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Quick Fact: Fox & Friends pushes tired myth that Fannie and Freddie caused economic crisis

April 22, 2010 8:38 am ET — 183 Comments

Fox & Friends advanced the false claim that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were "the original cause" of the economic crisis. In fact, as economist Dean Baker has stated, holding Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac responsible for the financial disaster is "absurd on its face."

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Fox & Friends: Fannie and Freddie "got us into trouble in the first place," "original cause" of financial crisis

From the April 22 edition of Fox News' Fox & Friends:

BRIAN KILMEADE (co-host): Stuart, tell me about Chris Dodd writing this bill.

STUART VARNEY (Fox Business host): OK, he wrote the financial reform bill, which essentially beats up on bankers, right? It beats up on Wall Street -- it regulates Wall Street. Not part of that reform effort is the whole housing market -- Fannie and Freddie.

STEVE DOOCY (co-host): Wait a minute. Wait, wait -- stop right there. That's what got us into trouble in the first place.

VARNEY: Thank you, Steve. You're absolutely right.

Go back to square one. Go right back to the beginning. What started the panic of '08 and the recession of '09. What started it? The collapse of the housing market. Why did the housing market collapse? Because politicians had forced Fannie and Freddie to accept low-grade mortgages where they knew -- they were trying to shoehorn people into horses they could not afford. The mortgages went belly-up, Fannie and Freddie ran into trouble, the housing market collapsed. Now, that whole scenario -- that whole mess-up of housing, Fannie and Freddie -- that's not included in this reform bill.

[...]

VARNEY: Fannie and Freddie were the way you shoehorned relatively poor people into houses they could not afford. The Democrats were part of that push in that area. Why are we beating up on the bankers now? Good political reasons. It makes good politics. It does not make good politics to start reining in Fannie and Freddie and reforming them, because they're the original cause of this problem.

FACT: Economist says holding Fannie and Freddie responsible is "absurd"

Economist Dean Baker: Claim that Fannie and Freddie "responsible for the financial disaster is absurd on its face." Economist Dean Baker reported in September 2008 that the accusation that "the financial crisis is attributable to the close government relationship with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac" is "obviously not true." He further wrote:

Fannie and Freddie got into subprime junk and helped fuel the housing bubble, but they were trailing the irrational exuberance of the private sector. They lost market share in the years 2002-2007, as the volume of private issue mortgage backed securities exploded. In short, while Fannie and Freddie were completely irresponsible in their lending practices, the claim that they were responsible for the financial disaster is absurd on its face -- kind of like the claim that the earth is flat.

Indeed, in a 2006 Securities and Exchange Commission filing covering its activities in 2004, Fannie Mae stated (report available here): "We did not participate in large amounts of these non-traditional mortgages in 2004 and 2005." In the report, Fannie Mae also noted the growth of subprime lending and reported, "These trends and our decision not to participate in large amounts of these non-traditional mortgages contributed to a significant loss in our share of new single-family mortgage-related securities issuances to private-label issuers during this period." In a 2006 Federal Reserve analysis, Souphala Chomsisengphet, a financial economist at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Anthony Pennington-Cross, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, reported that the value of the subprime market had increased from $65 billion in 1995 originations to $332 billion in 2003.

Daniel Gross: Investment banks to blame for subprime loans. In an October 2008 Newsweek article, Daniel Gross wrote:

There was a culture of stupid, reckless lending, of which Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the subprime lenders were an integral part. But the dumb lending virus originated in Greenwich, Ct., midtown Manhattan, and Southern California, not Eastchester, Brownsville, and Washington. Investment banks created a demand for subprime loans because they saw it as a new asset class that they could dominate. They made subprime loans for the same reason they made other loans: They could get paid for making the loans, for turning them into securities, and for trading them --frequently using borrowed capital.

Former Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld: Fannie and Freddie played "de minimis" role. Gross further reported that the following happened during testimony by Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform:

At Monday's hearing, Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., gamely tried to pin Lehman's demise on Fannie and Freddie. After comparing Lehman's small political contributions with Fannie and Freddie's much larger ones, Mica asked Fuld what role Fannie and Freddie's failure played in Lehman's demise. Fuld's response: "De minimis."

From Fuld's testimony:

MICA: And one of your big com -- well, one of the big packagers, or the competitor, so to speak, was Fannie Mae, which was deep into this. And you were -- you were dealing in some of the paper, I think, for secondary markets and other securitized mortgage paper, to basically package it and make money off it. Is that right?

FULD: Yes, sir.

MICA: What was Lehman Brothers' exposure to the debt of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and what role did their collapse play in precipitating some of your financial troubles?

FULD: Our --

MICA: It didn't matter or you --

FULD: Our exposure to both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was de minimis, sir.

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    • Author by newzhound (April 22, 2010 9:10 am ET)
      5  
      Why is this so hard to understand? Subprime lending exploded because it took place in an unregulated hothouse environment.

      Fannie, Freddie, banks and thrifts are all regulated by the Federal government and/or the respective states. Yes, they did their best to get into the game after things appeared to have really taken off. That amounted to throwing some large sticks of wood onto a roaring bonfire. It helped things keep going a bit longer - but it sure didn't start it.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Andy Kreiss (April 22, 2010 9:53 am ET)
        4  
        Sure, newzhound, you're right, but that's all a bit complicated for those worshiping at the altar of St. Ronald. They like one or two word answers.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by nerzog (April 22, 2010 10:00 am ET)
        3  
        Exactly. They were relatively small players in the whole debacle, but they're convenient whipping boys for the Troglodytes, since they can tie them to Barney Frank.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 10:12 am ET)
      1 10
      Fox should do their homework. It was not just Fannie and Freddie, it was that plus countless other government intrusions into the free markets such as:

      1. Community Reinvestment Act
      2. Land-use restrictions/zoning
      3. Artificial interest rate manipulation
      4. Tax incentives (e.g. mortgage interest deductions)
      5. Fannie/Freddie
      6. Loan programs (FHA)
      7. Federal Reserve blocking M&A until banks lend to minorities
      8. US Attorney General bringing trials against banks for minority lending practices

      Wall Street has no bad loans to bundle if the government does not get involved in the first place.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by nerzog (April 22, 2010 10:17 am ET)
        9  
        But Wall Street is blameless for bundling loans they knew were toxic into complex investments, rating those investments AAA, selling them all over the world, then betting on their failure with Credit Default Swaps?

        GMAFB
        Report Abuse
        • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 10:35 am ET)
          1 7
          I did not say that Wall Street was blameless. I am just putting things into their proper perspective. Politicians love to pass laws and then absolve themselves of the consequences by pointing fingers. Washington set this whole thing in motion.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (April 22, 2010 10:44 am ET)
            7  
            I am just putting things into their proper perspective.

            Baloney.

            1. Community Reinvestment Act

            You've got that listed number 1? That act was passed during Jimmy Carter's Administration. The CRA had nothing to do with it.

            ...it was that plus countless other government intrusions into the free markets...

            More baloney. The government's failure to regulate the "free markets" is what caused this latest (and biggest) reincarnation of Tulipmania.
            ~
            Report Abuse
            • Author by MilitantMNMan (April 22, 2010 12:27 pm ET)
              8  
              The CRA actually had the highest rate of return payment from those who took the loans. It was a success.
              Report Abuse
          • Author by raddave43 (April 22, 2010 10:53 am ET)
            9  
            Those laws did not force lending companies and banks to give loans to people who could not afford them. It was the practice of luring people into adjustable rate mortgages with very low interest rates in the beginning that the people could afford to pay, but when the interest rates reset, it was usually so high that they could no longer keep up with the payments. It had nothing to do with lending to "minorities."
            Report Abuse
            • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 11:20 am ET)
                6
              1, 7 and 8 clearly DID force lending companies to give loans out that they otherwise would not. And please stop with the "luring people". Have some personal responsibility for the contracts that you voluntarily enter.
              Report Abuse
              • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 11:22 am ET)
                6  
                Your saying so does not make it so. Prove it.
                Report Abuse
              • Author by nerzog (April 22, 2010 11:27 am ET)
                4  
                True to a point, but if the lender misrepresents the product, and tells you that you really can afford that McMansion, which party is more at fault?

