New member, liberal

Federal housing data reveal that the charges aren't true, and that the private sector, not the government or government-backed companies, was behind the soaring subprime lending at the core of the crisis.
Are you retarded? Fannie and Freddie simply buy loans that private banks make, and the private banks were forced to loan to people with shitty credit:
Community Reinvestment Act... regulations in 1995 required banks to demonstrate that they were making mortgage loans to underserved communities, which inevitably included borrowers whose credit standing did not qualify them for a conventional mortgage loan.
http://www.forbes.com/2009/02/13/ho...ibutors_0216_peter_wallison_edward_pinto.html
 
Thanks, I guess I am a Ted Kennedy lib, since I was born after JFK died.
When I heard the news on the radio I immediately pulled the truck into a parking lot, took out my phone and text'd the following message to my sistah in Taxachusetts: "TED IS DEAD".
 
Are you retarded? Fannie and Freddie simply buy loans that private banks make, and the private banks were forced to loan to people with shitty credit:

http://www.forbes.com/2009/02/13/ho...ibutors_0216_peter_wallison_edward_pinto.html


I understand in your little mind if the crash of our economy could be blamed on poor people, government and a homosexual in government, it would make your Monica Lewinsky urges toward the rich less of an insecurity...but it just ain't so.

CRA is not to Blame for the Mortgage Meltdown

It's time to stop the scapegoating: According to a study by the Federal Reserve, 94% of high-cost loans originated during the housing boom had nothing to do with Community Reinvestment Act goals. Lending to poor didn't spur crisis -Fed's Kroszner

The Comptroller of the Currency. John C. Dugan, agrees: "CRA [the Community Reinvestment Act] is not the culprit behind the subprime mortgage lending abuses, or the broader credit quality issues in the marketplace. Indeed, the lenders most prominently associated with subprime mortgage lending abuses and high rates of foreclosure are lenders not subject to CRA. A recent study of 2006 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data showed that banks subject to CRA and their affiliates originated or purchased only six percent of the reported high cost loans made to lower-income borrowers within their CRA assessment areas."**

* Remarks by John C. Dugan, Comptroller of the Currency, before the Enterprise Annual Network Conference (November 19, 2008), available at www.occ.gov/ftp/release/2008-136a.pdf.

** Glenn B. Canner, Senior Advisor, Federal Reserve Board, "2007 HMDA Data: Identifying Trends and Potential Regulatory Concerns," presentation at the Consumer Bankers Association's 2008 CRA and Fair Lending Colloquium, October 27, 2008.

Consider these facts:

CRA was effective long before the subprime market existed. CRA was passed in 1977 to correct the longstanding problem of redlining – the lack of lending in low and moderate income communities and in communities of color. CRA has been on the books for three decades, while the lending practices that created this crisis didn’t exist until the past five years.

Most subprime lenders weren’t covered under CRA. The predominant players in the subprime market – mortgage brokers, mortgage companies and the Wall Street investment banks that provided the financing – aren’t covered under CRA. Finance company affiliates of major banks also participated heavily, but are only included in CRA to the extent their bank parents choose them to be. In fact, many banks shifted the most risky lending – the loans at the root cause of this current crisis -- to affiliates to escape CRA requirements and regulatory oversight.

Wall Street created the demand for riskier loans.
The subprime market is the result of loans made without regard to the borrower’s ability to repay the loan and with little or no documentation of income. Lenders chose to engage in risky underwriting practices because Wall Street was eager for high-interest investments, not because of CRA.

Regulatory oversight and accountability was missing. The lack of regulation in the subprime market made it easy for subprime lenders to undercut responsible lending. Because lenders used artificially low initial payments and passed the loans onto investors while hiding the disastrous consequences coming down the line, many borrowers found themselves in loans that were ultimately unaffordable. In many communities, particularly communities of color, subprime lenders were often the only ones serving the community. Had regulators leveled the playing field through common sense underwriting requirements and more vigorously enforced CRA requirements instead of allowing a race to the bottom, this crisis would have been averted.

The majority of subprime loans went to white borrowers. It is true that African-American and Latino families disproportionately received ruinous subprime loans, but the majority of total loans were made to non-Latino white families. According to data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) from 2005-2007, 58% of higher-cost loans went to white borrowers, with 18% to African-American borrowers and Latino borrowers each.

