you don't actually understand what we are discussing, do you......of course if a person buys a package of bundled loans he risks losing his investment.....UNLESS some government official at the fed decides WE will guarantee he gets it all........then he doesn't give a fuck if the loans are high risk or not......THAT is the problem......cope......
It is you who does not understand what we are discussing.
These mortgage bundles, these Securitization structures, pre 2008 and pre any Fed Guarantee, were ALWAYS cross collateralized and utilized leverage to the maximum.
What that ALWAYS meant, was if any of the groupings (from Prime to Sub Prime) performed far more poorly than the tolerance allowed for, it COULD and WOULD force the collapse of the ENTIRE bundle as the banks would seek to recoup their money from the failing loans, by liquidating the better performing loans.
There simply IS NOT the option, you seem to think exists, to simply pull out the block of bad loans and let them collapse, costing the banks money, and leave the better loans untouched for your own profit.
That is NOT how the system has ever worked and the Fed Guarantee has NO IMPACT on that aspect.
And believe me, I get that we are talking real estate law about 200 times over your pay grade and your only thought now is 'hurr durr, i just sign judgement documents against people who do not fight back', but you are wayyyy over your head here and, once again show absolutely zero comprehension of real estate law.