                Greedy, unscrupulous lenders and Wall Street Bankers looted the system, and crashed it in the process. Some home buyers were complicit, to be sure, but many were simply lied to and exploited.
                Report Abuse
                • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 11:32 am ET)
                  1 5
                  I agree with you except for the "which party is more at fault?" part. Nobody should be telling you what you can or cannot afford, that is your decision to make. We have the most on the line if things go south, not some stuffed suit banker. Ultimately it is our responsibility to control and manage our own finances.
                  Report Abuse
                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 11:36 am ET)
                    4  
                    That is pure hogwash.
                    And this goes to jms also:
                    http://pdamerica.org/articles/news/2009-09-19-11-10-04-news.php
                    The crisis was caused by Wall St. and the lax in regulations.
                    Report Abuse
                    • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 11:41 am ET)
                      1 4
                      So you are not responsible for your own finances or to determine what you can or cannot afford? Well you should be. Don't blame someone else if you can't do it.
                      Report Abuse
                  • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 12:44 pm ET)
                    8  
                    Nobody should be telling you what you can or cannot afford


                    Actually, that is EXACTLY what the banks are SUPPOSED to do when qualifying consumers for loans . . . we call them underwriters.
                    Report Abuse
                    • Author by caucasion jesus (April 22, 2010 12:47 pm ET)
                      3  
                      bravo!
                      Report Abuse
                    • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 12:48 pm ET)
                        4
                      No, underwriters are telling people what they are approved for, not what they can afford. There is a difference.
                      Report Abuse
                      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:52 pm ET)
                        2  
                        Hahaha...
                        Report Abuse
                      • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 1:17 pm ET)
                        6  
                        No, underwriters are telling people what they are approved for, not what they can afford.


                        Tragically wrong. Underwriters work for the banks and are supposed to make loans for the betterment of the banks. If someone is approved for what they cannot afford, that is the direct result of the underwriter.

                        Report Abuse
                        • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 1:27 pm ET)
                            3
                          tragically naive. why would a bank underwriter EVER approve a loan unless it expected to be repaid on that loan? probably only if it knew that someone else (fannie anyone?) would be there to buy up the bad loan and make the lender whole plus interest, OR if the bank had a governement "gun" to its head.
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:41 pm ET)
                            4  
                            What about these loans being repackaged and sold and verified by credit reporting agencies as solid you don't understand? There was money to be made. That was the motive. Naive is you in your haste to blame Freddie and Fannie,the picture is more complicated than that and you know it... The system was gamed by those who knew how to game the system. Those who understood the laws and manipulated them for profit. The same way in the 80's that S&L's were deregulated and those who knew the FDIC insured investments gamed the system and caused that crisis.
                            Report Abuse
                          • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 5:53 pm ET)
                            2  
                            gov't gun? wtf are you blabbering about?
                            Report Abuse
                            • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 10:44 pm ET)
                                2
                              since you can't answer why a bank underwriter would ever approve a loan he didn't expect to be paid back, this is what you come up with? brilliant.
                              Report Abuse
                          • Author by mhughen (April 23, 2010 8:48 am ET)
                            2  
                            hy would a bank underwriter EVER approve a loan unless it expected to be repaid on that loan?

                            because there is money to be made in executing a loan.
                            OR if the bank had a governement "gun" to its head.


                            This is such a crazy statement i dont even know what it refers to. I guess you think that CRA was the "gun" by which gov't forced banks to make bad loans . . . if that is your premise, you are swallowing AEI Limbaugh talking points.
                            Report Abuse
                        • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:28 pm ET)
                            3
                          No, you are wrong. It is not uncommon to get approved beyond what you can actually afford in your budget. If you think otherwise you have no idea what you are talking about. It's completely idiotic to say it's the underwriter's responsibility to tell me what I can afford. It's ridiculous.
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:44 pm ET)
                            1  
                            You argue from both sides of your mouth. If it was uncommon to get apporved for more than you can afford then that destroys your allegation that it was people getting more than they can afford.
                            Report Abuse
                            • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:55 pm ET)
                                1
                              Huh? Did you just read what you wrote? You are a mess my friend. I said the exact same thing.
                              Report Abuse
                              • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 2:16 pm ET)
                                2  
                                Are you referring to me? Oh I'am sorry I must have missed that part. You wrote what I wrote? Kindly highlight it for me and I'll apologize,but I don't see it!
                                Report Abuse
                                • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:19 pm ET)
                                    1
                                  "If it was uncommon to get apporved for more than you can afford then that destroys your allegation that it was people getting more than they can afford"

                                  That was my Huh? I said it is not uncommon.
                                  Report Abuse
                                • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 2:27 pm ET)
                                  1  
                                  Ok I misread your post. People commonly get approved for more than they can afford in their budget.
                                  I apologize, but these were not loans made under the CRA and the primary motive for those unscrupulous loans were greed primarily by the lenders and they were repackaged and sold to other institutions with the seal of approval by credit agencies that should have been the canary in the mine. In other words the system was gamed by those inside the system who knew the rules and manipulated them for financial gain. You want to place the blame on the borrower,I'am saying they were a very small part of the problem if at all. You also fail to address the issue of those borrowers who qualified for legitimate loans but were steered into the sub-prime route.
                                  Report Abuse
                    • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 12:53 pm ET)
                        4
                      they are underwriters for the BANK not the borrower moron.
                      Report Abuse
                      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:59 pm ET)
                        2  
                        More elitism...
                        Report Abuse
                        • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:02 pm ET)
                            3
                          You don't even know what elitism is do you? You can't with a response like that.
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:06 pm ET)
                            3  
                            Well when someone calls another poster an elitist snob and distorts their post to say they are calling people morons,then calls same people uneducated and morons I think it speaks for itself. Hehehe...but I'am sure the irony is lost on you.
                            Report Abuse
                            • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:10 pm ET)
                                5
                              No, when a liberal tells some people that they are too uneducated to be able to manage and control their own finances and to know what they can or cannot afford - and that they need "experts" to do it for them; that is a textbook definition of a liberal elitist snob.
                              Report Abuse
                              • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:16 pm ET)
                                2  
                                Hehehe...too funny dude.
                                Report Abuse
                              • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 1:20 pm ET)
                                4  
                                In the real world the "liberal elitist experts who tell people what the can and cannot afford" are called bank underwriters. But dont let things like facts cloud your judgement . . .
                                Report Abuse
                                • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:22 pm ET)
                                    2
                                  So if the homeowner gets in financial hot water and can't pay their bills, the creditors go after the underwriters then? Gosh, who knew?
                                  Report Abuse
                                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:28 pm ET)
                                    1  
                                    Yes then that borrower goes down,but how can that 1 borrower bring down the bank.
                                    Report Abuse
                                  • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 1:29 pm ET)
                                    2  
                                    uhh. who said the creditors go after the underwriters? strawman much?
                                    Report Abuse
                                    • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:35 pm ET)
                                        2
                                      Because you said it is the underwriter's responsibility to tell someone what they can afford. Now do you see how your silly assertion makes no sense?
                                      Report Abuse
                                      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:46 pm ET)
                                        1  
                                        You are not making any sense. Much like a dog chasing it's tail,more circular arguments.
                                        Report Abuse
                                        • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:51 pm ET)
                                            1
                                          You can't say it's the underwriter's job to tell someone what they can or can't afford and yet absolve them of the responsibility if something goes wrong. That is where this stupidity falls apart. Sorry you can't see it.
                                          Report Abuse
                                      • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 1:54 pm ET)
                                        5  
                                        You are misrepresenting my statement, but you know that. Your unwillingness to accept facts, like the role of underwriters in the loan process, show you to be the "silly" one. My assertions make no sense to you because you refuse reality when it doesnt comport to your worldview.
                                        Report Abuse
                                        • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 1:57 pm ET)
                                            1
                                          Nice dodge. You can't be responsible for one thing and then not held accountable if that sours. I know to liberals they can, but not in the real world. It is not the underwriter's job to tell you what you can afford, that is your job. If you aren't up to it, don't apply for a loan.
                                          Report Abuse
                                          • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 2:04 pm ET)
                                            2  
                                            I dodge nothing, sir.