The solution to this lending crisis and to make sure that it is not repeated is to require lenders to use sound underwriting practices, require Wall Street to take responsibility for loans it purchases, and to provide more assistance to homeowners facing foreclosure.

The answer is not to cut off access to credit in underserved communities. Homeownership still represents the best way for low and moderate income families to build wealth – we shouldn’t abandon that goal because of lenders’ bad decisions.

http://www.responsiblelending.org/mortgage-lending/policy-legislation/congress/cra-is-not-to-blame-for-blame-for-the-mortgage-meltdown.html

Lending to poor didn't spur crisis -Fed's Kroszner

Dec 3 (Reuters) - A federal program designed to increase lending to poor communities did not contribute to the recent subprime mortgage crisis, a senior Federal Reserve official said on Wednesday.

An extensive study of the Community Reinvestment Act shows the program, which is meant to increase borrowing opportunities for the poor, did not exacerbate current housing finance woes in any meaningful way, said Fed Governor Randall Kroszner.

"The long-term evidence shows that the CRA has not pushed banks into extending loans that perform out of line with their traditional business," Kroszner told a conference on extending credit to the poor in Washington.

In the last two years, millions of homeowners have faced the threat of losing their homes as defaults have climbed and property values have sunk.

The Fed conducted its study in the light of some critics who laid much of the blame for the current mortgage crisis at the feet of lawmakers and policy-makers who supported CRA.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN0332633420081203
 
You must not have watched it yourself, since you can't summarize what's in your one-hour video.

According to Bravo's analysis, you couldn't have:

Funny, I said I wouldn't do your homework, not that I couldn't summarise the video.

I am guessing you didn't watch it, since you have no comment on it it.
 
I understand in your little mind if the crash of our economy could be blamed on poor people, government and a homosexual in government, it would make your Monica Lewinsky urges toward the rich less of an insecurity...but it just ain't so.

CRA is not to Blame for the Mortgage Meltdown

It's time to stop the scapegoating: According to a study by the Federal Reserve, 94% of high-cost loans originated during the housing boom had nothing to do with Community Reinvestment Act goals. Lending to poor didn't spur crisis -Fed's Kroszner

The Comptroller of the Currency. John C. Dugan, agrees: "CRA [the Community Reinvestment Act] is not the culprit behind the subprime mortgage lending abuses, or the broader credit quality issues in the marketplace. Indeed, the lenders most prominently associated with subprime mortgage lending abuses and high rates of foreclosure are lenders not subject to CRA. A recent study of 2006 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data showed that banks subject to CRA and their affiliates originated or purchased only six percent of the reported high cost loans made to lower-income borrowers within their CRA assessment areas."**

* Remarks by John C. Dugan, Comptroller of the Currency, before the Enterprise Annual Network Conference (November 19, 2008), available at www.occ.gov/ftp/release/2008-136a.pdf.

** Glenn B. Canner, Senior Advisor, Federal Reserve Board, "2007 HMDA Data: Identifying Trends and Potential Regulatory Concerns," presentation at the Consumer Bankers Association's 2008 CRA and Fair Lending Colloquium, October 27, 2008.

Consider these facts:

CRA was effective long before the subprime market existed. CRA was passed in 1977 to correct the longstanding problem of redlining – the lack of lending in low and moderate income communities and in communities of color. CRA has been on the books for three decades, while the lending practices that created this crisis didn’t exist until the past five years.

Most subprime lenders weren’t covered under CRA. The predominant players in the subprime market – mortgage brokers, mortgage companies and the Wall Street investment banks that provided the financing – aren’t covered under CRA. Finance company affiliates of major banks also participated heavily, but are only included in CRA to the extent their bank parents choose them to be. In fact, many banks shifted the most risky lending – the loans at the root cause of this current crisis -- to affiliates to escape CRA requirements and regulatory oversight.

Wall Street created the demand for riskier loans.
The subprime market is the result of loans made without regard to the borrower’s ability to repay the loan and with little or no documentation of income. Lenders chose to engage in risky underwriting practices because Wall Street was eager for high-interest investments, not because of CRA.

