10-15-2010, 08:02 PM | #41 | |
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10-15-2010, 10:15 PM | #42 |
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I know the question wasn't directed to me but if you look at the financial problems Countrywide, and by extension BoA had the originators appear to have been holding on to more than enough loans to screw themselves up and that did nothing to check their decision making.
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10-15-2010, 10:36 PM | #43 | |
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Countrywides issue was they were kings of the "give mortgage to anybody" and then sell the loans off. In the end...they could dump them anymore and were stuck with them. I guess the reality of it is that taking ownership (of the debt/obligations) would only work with smaller banks. Stringent lending practices without the pressure to turn the mortgage business into a cash cow. |
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10-16-2010, 12:32 AM | #44 | |
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10-16-2010, 07:44 AM | #45 |
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A contributing factor to this is American public has no memory. We been through this before on a smaller scale in the late 80's and early 90's. We saw what was then "Record Foreclosures" and people acting like it was the banks fault then. Yet by the end of the 90 and the beginning of the new millennium the public was back to signing ARM's and assuming a level of risk that would break them. We are going to repeat this mess if the public in general doesn't get off the credit pipe!
I am old enough to remember when buying something on credit was considered something to be a little ashamed of. The public was and largely still is the Un-named Co-conspirator in this latest economic meltdown.
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10-16-2010, 11:06 AM | #46 |
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Legalize pot!!
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10-16-2010, 11:56 AM | #47 | |
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Smaller banks haven't faired much better. This is a list of banks that have failed in the 2000s along with when they failed. Notice the list is almost exclusively small banks. There is no reason given for the failure of each bank but I think it is safe to say mortgages played a large role for the majority of them. http://www.fdic.gov/bank/individual/.../banklist.html |
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10-16-2010, 02:20 PM | #48 | |
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Countrywide was by choice and the long term gains outweighed the losses. BOA was more than capable to absorb all the losses and captilize on Countrywides market presence. When Merrill Lynch was in talks with BOA (initially) for a rescue it looked promising because Lewis was not happy with the performance of BOA's investment house for some time. Merrill had a lot of expertise to bring to the table. However once they looked closely at it they'd backed off. That's when the administration pulled their bullshit. You have a point with small banks. I guess I was thinking more local banks like credit unions. |
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10-16-2010, 10:40 PM | #49 |
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No. In the system producers are rewarded, only a mountain of defaults and write offs would sink an officer, relegate him to admin only kinda duty. And at higher dollar levels it is committee approval, so in effect zero individual accountability.
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10-16-2010, 10:50 PM | #50 |
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Our society has become a consumer spending crack pipe. Consumer buy all they can period. Consumers have adjusted to the income/inflation deficiencies over the years. Revolving credit, crunch down mortgage consolidations, went from 24 mo auto financing in the 70s to 72 mo finances and leases today. Mortgages from 10 yrs to 30, then adjustable rates to afford even longer effectual amortization.
this has been brewing for decades fellas. The middle class aged and shrank. Corporations turned out profit at the expense of long term viability. And I dont buy the global market crap. We started the global market by becoming huge importers, allowing a huge trade deficeit, closing off our natural resources for cheaper foreign alternatives, oil dependency, policing the world while fighting communism with trade deals that dealt us out... shit I am tires of thinking about it.
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