                                            If you aren't up to it, don't apply for a loan.


                                            Your assertions are just simply wrong based on facts not opinion, not liberal philosophy or conservative, but simple facts. You ignore them. The role of the underwriter for financial institutions is clear andn uncontroversial, but your unwillingness to deal with facts makes you the "silly" one.
                                            Report Abuse
                                            • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:06 pm ET)
                                                2
                                              Then you ask an underwriter this; Is your job to tell someone what they can or cannot afford or is to approve or deny loans based on fiscal worthiness?
                                              Report Abuse
                                            • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:08 pm ET)
                                                1
                                              Or answer this simple question; If I default on a loan, who's responsible for that? The answer to that should help you understand this.
                                              Report Abuse
                                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 2:12 pm ET)
                                            1  
                                            I had no idea Goldman Sachs ,AIG , Bank of America who were bailed out(so much for personal responsibility)were liberal institutions? Please enlighten us about their liberal leanings, or just offer us more of your ideology driven generalizations and insults divorced from fact.
                                            Report Abuse
                                        • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (April 22, 2010 1:58 pm ET)
                                          4  
                                          This is one hilarious thread.

                                          I am an underwriter, and mhughen is correct.

                                          Wrong-ON, you don't have a clue.
                                          ~
                                          Report Abuse
                                          • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:01 pm ET)
                                              3
                                            Then you are a lousy underwriter.
                                            Report Abuse
                                            • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 2:12 pm ET)
                                              2  
                                              There you go. Show your true colors . . . When confronted with facts go ad-hominem.
                                              Report Abuse
                                              • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:14 pm ET)
                                                  1
                                                The fact that some poster says they are an underwriter? Sorry, if they were they would know better. I don't believe it.
                                                Report Abuse
                                                • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (April 22, 2010 2:30 pm ET)
                                                  3  
                                                  Funny.

                                                  Wrong-ON says he doesn't believe something.

                                                  Sane people then are more likely to believe it, based on prior history.

                                                  For the record, I'm working on five multifamily projects in various stages of application: 160 units in Columbus, OH, 42 units in Dallas, GA, 77 units in Stamford, CT, 193 units in Beloit, WI, and 203 units in Tallahassee, FL.

                                                  P.S. You probably haven't noticed, given your demonstrated powers of observation, but most bad underwriters don't have jobs anymore.
                                                  ~
                                                  Report Abuse
                                                  • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:38 pm ET)
                                                      2
                                                    If you were an underwriter then you would also know that it is not your job, nor your responsibility, to tell me what I can or cannot afford. If it is, then I will blame you when I live beyond my means. If you accept that responsibility, give me your address, I will let you underwrite my next loan.
                                                    Report Abuse
                                                    • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (April 22, 2010 2:45 pm ET)
                                                      3  
                                                      How surprising!

                                                      Wrong-ON has retreated and is now making a semantics-based argument.
                                                      ~
                                                      Report Abuse
                                                      • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:48 pm ET)
                                                          1
                                                        How sleazy. To lie and say you are an underwriter just to try and argue your ridiculous point. I guess you had too.
                                                        Report Abuse
                                                • Author by peace4all (April 22, 2010 2:33 pm ET)
                                                  4  
                                                  Is your job to tell someone what they can or cannot afford or is to approve or deny loans based on fiscal worthiness? -rightoff (the cliff)

                                                  this is what you said. both are the same question. it's not the underwriters job to tell you what you can afford but it's their job to approve or dis-approve the loan based on weather they can afford it. now that's a truly epic fail..lol
                                                  Report Abuse
                                                  • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:36 pm ET)
                                                      1
                                                    Sorry you too. If you don't or can't understand the difference, then it is above your pay grade. It is not the underwriter's job to tell you what you can't afford, PERIOD. For if it was their job or their responsibility, then they would be on the hook for your personal financial affordability issues, and of course they are not. It is their job to approve or deny you a loan. It is your job to manage your own finances.
                                                    Report Abuse
                                                    • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 2:50 pm ET)
                                                      3  
                                                      WTF! If I desire a million dollar home, but don't make enough the underwriter will tell me I cannot afford that house or the bank will not loan me the money for it in either case they ARE telling me what I can afford.
                                                      Report Abuse
                                                      • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:55 pm ET)
                                                          2
                                                        Whose responsibility is it to determine what you can or cannot afford? Why none of you can answer that simple direct question is beyond me.
                                                        Report Abuse
                                                        • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 3:03 pm ET)
                                                          4  
                                                          WTF are arguing about? The underwriter is supposed to tell you what you can afford in housing or otherwise based on the financial information you give him. I saw a house I liked but it was told based on my income the bank would not loan me the money for it ,they said look at houses within this range. In essence they were telling me what I could afford. Your're arguing semantics and attempting to change the discussion. Go F$%K yourself with your silly question.
                                                          Report Abuse
                                                          • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 3:05 pm ET)
                                                              3
                                                            "Go F$%K yourself with your silly question"

                                                            Phony hypocrite.
                                                            Report Abuse
                                                            • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 3:11 pm ET)
                                                              4  
                                                              I thought it an appropriate response to your circular arguments and semantical games you play and I meant it.
                                                              Report Abuse
                                                              • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 3:14 pm ET)
                                                                  2
                                                                No, it was a potty mouthed dodge for somebody who cannot acknowledge simple and reasonable responsibility on the part of an individual. But rather affix blame, it's expected from liberals. And you didn't disappoint.
                                                                Report Abuse
                                                                • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 3:21 pm ET)
                                                                  1  
                                                                  Your questions have been answered,responded too so many times here. your generalizations about liberals...so what. You are a tired old man/women arguing from tired old positions divorced from reality. You like to characterize answers to you as dodges so you can continue to push the same generalizations I guess it makes you feel you have a point. Oh well, whatever helps you make it through the day.
                                                                  Potty mouth?!? Jezzz,you are old,in your case wisdom didn't come with age.
                                                                  Report Abuse
                                                                • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 3:30 pm ET)
                                                                  6  
                                                                  I answered your question. But the nuances of reality seem to be lost on you. Others have answered your question but you fail to accept assertions of fact. Underwriting as part of "best practices and methods" of the banking industry is not controversial. Facts are not ideological. However, your FAILURE to accept facts makes you a makes you a dishonest participant in this discussion.
                                                                  Report Abuse
                                                                  • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 3:32 pm ET)
                                                                      3
                                                                    I missed your direct answer then, please repeat;

                                                                    "Whose responsibility is it to determine what you can or cannot afford?"
                                                                    Report Abuse
                                                                    • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 3:39 pm ET)
                                                                      3  
                                                                      For the bank it is the under writer.
                                                                      Report Abuse
                                                                      • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 3:43 pm ET)
                                                                          2
                                                                        1/2 right, for the bank, yes. But for you, who is responsible for determining what you can or cannot afford?
                                                                        Report Abuse
                                                                        • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 4:00 pm ET)
                                                                          2  
                                                                          Individual borrowers do NOT figure out what the upper range of loan and loan payments they can afford.

