Re: [scifinoir2] OT-Mortgage Mess is Far Far Worse than You Suppose

2007-12-13 Thread Martin
And the bullcrap that's flown in the wake of all of this, from the Fed's two 
ill-timed and -advised rate cuts to its more recent decision to begin 
auctioning bonds and firming links between itself and its EU counterpart are, 
IMO, nothing more than slapping a Band-aid on a ruptured aorta. It only mkes 
the blood spray prettier to look at...
   
  The only slution, again IMO, is to set regulations regarding mortgages and 
banking in concrete, and allowing no rollbacks or deregulations. This is all 
the fault of those who walked in the door and decided that deregulation would 
be a good thing.
   
  That's Republicans, if anyone was wondering.
   
  Martin (relinquishing soapbox)

"Tracey de Morsella (formerly Tracey L. Minor)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  Straight Talk on the Mortgage Mess from a Mortgage Industry Insider, 
as 
featured at MarketWatch, 12:11:23 PM, December 6th, 2007.
by Richard Clark
http://www.opednews.com/articles/1/opedne_richard__071208_mortgage_industry_in.htm

Even before this mortgage mess started, this insider with 20 years 
experience in the mortgage industry kept saying that this is going to 
get real bad. He kept saying this was beyond sub-prime, beyond low FICO 
scores, beyond Alt-A, and beyond the imagination of most pundits, 
politicians and the press. When he was asked why somebody from inside 
the industry would be so emphatically sounding the alarm, he simply 
replied, “Somebody’s got to warn people.”

Since then, Mark Hanson has spent most of his career in the 
wholesale and correspondent residential arena, primarily on the West 
Coast. So far he has been pretty much on target as the situation has 
unfolded.

His current thoughts, which I urge you to read, follow a short 
introduction, the first part of which is a synopsis of the New Road To 
Serfdom article in the May 2006 issue of Harpers, written by Michael 
Hudson, who saw what was coming:

"Although home ownership has been a wise choice for many people, 
this particular real estate bubble has been carefully engineered to lure 
home buyers into circumstances detrimental to their own best interests. 
The bait is easy money. The trap is a modern equivalent to peonage – a 
lifetime spent working to pay off debt on an asset of rapidly dwindling 
value.

Most everyone involved in the real estate bubble thus far has made 
money. But all that is about to change. The bubble will burst . . and 
when it does, the people who thought they would be living the easy life 
of a landlord will soon find that what they really signed up for was the 
hard servitude of debt serfdom.

Many home owners are spending tomorrow’s capital gain today by 
taking out home-equity loans. For families whose real wages are stagnant 
or falling, borrowing against higher property prices seems almost like 
taking money from a bank account that has earned valuable dividends. New 
home-equity loans added $200 billion to the US economy in 2004 alone.

The problem is, home-owner debt is about to surpass the size of 
America’s entire domestic product. And in growing numbers of housing 
markets around the country, home prices seem to have reached their peak, 
and in some places are already in decline.

Even Alan Greenspan stated home prices had “risen to unsustainable 
levels,” and would have exceeded the reach of many Americans long ago . 
. if not for “the dramatic increase in the prevalence of interest-only 
loans” and “other, more exotic forms of adjustable–rate mortgages that 
enable marginally qualified borrowers to purchase homes at inflated 
prices.” If this trend continues, Greenspan said, homeowners and banks 
alike “could be exposed to significant losses.”

The second part of this introduction is extracted from the World 
Socialist Web Site at http://wsws.org:

"The New York Times recently reported that Treasury Secretary Hank 
Paulson’s former firm, Goldman Sachs, began unloading its mortgages and 
mortgage-backed securities late last year when subprime defaults began 
to soar. But the top investment bank continued to package and sell 
securities backed by subprime mortgages, marketing $6 billion worth of 
these securities in the first nine months of 2007.

Those who were hustled into taking a subprime adjustable-rate 
mortgage were assured that they would be able to refinance their loans 
before the reset rates—generally 30 percent higher—kicked in two or 
three years later because the market values of their homes would have 
significantly risen in the interim. But the collapse of the housing 
market and sharp decline in home prices has left many of these borrowers 
owing more than their homes are now worth.

