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The Mortgage Mess Explained Simply
I caught this on NPR today
http://thisamericanlife.org/Radio_Ep...px?episode=355 It is an excellent in that it explains the frenzy that the world of mortgage backed securities became over the last 5 years. If anyone is confused about the how and why we are in this catastrophe today, and wants s simple, interesting understanding of it, this is well worth your time to have a listen. |
Love this American Life. One of my favorite public broadcasting shows. I like to get it as a podcast on my IPOD. I will check it out as I have not heard it yet. Thanks
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I read the transcript, great stuff - thanks hooper
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Good stuff, Hoop, Thanks.
I liked the quote-" Everybody deluded themselves,thinking they could throw out the old rules of banking." We never,ever, would been involved in this mess if the old rules weren't thrown out, imho. My understanding of the old rules of needing 20% down to obtain a mortgage and a limit on the amount you could borrow determined by your income was part of the Glass-Spigel act. That act was thrown out during the Clinton Administration, allowing no down payment and inerest only payment loans. From what i see it was to make houses affordable to everyone and therefore a political move to get votes. Looks to me like we were sold out for votes. :( I would still like to know who initiated and threw out the Glass-Spigel act. Can anybody shed any light on that? :huh: I have sent my congressman the question of who and why,but feel it will be awhile before i get an answer. |
Phil Gramm
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I have not listened to it yet but I will... but the one thing I don't understand, I have read in several places...while the amount of mortgage failures is large, the percentage of "bad" mortgages compared to the total is not. It is something like 10% of the mortgages which are bad, many of which could be restructured and only about small % are really bad. I don't understand how something less than 10% of the bad mortgages can cause this total collapse of these huge banks.
Also,they write off these as worthless...which they are not. There is a house that is worth something, it is not zero. It may be 20-50% less than a few years ago but it is not zero. |
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The government plan looked like it meant to buy blocks of risky loans to take the liability off of the lenders and sort it out themselves. -spence |
Yeah, I understand the intent of the rescue package but I don't understand how when 90+% of the loans are sound how it could get to the point where you loose big banks like this. IMO this is largely psychological...probably a "vast left-wing conspiracy" to gain votes somehow:rotf2:
Honestly though, I hope this ship can be righted and sail on. It is very unnerving to watch play out... I am trying to concentrate on important things, like fishing. |
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Additionally the scheme gave companies false confidence that they didn't need to protect themselves from a large percentage of defaults. So the economy slows down, foreclosures skyrocket, and the lenders don't have the resources to pay the bills for those holding the liability on the loan. It's like any business, at the end of the day you either need to have a black balance sheet or credit to get a loan. Lacking either and you can't keep the lights on. At least, that's how I think it happened. -spence |
Sounds about right to me.
I still don't think a 'shoot from the hip' bailout is the best way to go, glad to see some step back and think about it. |
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McCain sure looked stupid claiming a personal victory before it was all said and done. But my real anger is toward the House Republicans. The fact that they would submarine the bill because Pelosi made a silly partisan comment is absolutely pathetic. She also needs to get control of her own side of the House. -spence |
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http://www.investopedia.com/articles...603.asp?Page=1 Conclusion Although the barrier between commercial and investment banking aimed to prevent a loss of deposits in the event of investment failures, the reasons for the repeal of the GSA and the establishment of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act show that even regulatory attempts for safety can have adverse effects. Dave, very good question I bet they will be a while getting back to you Maybe I should raise the question to my congressman as well I don't think many around here have a clue what or how clueless Barney Frank is :hs: he is part of the problem, time for him to be part of the solution or join the unemployed:wall: |
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Thanks, good stuff. Got some reading to do.
"Vote paves way for financial services modernization. " Pfttt- in this case it should of been -"No road like the old road." :( |
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I feel like someone just pushed the reset button...... |
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the repeal of glass steagall is irrelevent.
the types of instruments that initially got us into trouble were $2 trillion of sub-prime mortgages underwritten from 2002-2007. that's the countrywides, indymacs, and wamus that didn't have investment banking operations to speak of. this is all a symptom of the money supply being ballooned by that idiot greenspan. take a look at this chart. from 1987 to present, greenspan and his protege bernanke more than quadrupled one measure of the money supply, while at the same time, the economy (not pictured) only doubled. http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2...ax_630_378.png this constant increase in the money supply - which was intended to lower interest rates, encouraged investment banks like bear stearns and lehman and insurance companies like AIG (neither of which had any commercial or home lending operations) to assume huge amounts of leverage - loans and derivatives contracts that were 30-60x a firm's capital. because the fed gave them a false sense of security by keeping rates low. if the fed had not meddled, you would have seen a natural deleveraging process (slow down loans and derivatives contracts) occur. because leverage only works for you when the market is going up. on the way down, it bites you in the arse. all this talk about regulation is really moot. the real culprit is the federal reserve. |
as for the origins of the sub-prime mess, see attached. greenspan spiking the punch bowl was the monetary gasoline on the fire.
note date of article and presidential administration. see paragraph 8. it is prophetic. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpag...gewanted=print Quote:
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I still think this is way over blown. There are 14 trillion in GOOD loans in which they are making money on. 2 trillion are bad...but they are BACKED BY REAL PROPERTY, they are not worthless. OK, I grant you they are not worth what they were but even discounted at 50% would be conservative. They are not worthless as they are being written off as. Did they just leverage the bad loans? if not they leveraged the good ones too.
IMO (clearly I am no economist) the real problem started with the 110% financing with no docs...that was insane. I never understood that logic...but then again I am no mortgage broker. I can tell you where I live every illegal on this island jumped on that...the good thing this event has flushed them out like bad water in a clogged toilet. Frankly I am not a fan of the bail out. If I go to Las Vegas and loose who bails me out? I don't care about the fall out. Let them take it in the ass. If it caves in the entire global markets so be it, as long as they loose their ass. That is how I feel. |
sandman, bad mortgage loans are a drop in the bucket compared to the $1.4 quadrillion global derivatives time bomb that is ticking away.
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quadrillion?? dang.
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yeah, that's a thousand trillion.
now you know why the banks around the world are acting funny. |
amazing. I have learned a ton lately... lots from you and lots from simply paying attention.
simply amazing. |
it's gonna cost $5 trillion to clean this up (on our shores).
not $700 B. and you wonder why the stock market is tanking. |
wow.
no....double wow |
yeah, i wasn't kidding when i posted a few days ago that i threw up thinking about this.
i don't think the american public gets the magnitude of the mess (but it seems to be reflected in the daily stock market carnage). you know, this is a mess 20+ years in the making, largely perpetrated by the federal reserve. NOT CLINTON, NOT BUSH. whoever ends up winning the election is gonna have their hands full. i genuinely feel sorry for him, there's not much he can do, unless he hijacks the federal reserve and SHUTS DOWN THE PRINTING PRESSES. |
:(
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