                                                                          People might decide what they are comfortable with, but that's different than what they can afford.

                                                                          Loan officers/underwriters figure out how much house and/or how large of a mortgage payment they can afford.

                                                                          People might decide to buy LESS house, but doesn't mean that they couldn't afford more!

                                                                          Because home ownership is the most property the vast majority of Americans who own property will ever get involved in, and over the lifespan of most adults, property investment is the best investment one can make, it's a great idea for people to buy close to the most expensive house they can afford to maximize their returns on that investment! And underwriters figure out what they can afford.
                                                                          Report Abuse
                                                                    • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 3:40 pm ET)
                                                                      1  
                                                                      http://mediamatters.org/research/201004220008#828311
                                                                      Report Abuse
                                                                      • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 3:41 pm ET)
                                                                          1
                                                                        That is not an answer, sorry. Why you keep dodging it is ridiculous.
                                                                        Report Abuse
                                                                        • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 3:47 pm ET)
                                                                          4  
                                                                          "Whose responsibility is it to determine what you can or cannot afford?"

                                                                          My answer is fact, whether you like it or not.
                                                                          If you wanna sit around your dinner table and figure out your finances I encourage you to do that. You will be better for it. When you got to a bank to obtain a mortgage, professionals called underwriters will evaluate your finances and determine if the loan is a proper fit for you and therefor a good investment for the bank he represents.
                                                                          Report Abuse
                                                                          • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 3:54 pm ET)
                                                                              3
                                                                            The answer is we are, or unless we hire some person to manage our finances. You, and I, and each one of us is responsible for what we can afford to buy, or not. Not some third party who happens to be in charge of approving or denying some loan we have applied for. How anyone can disagree with something so basic is puzzling beyond belief.

                                                                            We don't outsource such responsibility based on underwriting guidelines, how ridiculous. And that is why often times we are approved for more than what we can realistically afford. If you don't think that ever happens, think again. Just because you're approved for a $500 loan to buy a house does not mean you can afford it. Which is why it is our responsibility, not some faceless banker. And because we are responsible, any creditors who fall victim to our irresponsibility will come after us, not the faceless banker.

                                                                            Because, the faceless banker is not responsible. If something so simple still escapes you, I tried. You can call me dishonest all day long, but you should look at your arguments first.
                                                                            Report Abuse
                                                                            • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 4:01 pm ET)
                                                                              2  
                                                                              You are beyond belief!
                                                                              Report Abuse
                                                                            • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 4:49 pm ET)
                                                                              2  
                                                                              ...Not some third party who happens to be in charge of approving or denying some loan we have applied for....We don't outsource such responsibility based on underwriting guidelines, how ridiculous...Just because you're approved for a $500 loan to buy a house does not mean you can afford it. Which is why it is our responsibility, not some faceless banker.


                                                                              I am beginning to think you are the Andy Kaufman of trolls. You are elevating disregard for facts to an art. When you reveal yourself to be a performance artist I will laugh along with you.

                                                                              If you believe these things you say, than you have never been through the mortgage process. I hope one day you find yourself the opportunity to be a responsible homeowner.
                                                                              Report Abuse
                                                                              • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 5:03 pm ET)
                                                                                  2
                                                                                So you think just because you're approved for a 500k loan then that is the end of it. You can absolutely afford the max you are approved for?

                                                                                And you have continually dodged my statements about responsibility so unless you address it directly, I am not interested in your dishonest and ridiculous arguments any further. Your cute insults might mask your avoidance in your eyes, but to me you just look foolish. Sorry.
                                                                                Report Abuse
                                                                                • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 5:07 pm ET)
                                                                                  2  
                                                                                  I have dodged nothing.
                                                                                  Do you believe that a bank has a responsibility to "vet" a borrower?
                                                                                  Report Abuse
                                                                                  • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 5:10 pm ET)
                                                                                    2  
                                                                                    sorry. that should have read:
                                                                                    Do you believe that faceless bankers have a responsibility to vet a borrower?
                                                                                    Report Abuse
                                                                                  • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 5:13 pm ET)
                                                                                      2
                                                                                    Of course, but the original point was whose responsibility it is to determine what an individual purchasing a home can or cannot afford. You said it was the underwriters, I said it was the homeowners.
                                                                                    Report Abuse
                                                                                    • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 5:30 pm ET)
                                                                                      3  
                                                                                      These poor defenseless banks have been bamboozled by evil and deceptive people trying to get mortgages that they could not afford?

                                                                                      That is your version of reality?

                                                                                      Banks hold no responsibility for the efficacy of the 500k they just handed out?

                                                                                      Even bankers would think you are being rediculous at this point. . . but you are entertaining like a car wreck.

                                                                                      Report Abuse
                                                                                      • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 5:34 pm ET)
                                                                                          2
                                                                                        HA! You still won't answer the question, will you? Who is responsible to determine your personal financial affordability? Is it that tough for a liberal to say "I AM!"

                                                                                        I guess so. lol
                                                                                        Report Abuse
                                                                                        • Author by mhughen (April 22, 2010 5:42 pm ET)
                                                                                          3  
                                                                                          question DIRECTLY answered here:
                                                                                          http://mediamatters.org/research/201004220008#828518

                                                                                          But I suppose you dont care because its not the answer you like. It does not fit your worldview.

                                                                                          Are you going to continue to ignore my questions?
                                                                                          I suspect you will.
                                                                                          Report Abuse
                                                                                          • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 6:00 pm ET)
                                                                                              3
                                                                                            My worldview? How ridiculous. It is too tough to say you are responsible for your own financial decisions, isn't it? Never mind. You have already answered it.
                                                                                            Report Abuse
                                                                                            • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 6:27 pm ET)
                                                                                              1  
                                                                                              Your assumption that everything was upfront is amazing,as your belief that everyone who is having mortgage problems assumed loans they could not afford when they got them.
                                                                                              Report Abuse
                                                                                            • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 6:30 pm ET)
                                                                                              2  
                                                                                              I guess the home owners conspired to bring the system down.
                                                                                              Report Abuse
                                                                                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 6:20 pm ET)
                                                                                            1  
                                                                                            He has and he will. His question has been answered,but he refuses to acknowledge that it wasn't the individual borrowers who brought down the whole economy. Reason has nothing to do with it. I asked for proof of something on another thread and was told by that con that they didn't have proof of the resurrection but he believed it took place. RO believes that those who had mortgage trouble took the loans knowing they could not afford them. Darn anything else or proof of other factors it was their fault. Like was said earlier the market can do no wrong it's like religion to them,I so agree. It's convenient, it releaves society from making any changes and they can relax and comfort themselves with the belief it was just those greedy borrowers,or that unemployment is high because people just don't want to work or that they have it so cushy with food stamps and unmeployment insurance.
                                                                                            Report Abuse
                                                                              • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 7:14 pm ET)
                                                                                3  
                                                                                You got it. He's a paid troll who's very skilled at derailing threads and keeping people going with these kinds of conversations.