Seeking relief for banks and big investors

The motivation behind the discussions is the growing alarm on Wall 
Street and in Washington over the potentially catastrophic financial 
implications of the accelerating housing slump and related crisis on 
credit markets. The proposals under discussion a

[scifinoir2] OT-Mortgage Mess is Far Far Worse than You Suppose

2007-12-13 Thread Tracey de Morsella (formerly Tracey L. Minor)
Straight Talk on the Mortgage Mess from a Mortgage Industry Insider, as 
featured at MarketWatch, 12:11:23 PM, December 6th, 2007.
by Richard Clark
http://www.opednews.com/articles/1/opedne_richard__071208_mortgage_industry_in.htm

 Even before this mortgage mess started, this insider with 20 years 
experience in the mortgage industry kept saying that this is going to 
get real bad. He kept saying this was beyond sub-prime, beyond low FICO 
scores, beyond Alt-A, and beyond the imagination of most pundits, 
politicians and the press. When he was asked why somebody from inside 
the industry would be so emphatically sounding the alarm, he simply 
replied, “Somebody’s got to warn people.”

 Since then, Mark Hanson has spent most of his career in the 
wholesale and correspondent residential arena, primarily on the West 
Coast. So far he has been pretty much on target as the situation has 
unfolded.

 His current thoughts, which I urge you to read, follow a short 
introduction, the first part of which is a synopsis of the New Road To 
Serfdom article in the May 2006 issue of Harpers, written by Michael 
Hudson, who saw what was coming:

 "Although home ownership has been a wise choice for many people, 
this particular real estate bubble has been carefully engineered to lure 
home buyers into circumstances detrimental to their own best interests. 
The bait is easy money. The trap is a modern equivalent to peonage – a 
lifetime spent working to pay off debt on an asset of rapidly dwindling 
value.

 Most everyone involved in the real estate bubble thus far has made 
money. But all that is about to change. The bubble will burst . . and 
when it does, the people who thought they would be living the easy life 
of a landlord will soon find that what they really signed up for was the 
hard servitude of debt serfdom.

 Many home owners are spending tomorrow’s capital gain today by 
taking out home-equity loans. For families whose real wages are stagnant 
or falling, borrowing against higher property prices seems almost like 
taking money from a bank account that has earned valuable dividends. New 
home-equity loans added $200 billion to the US economy in 2004 alone.

 The problem is, home-owner debt is about to surpass the size of 
America’s entire domestic product. And in growing numbers of housing 
markets around the country, home prices seem to have reached their peak, 
and in some places are already in decline.

 Even Alan Greenspan stated home prices had “risen to unsustainable 
levels,” and would have exceeded the reach of many Americans long ago . 
. if not for “the dramatic increase in the prevalence of interest-only 
loans” and “other, more exotic forms of adjustable–rate mortgages that 
enable marginally qualified borrowers to purchase homes at inflated 
prices.” If this trend continues, Greenspan said, homeowners and banks 
alike “could be exposed to significant losses.”

 The second part of this introduction is extracted from the World 
Socialist Web Site at http://wsws.org:

 "The New York Times recently reported that Treasury Secretary Hank 
Paulson’s former firm, Goldman Sachs, began unloading its mortgages and 
mortgage-backed securities late last year when subprime defaults began 
to soar. But the top investment bank continued to package and sell 
securities backed by subprime mortgages, marketing $6 billion worth of 
these securities in the first nine months of 2007.

 Those who were hustled into taking a subprime adjustable-rate 
mortgage were assured that they would be able to refinance their loans 
before the reset rates—generally 30 percent higher—kicked in two or 
three years later because the market values of their homes would have 
significantly risen in the interim. But the collapse of the housing 
market and sharp decline in home prices has left many of these borrowers 
owing more than their homes are now worth.

 Seeking relief for banks and big investors

The motivation behind the discussions is the growing alarm on Wall 
Street and in Washington over the potentially catastrophic financial 
implications of the accelerating housing slump and related crisis on 
credit markets. The proposals under discussion are calibrated to avert 
(at the least possible cost to the banks and big investors) a collapse 
of major US banks and other financial institutions that could be 
triggered by spiraling home foreclosures.

 In essence, the scheme is aimed at containing the home foreclosure 
epidemic sufficiently to shield the major financial institutions from 
the full consequences of years of rampant speculation, accompanied by 
accounting manipulations that concealed the immense levels of risk 
behind the soaring profits and gargantuan salaries reaped by Wall Street 
executives.

 Were the plan implemented, it would allow holders of 
mortgage-backed securities to put off marking down their assets.

The real estate and credit bubbles that have now bur