Regulatory oversight and accountability was missing. The lack of regulation in the subprime market made it easy for subprime lenders to undercut responsible lending. Because lenders used artificially low initial payments and passed the loans onto investors while hiding the disastrous consequences coming down the line, many borrowers found themselves in loans that were ultimately unaffordable. In many communities, particularly communities of color, subprime lenders were often the only ones serving the community. Had regulators leveled the playing field through common sense underwriting requirements and more vigorously enforced CRA requirements instead of allowing a race to the bottom, this crisis would have been averted.

The majority of subprime loans went to white borrowers. It is true that African-American and Latino families disproportionately received ruinous subprime loans, but the majority of total loans were made to non-Latino white families. According to data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) from 2005-2007, 58% of higher-cost loans went to white borrowers, with 18% to African-American borrowers and Latino borrowers each.

The solution to this lending crisis and to make sure that it is not repeated is to require lenders to use sound underwriting practices, require Wall Street to take responsibility for loans it purchases, and to provide more assistance to homeowners facing foreclosure.

The answer is not to cut off access to credit in underserved communities. Homeownership still represents the best way for low and moderate income families to build wealth – we shouldn’t abandon that goal because of lenders’ bad decisions.

http://www.responsiblelending.org/mortgage-lending/policy-legislation/congress/cra-is-not-to-blame-for-blame-for-the-mortgage-meltdown.html

Lending to poor didn't spur crisis -Fed's Kroszner

Dec 3 (Reuters) - A federal program designed to increase lending to poor communities did not contribute to the recent subprime mortgage crisis, a senior Federal Reserve official said on Wednesday.

An extensive study of the Community Reinvestment Act shows the program, which is meant to increase borrowing opportunities for the poor, did not exacerbate current housing finance woes in any meaningful way, said Fed Governor Randall Kroszner.

"The long-term evidence shows that the CRA has not pushed banks into extending loans that perform out of line with their traditional business," Kroszner told a conference on extending credit to the poor in Washington.

In the last two years, millions of homeowners have faced the threat of losing their homes as defaults have climbed and property values have sunk.

The Fed conducted its study in the light of some critics who laid much of the blame for the current mortgage crisis at the feet of lawmakers and policy-makers who supported CRA.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN0332633420081203

The concept of sub-prime extended into the market. Bwarney forced Fannie and Freddie to buy them all.
 
1. No.
2. Ax Dune; I don't live there.

1. How come you haven't seen any rifles blowing up lately?

Based on my knowledge of mechanical components, that doesn't sound right, since the bullet wouldn't probably jam.

I'm not an expert on firearms by any stretch, but I think that you'd blow up a gun if you fired a bullet that size through it.

You arrogantly claimed to have a knowledge of ballistics, yet you clearly don't, because a bullet that size would blow up a gun in your face. Try it and see. :)
You best measure your groove diameter and your bullet OD, because if they're the same the gun will blow up on you. Guaranteed, Mr. Ballistics expert. :)




2. Then how do you know how they talk there? Dune lives there and says they don't talk that way. What does that make you?
 
No, that is how that talk in Maine.
Dune, this is a perfect example of feeding trolls.

Dumn Yankee, despite his reverence for mocking Damn Yankee (known to others here as Southern Man), is the troll known as Legion. Please do not respond to him and I highly suggest you add him to your ignore list (Damn Yankee is currently under investigation for trolling as of late as well, so feel free to add him too. You'll feel better)
 
Dune, this is a perfect example of feeding trolls.

Dumn Yankee, despite his reverence for mocking Damn Yankee (known to others here as Southern Man), is the troll known as Legion. Please do not respond to him and I highly suggest you add him to your ignore list (Damn Yankee is currently under investigation for trolling as of late as well, so feel free to add him too. You'll feel better)

Still can't find a job, Billy Barstool?
 
Dune, this is a perfect example of feeding trolls.

Dumn Yankee, despite his reverence for mocking Damn Yankee (known to others here as Southern Man), is the troll known as Legion. Please do not respond to him and I highly suggest you add him to your ignore list (Damn Yankee is currently under investigation for trolling as of late as well, so feel free to add him too. You'll feel better)
Get drunk lately? :)
 
Get drunk lately? :)


It's twelve o'clock somewhere, RIGHT???

najba.jpg
 
Back
Top