                                                                                He HAS been revealed as a paid troll and therefore a performance artist.
                                                                                Report Abuse
                                                                        • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 3:53 pm ET)
                                                                          1  
                                                                          Your persistence in blaming the borrower is ridiculous. You have no idea or proof that most of the forclosures were because people knowingly accepted loans they knew they could not afford. You want to allege that because it fits neatly into your ideological mindset. People got loans then maybe lost their jobs as the economy went downhill,the value in peoples homes dropped making them bad investments, ballon payments were hidden in fine print. In either case as bruce pointed out 3 hrs. ago:

                                                                          "I think you and congero are talking about two different things. Everyone is responsible for themselves on a personal level as you are saying.

                                                                          However, one person cannot bring down an economy, they can only bring down themselves. The banks, however, should know what collective risk they have out there and they mismanaged it badly in the name of greed..."

                                                                          Yet you are still arguing the same old tired silly point that was answered over 3 hrs. ago. WTF!
                                                                          Report Abuse
                • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 11:39 am ET)
                    3
                  No doubt that there were instances of fraud by lenders and brokers. I just believe that those cases are the vast minority. No one knows better than I do what I can afford, and just because a lender tells me I can afford something does not make it so. I believe most cases where people got in over their heads were either (1) trying to make money via market appreciation or (2) trying to "keep up with the Jones'" and impress their friends and families.
                  Report Abuse
                  • Author by raddave43 (April 22, 2010 11:43 am ET)
                    3  
                    Just because you believe something, doesn't make it a fact.
                    Report Abuse
                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 11:43 am ET)
                    3  
                    Yea and since you provide nothing but your opinion we will just have to accept your opinion is wrong. This is from the article I linked to above:

                    "...The right-wing case against the CRA is entirely bogus--a diversionary tactic to take the heat off the financial services industry and its allies, like McCain. The CRA applies only to depository institutions, like commercial and savings banks, but thanks to Congress's deregulation mania, there are now many other lenders, including private mortgage companies like CitiMortgage, Household Finance and Countrywide Financial (which was recently bought out by Bank of America). These outfits, which exist in a shadow world without government oversight, account for most of the predatory loans in trouble today.

                    When Congress enacted the CRA in 1977, the vast majority of all mortgage loans were made by lenders regulated by the law. In 2006 only about 43 percent of home loans were made by companies subject to the CRA. Indeed, the main culprits in the subprime scandal--the nonbank mortgage companies, which successfully grabbed the bulk of the mortgage market away from the CRA-regulated banking industry--were not covered by the CRA.

                    Wall Street investment firms--including Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns and Citigroup--set up special units, provided mortgage companies with lines of credit, then purchased the subprime mortgages from the lenders, bundled them into "mortgage-backed securities" and sold them for a fat fee to wealthy investors worldwide, typically without scrutiny. By 2007 the subprime business had become a $1.5 trillion global market for investors seeking high returns. Because lenders didn't have to keep the loans on their books, they didn't worry about the risk of losses..."

                    Quite a different story than the one you and RO are trying to peddle.
                    Report Abuse
                    • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 11:57 am ET)
                        6
                      thanks for making my point that the CRA was 1 of many contributing factors by forcing certain institutions to make loans that they otherwise would not make. maybe you can help me support my other 7 points of government intrusion? why do you point out wall street investment banks and ignore fannie and freddie who were doing the exact same thing?

                      Report Abuse
                      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:05 pm ET)
                        3  
                        You have a reading comprehension problem. Either that are you are just a liar. I did not make your point at all infact refuted it.

                        "...The explosion of subprime mortgages was touched off in the early twenty-first century, as the number of lenders regulated by the government and covered by the CRA dramatically dwindled. In 2002 subprime loans made up 8 percent of all mortgages; by 2006 they had soared to 20 percent. Since 2004 more than 90 percent of subprime mortgages have come with exploding adjustable rates.

                        Not surprisingly, the foreclosure rates on subprime, adjustable-rate and other exotic mortgage loans have run four to five times higher than the foreclosure rates on conventional CRA mortgages. Testifying before the House Financial Services Committee in February, University of Michigan law professor Michael Barr reported that only about 20 percent of subprime mortgages were issued by banks regulated by the CRA. The other 80 percent of predatory and high-interest subprime loans were offered by financial institutions not covered by the CRA and not subject to routine examination or supervision. "The worst and most widespread abuses occurred in the institutions with the least federal oversight," Barr told Congress.

                        In contrast, the CRA actually penalizes banks for reckless, irresponsible or otherwise predatory lending. According to Ellen Seidman, director of the Treasury Department's Office of Thrift Supervision from 1997 to 2001, federal regulators warned CRA-covered institutions that "badly underwritten subprime products that ignored consumer protections were not acceptable." Lenders not subject to CRA did not receive similar warnings.

                        And unlike the institutions that offer unregulated predatory subprime loans, banks that make CRA loans are required by federal regulation to verify borrowers' incomes to make sure they can afford the mortgages. In 2006 the Federal Reserve reported that just 11.5 percent of mortgages made by CRA-regulated institutions were high-cost loans, compared with 33.5 percent for lenders not covered by the CRA. Janet Yellen, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, has criticized those who blame CRA lending for the subprime crisis: "Most of the loans made by depository institutions examined under the CRA have not been higher-priced loans, and studies have shown that the CRA has increased the volume of responsible lending to low- and moderate-income households."

                        While the CRA helped boost the nation's homeownership rate, particularly among black and Latino borrowers, subprime and other exotic mortgages had very little impact on homeownership. Most subprime loans were refinances of existing mortgages. From 1998 through 2005, more than half of all subprime mortgages were for refinancing, while less than 10 percent of subprime loans went to first-time home buyers. Moreover, a significant number of borrowers who took out subprime loans could have qualified for conventional, prime-rate mortgages with much better terms. Even the Wall Street Journal acknowledges that "plenty of people with seemingly good credit are also caught in the subprime trap." Brokers and lenders misled many of these homeowners, replacing safe thirty-year fixed-rate mortgages with deceptive, risky loans..."

                        Report Abuse
                        • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 12:27 pm ET)
                            5
                          The use of the CRA as a tool to force banks to make loans they did not want to make dramatically dwindled only because the government found its new darlings -- Fannie and Freddie as a way to backstop lenders and allow them to give loans away to everyone.
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:30 pm ET)
                            3  
                            Hahaha...yea and when you back that up I'll listen. The CRA didn't force banks to do anything but stop discriminating and since cthe loans that were made under the CRA didn't cause the crisis you are full of bunk.
                            Report Abuse
                            • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 12:52 pm ET)
                                4
                              Back it up? It is a commonly known fact. That is what Fannie and Freddie are in the business of doing. It is not my job to come here and educate the uneducated or brainwashed.
                              Report Abuse
                              • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:58 pm ET)
                                2  
                                In other words you got nothing. Educate the uneducated...ouch that hurts! You elitist!
                                Report Abuse
                                • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 1:21 pm ET)
                                    1
                                  read here what freddie is in business to do and then tell me how what they do is any different than what you are faux outraged at wall street for: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/pr?s=FRE+Profile

                                  Report Abuse
                                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:50 pm ET)
                                    2  
                                    When you show how it was the loans made under the CRA that was the cause of the crisis then I'll answer your question but you can't so I won't even entertain your nonsense.
                                    Report Abuse
                              • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 1:56 pm ET)
                                3  
                                JMS says It is a commonly known fact.

                                But it's not. It's a common misperception, certainly, pushed by the right. It's not a fact.

                                It is not my job to come here and educate the uneducated or brainwashed.

