RangerDave wrote:
While I agree that the rating agencies' malfeasance wasn't directly relevant to regular home buyers' decisions, it was certainly key to the ability of those buyers to get the mortgage terms that have left many of them underwater now. More to the point, though, it's pretty obvious there was a bubble culture surrounding home-buying in this country for much of the early 2000s. There were half a dozen shows like "Flip This House" on t.v., lots of people who were not sophisticated investors/buyers were purchasing multi-$100k houses with the intent of cashing out in a few years because "that's what everyone is doing" and they didn't want to miss the bandwagon, etc. Was it possible to recognize that there was a bubble underway and that it would pop eventually? Sure, but plenty of genuinely sophisticated analysts obviously didn't realize it at the time, so of course many, many regular people had no idea either. Hell, that's how a bubble works. Prudence should still dictate against making an investment one can't afford to lose, but if everyone was prudent, we wouldn't have bubbles in the first place.
Laying it at the feet of the ratings agencies is misplacing the blame, IMHO. As I stated previously, the ratings agencies are rating the odds that the securitization trust is going to default. Who are major players in the securitization of mortgages? FNMA (and FHLMC), you know, the Government Sponsored Enterprise that states: "The corporation's purpose is to expand the secondary mortgage market by securitizing mortgages in the form of mortgage-backed securities (MBS)." What are the odds that a GSE is going to default? That's why the MBS's got AAA's, on the back of the "full faith and credit of the United States Government".
Why were these GSE's interested in the sub-prime market? Not because the MBS's were AAA rated, because the Gov't told them they had to offer the loans. The Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 made it part of their
charter that they: "have an affirmative obligation to facilitate the financing of affordable housing for low-income and moderate-income families." In 1999, they were pushed even further by our wise Gov't to provide loans in distressed inner city areas. You think that maybe because they were mandated by the Gov't to provide a greater and greater ratio of loans to those in the "inner-city" and those with "low incomes" that maybe they were looking to fulfill those goals by tapping the sub-prime market, rather than making those loans because they wanted to facilitate MBS's that involved sub-prime mortgages?
These GSE were explicitly backed by the Gov't. Additionally, these GSE's had, as their Gov't mandated goals, the need to increase low-income home-ownership and home-ownership in the inner-cities. I think it's fairly obvious how the whole "mortgage crisis" came about, and it's not because ratings agencies were giving AAA ratings to instruments backed by the "full faith and credit of the United States Government". The Gov't involvement in aspects of our lives in an attempt to create equality of outcomes is not a wise course.
Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Your share will be ~1/230million of that house.
But, on the bright side, your share is ~1/230millionth of *all* the foreclosed houses...
That's a lot of vacation homes!
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