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To: hattend

“Who is the They and Their that you are tossing around? The Bankers?”

The law DID NOT state that they had to make loans to people that COULD NOT afford to ever make payments, much less loans at 10 times income levels...unless you can link me to where it said that.

Actually it wasn’t Dodd Frank (that was 2010), it was Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act that probably did the most damage. It was passed by a REPUBLICAN CONGRESS and opened up the door for banks to be even more idiotic than before.

Before that it was Carter’s Community Reinvestment Act, and that was the basis of this mess, but even that DID NOT require banks to loan money to people that couldn’t pay it back and some actually didn’t do that.


70 posted on 08/03/2014 2:11:43 PM PDT by BobL
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To: BobL
From a 2009 Forbes article:

What does "Congressionally Mandated Affordable Housing Goals" mean to you?

Fannie and Freddie (GSE)

====

But it also appears that, perhaps as early as 1993, Fannie Mae began to offer easy financing terms and lowered its loan standards in order to meet congressionally mandated affordable housing goals and fulfill the company’s trillion-dollar commitment. For example, in each of the years 2000 and 2001, the first years for which data are available, 18% of Fannie’s originations–totaling $157 billion–were loans with FICO scores of less than 660 (the federal regulators’ cut-off point for defining subprime loans). There is no equivalent data available for Freddie, but it is likely that its purchases were proportionately the same, amounting to an estimated $120 billion.

These sums would have swamped originations by the traditional subprime lenders, which probably totaled $119 billion in these two years. Data for Alt-A loans before 2005 are unavailable, but the fact that that Fannie and Freddie now hold 60% of all outstanding Alt-A loans provides a strong indication of the purchases they were making for many earlier years.

The GSE’s purchases of all mortgages slowed in 2004, as they worked to overcome their accounting scandals, but in late 2004 they returned to the market with a vengeance. Late that year, their chairmen were telling meetings of mortgage originators that the GSEs were eager to purchase subprime and other nonprime loans.

This set off a frenzy of subprime and Alt-A mortgage origination, in which–as incredible as it seems–Fannie and Freddie were competing with Wall Street and one another for low-quality loans. Even when they were not the purchasers, the GSEs were Wall Street’s biggest customers, often buying the AAA tranches of subprime and Alt-A pools that Wall Street put together. By 2007 they held $227 billion (one in six loans) in these nonprime pools, and approximately $1.6 trillion in low-quality loans altogether.

From 2005 through 2007, the GSEs purchased over $1 trillion in subprime and Alt-A loans, driving up the housing bubble and driving down mortgage quality. During these years, HUD’s regulations required that 55% of all GSE purchases be affordable, including 25% made to low- and very low-income borrowers. Housing bubbles are nothing new. We and other countries have had them before. The reason that the most recent bubble created a worldwide financial crisis is that it was inflated with low-quality loans required by government mandate. The fact that the same government must now come to the rescue is no reason for gratitude.

71 posted on 08/03/2014 2:31:11 PM PDT by hattend (Firearms and ammunition...the only growing industries under the Obama regime.)
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