                                No, it's your job to push that false meme because it's all you've got. You can't win this argument using facts.
                                Report Abuse
                  • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 11:45 am ET)
                    1 3
                    Exactly. There is plenty of blame to go around but one isn't absolved of their responsibility just because there are fatter and richer corporate cronies who also are at fault.
                    Report Abuse
                    • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 11:50 am ET)
                      3  
                      The question is who was to blame and the blame falls on Wall St. they manipulated the situation that brought this country down. I'll await though for more of your fact free opinions.
                      Report Abuse
                      • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 11:54 am ET)
                        1 5
                        If you can't understand the very simple concept of responsibility, forget it. I am not invested into 100% blaming one and skipping over everyone else. I know it feeds into your corporate hatred but not all of us view the world that way. There is plenty of blame, that is all I have said. And if you want to dismiss those that entered into loans they couldn't afford as having no responsibility for their part, again, forget it.
                        Report Abuse
                        • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:09 pm ET)
                          2  
                          Well when you can substantiate your opinion with facts then I'll listen until then you are talking out your butt.
                          Report Abuse
                        • Author by bruce1ace (April 22, 2010 12:32 pm ET)
                          5  
                          I think you and congero are talking about two different things. Everyone is responsible for themselves on a personal level as you are saying.

                          However, one person cannot bring down an economy, they can only bring down themselves. The banks, however, should know what collective risk they have out there and they mismanaged it badly in the name of greed.

                          That's the way I see it.
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:41 pm ET)
                            1  
                            I agree.
                            Report Abuse
                          • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 22, 2010 1:22 pm ET)
                            3  
                            Agree as well. Those individuals that acted foolishly paid a price in foreclosure. However, those holding the purse strings DID know what was happening in the broader sense and cashed in on it and then got bailed out when everything collapsed.
                            Report Abuse
                  • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 11:54 am ET)
                    4 2
                    Actually, LOTS of well-educated and experienced people can tell almost EVERY homebuyer what they can and can't afford better than that individual homeowner.

                    The experts have access to calculations and projections that the average person isn't going to be confident using and interpreting.

                    Almost no people knew they were getting in over their heads, since they didn't understand from the experts they were listening to that their home could lose 25% of its value in one year, instead of appreciate, and they didn't understand that change would make them upside-down and likely unable to sell it for many years.

                    And then, top that off with the fact that the scenario above was only a teensy part of the problem.

                    The economic crisis was mainly caused by two things in the USA - timing was one. It was simply time for a recession. We have those every once in a while. But the accerbation of that 'normal' recession was caused by the people in the financial market getting greedy and thinking short-term, and behaving badly to achieve the goals of "winning" for themselves short term!
                    Report Abuse
                    • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 12:07 pm ET)
                      2 5
                      I love it, the average homebuyer is a moron and needs experts to compute their income less their expenses. What an elitist snob.
                      Report Abuse
                      • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 12:13 pm ET)
                        1 5
                        "Actually, LOTS of well-educated and experienced people can tell almost EVERY homebuyer what they can and can't afford better than that individual homeowner"

                        I know, if that nonsense from Sue above isn't the most asinine thing I have ever read. It's so stupid, even for her, and as you say, typical of something that would come out of a mouth of a liberal elitist.

                        But perhaps she is speaking for herself. Maybe she can't do her own finances, so she needs the "experts"
                        Report Abuse
                        • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:16 pm ET)
                          3 1
                          More attacks and name calling but no facts to back up your arguments a clear sign you have nothing to offer to the discussion.
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 12:17 pm ET)
                            1 5
                            Oh spare me. All you do is call names and offer nothing. I know liberals have a hard time accepting responsibility and you are living proof. Too bad, grow up.
                            Report Abuse
                      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:13 pm ET)
                        3 1
                        Facts please. Saying someone doesn't understand is not the same as calling someone a moron. Nice try though in trying to distort and change the subject. Sort of like you trying to hijack what I wrote to say I proved your point when just the opposite was true. So sad you got nothing left.
                        Report Abuse
                        • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 12:16 pm ET)
                          1 4
                          Because for Sue to say that some expert can tell me or you or anyone what we can afford better than we can ourselves is ridiculous. Who will be left holding the bag after these "experts" are long gone?
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 2:00 pm ET)
                            2  
                            Nope, it's actually not. It's the truth. Most people do NOT have an idea of what they can afford when they walk into a bank to get qualified. Those with lots of experience in that field are much better at figuring that out than the vast majority of people looking for homes because of that experience.

                            I understand that FACT destroys YOUR opinion. That must be frustrating. That's why you lashed out.

                            Too bad, so sad. You have no credibility here.
                            Report Abuse
                            • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 2:03 pm ET)
                                3
                              Sue, If you aren't up to managing your own finances and your monthly obligations you have no business applying for any loan.
                              Report Abuse
                              • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 4:03 pm ET)
                                2  
                                Totally bogus personal attack again showing us that your personal animus towards some former poster has gotten transferred to me since I apparently get you just as frustrated as she did because your arguments are SO FULL OF HOLES!
                                Report Abuse
                                • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 4:13 pm ET)
                                    1
                                  Face it Suzy, you don't like me. First I outed you as Sue. Then I remind people what a liar you are, see bintx for proof of that. Then I outed you as currently having more than one screen name when you "talked" to yourself by oddly contradicting your own post, all under "DellDolly". Then I reminded people just how nasty you are with your mouth with your latest "Screw You", again to bintx.

                                  So you know I have your number, and more and more are beginning to see you for the phony you are. Enjoy the rest of your time here, it's borrowed, my dear.

                                  And don't apply for any loans either if you aren't up to your own financial management.
                                  Report Abuse
                                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 4:21 pm ET)
                                       
                                    WoW! Tsk,tsk,tsk.
                                    Report Abuse
                                  • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 7:22 pm ET)
                                       
                                    I don't have ANY feelings towards you, and I'm not Sue.

                                    It's solely YOUR behavior that I address.

                                    You need to stop holding up a mirror when you try to throw accusations at someone else. It's YOU and your cohorts who attack ME, rather than the content of my posts.

                                    And yeah, after bintx totally misrepresented what had happened on this thread and on previous threads on similar topics, displaying that she wasn't willing and/or able to fairly discuss the topic, but was only expressing her personal animus towards me since I have caught her in kneejerk reactions and I have called out her inability to admit her errors, I called out that behavior.

                                    That's what one is SUPPOSED to do.

