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On Wed, 30 Jan 2008 12:03:58 -0500, "John" wrote:
"D.Duck" wrote in message m... wrote in message ... On Wed, 30 Jan 2008 09:30:17 -0500, JimH wrote: He promptly blamed the lender as he said he did not know what an ARM was. Doh! Summary of sub-prime write-downs in Q4 UBS $13.7 bln Citigroup $13.7 bln Morgan Stanley $10.3 bln Merrill Lynch $8.4 bln HSBC $3.4 bln Bank of America $3.3 bln Deutsche Bank $3.1 bln Barclays $2.7 bln Royal Bank of Scotland $2.6 bln Credit Agricole $2.3 bln Bear Stearns $1.9 bln Credit Suisse $1.9 bln JP Morgan Chase $1.6 bln Goldman Sachs $1.5 bln Wachovia Bank $1.1 bln Lehman Brothers $0.8 bln SunTrust Bank $0.6 bln Total: $72,900,000,000 and counting! I guess the lender didn't know what an ARM was either. Yep, the lenders screwed up big time. How in hell they thought the loan recipients were going to be able make the payments when the ARM kicked in is beyond me. 60 Minutes had a piece on the debacle last Sunday. Simply put is was greed. All along the food chain people/institutions were getting there commission. It some respects it was kind of like a Ponzi scheme. The 60 Minutes story reported that it was extremely easy to get a loan and figures on applications were not even verified. Add on top of that, because of the cheap easy money, more people were in the market driving the housing boom, which was the only thing that kept Bush's economy growing. My vacation home went up in value about 400%. Of course houses are now sitting - but my taxes will never go back down. I know a lot of people who refinanced their homes and kept taking equity out, I know dumb - but if you get cash in hand and your mortgage payment goes down...... I just hope that they are not caught with an adjustable loan. I *knew* it was Bush's fault! At least now someone admits the economy *was* growing. That's the first I've heard that. -- John H |