker, I wish to note the passing of an individual of considerable stature in the history of this nation's financial system, Michael P. Mortara. Mr. Mortara, who was the victim of an aneurysm last month, was instrumental in the creation of mortgage- backed securities, a market now valued at over $2 trillion. By devising a means for banks to package and sell mortgage loans to the broader capital markets, he helped enlarge the pool of credit available to millions of middle and low income American families, making it possible for them to purchase their first homes at affordable mortgage rates. Asset securitization, as the technique that Mr. Mortara helped pioneer is called, is the primary tool Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have used the carry out their missions--the establishment and maintenance of a stable and fluid nationwide secondary mortgage market essential to widespread, affordable housing finance. This technique was also adapted with success by the Resolution Trust Company, saving American taxpayers millions of dollars, and it has served as a model for housing finance markets around the world. In addition to his contribution to our country's economic well-being, Mr. Mortara was dedicated to the community in which he lived, the community in which he worked, as well as to his family--his wife Virginia and his two sons, Michael and Matthew. At his death, Mr. Mortara was a senior member of the Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs. There and wherever he came into contact with them, he mentored and guided hundreds of young men and women throughout their careers. He served on many educational boards, including those of Georgetown University, The Taft School, Rumsey Hall School, and the Connecticut Junior Republic. Mr. Mortara was the embodiment of a free-enterprise minded American citizen--a proponent of free markets, education, and family values. Mr. Speaker, what Mr. Mortara's life symbolizes is the mark an individual can make in the private sector that has positive ramifications for society as a whole. It is innovations in finance that have helped curb inflation and in the case of the secondary housing securities market made access to home ownership available to millions who would otherwise be precluded from participation in the American dream. Mr. Mortara will be much missed by this family and colleagues and so many who never knew him but benefited from the innovations in finance that he pioneered. ____________________