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On Fri, 10 Oct 2008 14:09:55 -0500, "jlrogers±³©"
wrote: wrote in message ... ...something you'd rather sweep under the rug in the rush to blame those evil libby-rull Democrats! Dave wrote: Nope. I blame the failures of the investment banks on their own stupidity in over-leveraging their capital and their undue concentration of assets. The guvmint should have let all of them run to the bankruptcy courts if they couldn't continue to meet their obligations, instead of bailing them out. OK, good so far. The only problem I have is that if we simply let the banks fail in an economy that has grown increasingly dependent on credit.... addicted to it, you might say.... then failure will spread quickly thru every level of the economy. Bank failure was one of the tripwires of the Great Depression. But apparently Thunder doesn't know the difference between a bank and an investment bank. No one who did would mention CRA in the same sentence with investment bank. That's why I suggested he take a nap while those who know something about the subject discuss it. I think I got it. We have a financial crisis caused by the CRA and commercial banks giving mortgages to unsuitable lenders. But the investment banks have nothing at all to do with the CRA and they're the biggest part of this crisis. Maybe you can explain just a little further Dave. You may be making a leap of faith here that I can't follow.... DSK Many investment banks bought huge amounts of the mortgages and packaged them into "Collateralized Mortgage Obligations" ("CMO"), slicing and dicing the packages into multiple tranches and then selling the various tranches to investors, including banks, private investors, and hedge funds. The MBA's on Wall Street kept getting wilder and wilder until no one knew what they were buying anymore, or what the CMOs were worth. When rates went up and mortgage holders with adjustable rate mortgages started defaulting some of the higher yielding tranches (riskier tranches) cash flow became impaired and investors started asking hard questions. The answers scared them and they quit buying. Market values fell, mark to market rules required write downs, and now we are in free fall. And it didn't help that the lowest yielding, most secure tranches were often rated AAA by the rating agencies, so investors thought they were getting a sound investment. It turns out that many of those so called triple A's became riddled with defaults. But Doug, when problem solving you always need to look for root cause. The red X in statistical DOE terms. There are many contributing factors, however the root cause, the red X is simply setting up a system to give people who could not afford these properties and loans in the first place a way to get them with no skin in the game. That's why I blame the dems. Just another social engineering experiment gone bad. If the systems were not set up, they wouldn't get the loans, they wouldn't get the properties, they wouldn't default the loans, the loan originators, incentified by commission and no skin in the game wouldn't have sprouted on every street corner, the stinky CMO's would never have been created, the CEO's of Fannie and Freddie would not have become multimillionaires based on an incentive system that resulted from quantitiy of loans made, demand for housing wouldn't have accelerated artificially driving prices higher, and the list goes on......... On the other side of the once heated market is the pre-construction flipper. Another entity with no skin in the game, but at least in that game someone other than the taxpayer had to take the hit. Frank |
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