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![]() Well, I just can't see this as a smoking gun. Frank Boettcher wrote: Sorry for that. *If many are like you we will be doomed to repeat.. Did you read Dave's earlier post in this thread? There are a lot of elements coming together to create this implosion... he called it 'the Perfect Storm' which is apt. There is no one single cause. 1st- the rate of default, as a percent, has not gone up all that much... less than a 10% increase overall IIRC Won't take the time to research to dispute those figures, but doesn't take much to tilt the scale, open the flood gates. The flood gates won't open unless there is a market collapse, caused by loss of confidence... say for example, if you are watching a market downturn and suddenly find out your insurance company is bankrupt & defaulting.... then you sell for whatever you can get. Like I said, it's not just one single root cause. 2nd- even if you take a dim view of poor people getting mortgages, and insist they would take a mortgage no more seriously than they would paying rent, it's hard to fathom why they would go to the trouble... it's time consuming and complicated to apply for a mortgage. Loan originators make it fairly easy these days. And the reason why there are 'loan originators' in the first place is the banking deregulation about reselling mortgages. For the past few years, most banks have been shucking their mortgages as fast as they can. All they were doing was originating loans for the fees generated, so why would they care about risk? I think I posted earlier that an individual left my employ, gave up twelve years tenure and a bright future as one who "adds value to something that is mined or grown" to become a loan originator. *This confused me, I didn't know why, thought this was just a bank clerical job. *No, he said, you can make a ton of money, the gov has fixed it so any warm body can qualify, I make my commission and the loan gets passed on to Fannie and Freddie. Well, he certainly was not fully informed on the business. I bet he's not making a "ton of money" any more. The CRA is part of what went wrong, but without the other pieces falling into place... deregulation, lack of accounting oversight, lack of diligence, and exeptions to reserve requirements... the mess would be so much smaller as to not be worth a front-page headline. Some people are determined to blame Allan Greenspan for keeping interest rates so low that credit was almost free to banks & other financial institutions, and so they couldn't resist gambling with this almost-free money. And he certainly played a part (although some of his more lucid public comments, back in the day, were on the need for consistent accounting & auditing standards and the need for diligent risk assessment). People only hear what they want to hear! Regards- Doug King |
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