                                    You have massively failed every time you've tried to back me into a corner. I NEVER said that bintx lied - that was PROVEN to be YOUR (and her) poor interpretation of very clear words that I said, where you confused "merely" and "just". You NEVER caught me forgetting to log off and log back on again as a sockpuppet, despite your efforts to link back to that thread multiple times. I could list 3 other things, and yeah, I have all the links saved should you want to continue to bring it up. And this effort TOO will fail, because it's not based on reality!
                                    Report Abuse
              • Author by raddave43 (April 22, 2010 11:46 am ET)
                5  
                it did not FORCE lending companies to give loans to people who could not afford them, it forced them to stop descriminating. I have personal responsibility because I would never enter into an adjustable rate mortgage because I know they are a scam. Many people did not know this.
                Report Abuse
                • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 11:48 am ET)
                  2 4
                  ARM's are not always a scam, they are a risk that one enters into freely. If someone doesn't know the advantages and disadvantages of them then it is their responsibility to find out, before they sign anything.
                  Report Abuse
                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 11:55 am ET)
                    2 1
                    More hogwash and non-substantiated opinions from RO. You are indeed entitled to them but the facts show who the real culprits were.
                    Report Abuse
                    • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 11:58 am ET)
                        3
                      You have no idea what you are talking about. ARM's are not scams, they are risks. Do you think your "hogwash" is proof of anything, you can keep saying it but it's meaningless.
                      Report Abuse
                      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:18 pm ET)
                        2 1
                        I've quoted from an article detailing the causes of this mortgage meltdown. What have you provided?
                        Report Abuse
                        • Author by southerngal (April 22, 2010 12:25 pm ET)
                          1 2
                          Because any idiot that says "Facts please" as a response to a statement saying that people know more about what they can or can't personally afford that some "expert" does, provides nothing except silliness. That would be you.
                          Report Abuse
                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:27 pm ET)
                            2 1
                            Hahaha...I congratulate you for being able to type while your head is so far up your butt.
                            Report Abuse
                          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:37 pm ET)
                            2 1
                            You draw the weirdest allies. jms?!?! With friends like those I'd start rethinking my positions...just saying. Have you read his arguments? No discrimination in housing? Really?
                            Report Abuse
                            • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 12:48 pm ET)
                                3
                              Let's play your game....prove that there has been racial discrimination in housing, and note that approval percentages by race do not provide any proof -- one would have to know the approval criteria and how that criteria aligned to the various races.
                              Report Abuse
                              • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:55 pm ET)
                                2  
                                Nope not going to play your game. Discrimination in housing and redlining is a fact. Old Ben provided you a link I suggest you read it.
                                Report Abuse
                                • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 1:17 pm ET)
                                    2
                                  that link proved nothing and thanks for admitting that you have nothing to offer here.
                                  Report Abuse
                                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:24 pm ET)
                                    1  
                                    Yea, I know discrimination doesn't exist? You're right! My bad! WTF! Hahaha...what a joke you are!
                                    Report Abuse
                                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:25 pm ET)
                                    1  
                                    Yea, I know discrimination doesn't exist? You're right! My bad! WTF! Hahaha...what a joke you are!
                                    Report Abuse
                                  • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 22, 2010 1:50 pm ET)
                                    3  
                                    So the denial of loans to people who lived in certain neighborhoods that were predominatly african american and were denied simply because of their address and NOT their ability to repay the loan, is not some kind of proof of racism in lending practices? WOW - you and RO deserve each other.
                                    Report Abuse
                                    • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 1:56 pm ET)
                                        2
                                      if you were in the business of making bank loans, and your served two areas, area 1 and area 2, and the average income in area 1 was $20K, credit scores were much lower on average, unemployment was higher, etc.; and the average income in area 2 was $60K, credit scores were much higher and unemployment was lower, -----where would you instruct your sales and marketing team to focus their efforts, assuming you were in business to make money?
                                      Report Abuse
                                      • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 22, 2010 2:10 pm ET)
                                        2  
                                        Three times and you still refuse to get it. Of course those tools are used by lenders. What redlining meant was some person with the wherewithal to repay a loan was refused by the lender based on their address. Not the individuals credit score or anything other than where they lived. And those area were almost exclusively inner city and aferican american neighborhoods.

                                        And again, you insist it is wise for the bank to use these averages to make these decisions yet the averages on rates of refusal can't be used to demonstrate racism.
                                        Report Abuse
                              • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 22, 2010 1:14 pm ET)
                                4  
                                jms -
                                Let's play your game....prove that there has been racial discrimination in housing, and note that approval percentages by race do not provide any proof -- one would have to know the approval criteria and how that criteria aligned to the various races.


                                How does that comport with what you also wrote below...

                                JMS -
                                the facts were that certain minority groups were less qualified borrowers on average.


                                Maybe it's me, but it seems in the first post above you state one can not divine racism from approval rate percentages by race. And in the second you assert that certain minority groups were less qualified on average. Can you clarify the seeming contradiction?
                                Report Abuse
                                • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 1:32 pm ET)
                                    2
                                  no contradiction - just because I approve asians over whites by a 2 to 1 ratio does not prove racism. there may well be some very compelling underlying data to justify such approvals. so i approved asians more because on average they were more qualified - no racism at all.
                                  Report Abuse
                                  • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 22, 2010 1:45 pm ET)
                                    2  
                                    Can you not read? In one post you state you can not use averages to determine the existance of racism in lending practices. And in another post state that the average acceptance rate can be used to determine the absence of discrimination in lending practices.
                                    Report Abuse
                                    • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 1:50 pm ET)
                                        2
                                      can you not comprehend? i was clearly referring to two different data sets. 1 - approval percentages by race, and 2 - the average of various lending criteria. i will stand back while your head explodes.
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                                      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:55 pm ET)
                                        2  
                                        Your ignorance hurts.
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                                      • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 22, 2010 2:31 pm ET)
                                        3  
                                        i was clearly referring to two different data sets. 1 - approval percentages by race, and 2 - the average of various lending criteria. i will stand back while your head explodes.


                                        No that not what you did.

                                        Let's play your game....prove that there has been racial discrimination in housing, and note that approval percentages by race do not provide any proof -- one would have to know the approval criteria and how that criteria aligned to the various races.


                                        So you are saying without knowing the average approval criteria (?) one cannot extrapolate racisim by approval percentages.

                                        But you also state...

                                        the facts were that certain minority groups were less qualified borrowers on average.


                                        Which you claim disproves racism. But how can that be when you don't know the average lending criteria
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                                        • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 2:44 pm ET)
                                          1  
                                          Bingo!
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                                        • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 10:42 pm ET)
                                            1
                                          how can you claim racism when YOU don't know the approval criteria. I know there was no racism because asians were being approved more than whites.
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                                          • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 23, 2010 11:55 am ET)
                                            2  
                                            Well there you have it - a single post in which you contradict yourself. Bravo!

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                • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 11:54 am ET)
                  2 5
                  they never were discriminating, that was government fabrication and media sensationalism. the facts were that certain minority groups were less qualified borrowers on average. this is proven by the fact that asian americans had HIGHER loan approval ratings than whites at the same time.
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                  • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:21 pm ET)
                    4  
                    There never was discrimination? Enough said!
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                  • Author by Old_Benjamin (April 22, 2010 12:22 pm ET)
                    5  
                    WTF? Are you seriously trying to posit there was never anything referred to as "redlining"?

                    And stating that because asian americans received high loan approvals than whites proves there was/is no discrimination at all in lending practices is specious at best.
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                  • Author by GotKids (April 22, 2010 12:31 pm ET)
                    5  
                    I can relate a personal story on this matter. In 2007 I consolidated mortgages for my home and rental property. I was told that my credit rating placed me in sub-prime status. Now, I have experience reading credit reports, so I got out my AMEX platinum pulled all my credit reports over my high-speed internet access. When I called the bank to ask what they were smoking I was later contacted and told there had been a mistake and quickly received the lowest rate available at the time. How many people do you think were in a position to or had the knowledge to challenge the banks quote?

                    THIS WAS A SCAM ON THE AMERICAN PUBLIC, get over it already and demand some flesh!
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                  • Author by wookie (April 22, 2010 1:02 pm ET)
                    2  
                    Everyone has an individual credit score. What difference does it make what minority groups are on average?
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                    • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 2:04 pm ET)
                      1  
                      Crickets, since the fact is that it doesn't make ANY difference, and because the two righty posters aren't actually trying to participate in a reasonable discussion of the known facts here.
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              • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (April 22, 2010 11:52 am ET)
                4  
                The subprime crisis was part of a huge ongoing real estate bubble.

                This was compounded many times over through betting on those loans, aka credit default swaps.

                The explosion in subprime lending was due to reckless, unchecked greed by financial institutions (socializing risk, privatizing profits).

                The Community Reinvestment Act had nothing to do with subprime crisis.

                Once again, we see the usual problem with debating anything with this country's rabid right wing: their refusal to acknowledge even the plainest of facts.
                ~
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                • Author by DellDolly (April 22, 2010 11:57 am ET)
                  3 1
                  I hope MMFA posts the Anderson Cooper interview with the Arizona legislator - watch IT and you'll see a clear example of your last sentence!
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                • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 12:25 pm ET)
                  2 1
                  Once again, we see the usual problem with debating anything with this country's rabid right wing: their refusal to acknowledge even the plainest of facts.--by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®©

                  Exactly. Just read jms post.
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              • Author by puttforever4682 (April 22, 2010 1:31 pm ET)
                3  
                Total bunk. The CRA specifically called on lenders to make responsible loans. The biggest problem was that the lenders made financially irresponsible loans because they could sell them off and make more irresponsible loans out of greed. The ratings of the subsequent mortgage securities was the linchpin in this miasma of greed and financial plundering by non reputable lenders.
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              • Author by mikehuck1976 (April 22, 2010 10:39 pm ET)
                1  
                You are simply wrong, jms. The majority of people who were talked into these 80/20 loans actually qualified for normal loans. The incentives for these loans was big. The realtors and lenders worked together in many cases to screw over the clients. This should not be something we allow. Saying a sucker who fell for the grift is stupid is not a good reason to allow this kind of behavior. This is precisely what regulation is required for. The same reason loan sharks are illegal. And these 80/20 loans had very little to do with the CRA. I was in mortgage banking for 8 years. The CRA is a successful program.
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      • Author by wookie (April 22, 2010 10:55 am ET)
        4  
        All of which have been around for decades without problems. This is a diversion. Its like saying that the used car dealer isn't really responsible for selling a lemon because the big bad government makes you get registration and insurance.
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        • Author by jms (April 22, 2010 11:24 am ET)
            2
          All kinds of contagion are around for a while before they compound, multiply, and evenutally become a problem. Nice try.

          This IS a diversion though, you are right. In your example, it would be like only going after the used car dealer that resold the lemon and ignoring the manufacturer that actually CREATED the lemon.
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          • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 11:27 am ET)
            3  
            Since you have provided nothing but Faux talking points about the crisis:
            http://www.slate.com/id/2201641/pagenum/2
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    • Author by GotKids (April 22, 2010 11:44 am ET)
      2  
      This meme is so tired.

      "WE WANT EVERYBODY TO OWN THEIR OWN HOME" GWB 2002

      In 2003 GWB signed the American Dream Down Payment Act, a measure designed(*) to subsidize first time house purchases among lower income groups. Lenders were encouraged by the administration not to press sub-prime borrowers for full documentation. (emphasis added) THE ASCENT OF MONEY, Nail Ferguson

      * It is not a coincidence that this coincided with the largest trade deficit in US history and fully 1/2 of these toxic CDO were sold to overseas borrowers. It is called the Global Flow of Funds (read Greg Palast, Armed Madhouse)
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    • Author by alienofwar (April 22, 2010 12:46 pm ET)
      1  
      The only failure of government was their inability to prevent the crisis in the first place:

      http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/warning/view/?utm_campaign=homepage&utm_medium=proglist&utm_source=proglist
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    • Author by alienofwar (April 22, 2010 12:48 pm ET)
      4  
      Remember that the narrative of these right-wingers is government is always bad and the free-market is always right. Nothing is ever the fault of unregulated markets and government intrusion in these free-markets will always fail. This is religion people and facts and statistics will not get in the way of their gospel.
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      • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 1:02 pm ET)
        2  
        So true, and so obvious in jms and RO post.
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      • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (April 22, 2010 1:33 pm ET)
        4  
        Exactly. For the record, I am an underwriter (of multi-family apartment projects, not single family homes).

        Numbnuts like jms and wrong-ON have no specific knowledge about the causes and effects of the real estate bubble, whatsoever.

        They are simply regurgitating the AEI/wingnut propaganda they have absorbed. Obvious problems with their logic go right down the memory hole.

        How come an Act passed in 1977 became a huge problem under the Bush Administration, which had a lax approach to the CRA and every other bit of financial regulation? Wouldn't it make more sense to look for what changed, rather than blame things that didn't?

        This is completely aside from the fact that the specific attempt to blame the CRA (began by AEI in a handwaving argument devoid of statistical backup) has been utterly debunked.
        ~


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        • Author by congero6189599 (April 22, 2010 2:36 pm ET)
          2  
          To the questions you asked:
          <crickets>
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        • Author by mikehuck1976 (April 22, 2010 10:41 pm ET)
          2  
          Correct. I also worked in the mortgage loan business for 8 years. The CRA was a necessary and a successful program.
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    • Author by YouDontMeanThat (April 22, 2010 5:01 pm ET)
         
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iW5qKYfqALE
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    • Author by egb (April 23, 2010 1:11 am ET)
        2
      It is no myth. If the local and regional banks hadn't had Fannie and Freddie buy their zero down NINJA loads, the housing bubble never would have happened even with those low
      Fed Interest rates.

      Quoting the referenced economist: "Fannie and Freddie got into subprime junk and helped fuel the housing bubble". [More like created it.] Fannie and Freddie were created by progressives in the federal government and hold fully have of the mortgages in the country.

      F&F have a bigger responsibility for the recession than any of the NY banks or even all of them together. If the government had not created Fannie and Freddy, the housing bubble that we saw would never have happened.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by ScienceBuff (April 23, 2010 9:20 am ET)
        2  
        The numbers don't support you.

        Federal Reserve Board data show that:
        - More than 84 percent of the subprime mortgages in 2006 were issued by private lending institutions.
        - Private firms made nearly 83 percent of the subprime loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers that year.
        - Only one of the top 25 subprime lenders in 2006 was directly subject to [CRA].

        Between 2004 and 2006, when subprime lending was exploding, Fannie and Freddie went from holding a high of 48 percent of the subprime loans that were sold into the secondary market to holding about 24 percent, according to data from Inside Mortgage Finance, a specialty publication. One reason is that Fannie and Freddie were subject to tougher standards than many of the unregulated players in the private sector who weakened lending standards, most of whom have gone bankrupt or are now in deep trouble.

        In 2005 and 2006, the private sector securitized almost two thirds of all U.S. mortgages, supplanting Fannie and Freddie.

        Fannie and Freddie, however, didn't pressure lenders to sell them more loans; they struggled to keep pace with their private sector competitors. In fact, their regulator, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, imposed new restrictions in 2006 that led to Fannie and Freddie losing even more market share in the booming subprime market.

        F&F are being scapegoated in opposition to the facts of the matter. The bulk of the responsibility still lies with out of control speculation by the private sector.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by mikehuck1976 (April 24, 2010 12:57 pm ET)
           
        As usual, egb. Not even CLOSE. Do some research of your own and stop regurgitating talking point you hear on Fox and hate radio. How many of the subprime mortgages were done through Fannie and Freddie? A very small percentage. You attempt to suggest over half by attempting to tell us they hold over half of the mortgages in this country. That slight of hand only works on the feable minded.

        Very few of the subprime mortgages were through Fannie and Freddie and they were very late to the game. Should they have stayed out altogether? Yes. But they had almost nothing to do with the subprimes fiasco that was created. Fannie Mae was created somewhere around 1940, Freddie Mac was created in 1970, The CRA was created in 1970. The CRA and Fannie and Freddie have all worked. And that is your real beef. The regulation and government programs have worked. The laissez-faire free market has not worked when left to its own devices. I know it goes against your ardent ideological mindset. But, the world has a way of throwing facts in your face even when you don't like it. Sorry.
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