Red13JoePa wrote:When did this board become a goddamn watercooler?
It's always been one when there's nothing much else worth talking about in Journeyworld.
Moderator: Andrew
Red13JoePa wrote:When did this board become a goddamn watercooler?
conversationpc wrote:Red13JoePa wrote:When did this board become a goddamn watercooler?
It's always been one when there's nothing much else worth talking about in Journeyworld.
Michigan Girl wrote:jrnychick wrote:Enigma869 wrote:Michigan Girl wrote: The victims (in most cases) are the people losing their homes because their LENDER did not explain SPECIFICALLY how an ARM loan works over the life of the loan. Sad indeed!!
While I definitely agree with you that the current credit and housing crisis is "sad", I'm not willing to blame mortgage companies or politicians for the downfall of the housing market. It's clear from your later comments in this thread that you work in the industry, and have industry knowledge. I also have worked in the mortgage industry for years, and ran my own company for years. The bottom line for me is that the American home buyer MUST be held accountable. I simply don't and NEVER will buy into "Consumers weren't told what their loans were"! That is the most ridiculous excuse I've ever heard!
I've NEVER signed a single document, without understanding what it was I was signing (including before I got into the industry)! It is simply inexcusable for any homeowner to say they didn't know that their mortgage rate could adjust! The freakin term "ARM" acronymn has "Adjustable" right in there! Also, there isn't a state that I'm aware of that doesn't require both the lender and broker to have the borrower sign an adjustable rate disclosure with warning after warning after warning! They then have to sign an adjustable rate rider with the mortgage, at the closing! If the borrower chooses not to read what it is he or she is signing, they have nobody to blame, but themselves!
Most people in our industry knew the bottom was going to fall out, when banks were offering 100% financing to VERY marginal borrowers. Most people with an ounce of common sense also knew that eventually the price of real estate was going to start going the other way, and it finally has! I don't see the prices of real estate bouncing back any time soon. I also think the foreclosure rate is going to continue to climb over the next 12-18 months, because we are nowhere near the bottom of this disaster!
John from Boston
I agree with you 110%, John! People got into these mortgages of their own free will. If they didn't understand what they were getting into, they shouldn't have signed the papers or they should have kept asking questions until they DID understand and were OK with it. Nobody held a gun to their heads and told them they must make poor financial decisions. I sometimes have difficulty understanding the money aspect of the loans (my math sucks), but I'll keep asking questions until I understand it and I don't care who I piss off.
Honestly, Greenspan needs to shut his piehole. The markets are still affected by the things he says. I truly believe that we're just beginning to pay for all of the "feel good" mistakes that were made by companies, the fed, and the legislators in the late '90s and early '00s. What goes up must come down...
People do get into these mortgages of their own free will however, by maintaining responsibility on OUR end means our company may be here tomorrow to service your mortgage needs!!! We can blame the consumer all we want for their lack of knowledge and their inablility to make sound financial decisions, but we have to make sound financial decisions as well if we are going to remain in business~sometimes that means saying NO!!!! Look, it's as simple as this...do you want to go bankrupt or not? If you choose yes, go ahead make the loans and continue to call other people irresponsible because YOUR business went under.
ohsherrie wrote:The economy was sinking early in Bush's reign because the dot.com bubble was deflating. Tax cuts and corporate welfare were going to send the manufacturing and related jobs out of the country, so they had to have a way to make it look like the economy was still doing good even while living wage jobs were shipped out and replaced by minimum wage.
Two of the primary economic indicators, other than the stock market (but the tax cuts and corporate welfare were going to take care of that) are the housing market and the unemployment figures.
Building houses creates jobs, but there's not enough money in the real economy to support a housing boon, so what to do, what to do? Well, let's make it easy for people to get loans and let them worry about how to pay for it later. If we keep telling them how good the economy is and how many jobs we're creating, they'll feel confident that they'll be all right.
There ya go, automatic good economy.
Stock prices are going up because those corporations are making so much money with that cheap Chinese and Mexican labor.
The housing market is going strong because we made it so easy for people to spend money they didn't and never would have.
The unemployment figures are still acceptable because those construction and construction related jobs are helping the fast food and retail jobs keep the numbers down.
Nevermind that those jobs won't pay those mortgages, we'll worry about that later.
Many of the materials, fixtures, furnishings and household goods for those houses are being manufactured by many of those corporations, so that also helps the stock market numbers.
Damn, this economy is rolling.
Nevermind that those materials, fixtures, furnishing and household goods aren't being manufactured here to put money back into the real economy, we'll worry about that later.
It's later folks.
Yeah, it was all about greed, but that started at the top.
A lot of it was people trying to live beyond their means but not all. For many it was that almost everything was beyond their means. What were they supposed to live in anyway, a FEMA trailer? $100,000 doesn't buy a lot of house these days but it makes a hell a mortgage when you only make $30,000 a year.
All this shit you see on TV about how they help people save money or make the mortgage payments by cutting down on their visits to Starbucks, Bloomingdales, and Best Buy is about as representative of reality as Desperate Housewives.
Anybody who doesn't know better than to spend hundreds of dollars on a handbag or iphone when they're having trouble making their house payments deserves to lose it, but not that poor schmuck who thought his construction job in that booming economy was going to pay his mortgage.
ohsherrie wrote:The economy was sinking early in Bush's reign because the dot.com bubble was deflating. Tax cuts and corporate welfare were going to send the manufacturing and related jobs out of the country, so they had to have a way to make it look like the economy was still doing good even while living wage jobs were shipped out and replaced by minimum wage.
Two of the primary economic indicators, other than the stock market (but the tax cuts and corporate welfare were going to take care of that) are the housing market and the unemployment figures.
Building houses creates jobs, but there's not enough money in the real economy to support a housing boon, so what to do, what to do? Well, let's make it easy for people to get loans and let them worry about how to pay for it later. If we keep telling them how good the economy is and how many jobs we're creating, they'll feel confident that they'll be all right.
There ya go, automatic good economy.
Stock prices are going up because those corporations are making so much money with that cheap Chinese and Mexican labor.
The housing market is going strong because we made it so easy for people to spend money they didn't and never would have.
The unemployment figures are still acceptable because those construction and construction related jobs are helping the fast food and retail jobs keep the numbers down.
Nevermind that those jobs won't pay those mortgages, we'll worry about that later.
Many of the materials, fixtures, furnishings and household goods for those houses are being manufactured by many of those corporations, so that also helps the stock market numbers.
Damn, this economy is rolling.
Nevermind that those materials, fixtures, furnishing and household goods aren't being manufactured here to put money back into the real economy, we'll worry about that later.
It's later folks.
Yeah, it was all about greed, but that started at the top.
A lot of it was people trying to live beyond their means but not all. For many it was that almost everything was beyond their means. What were they supposed to live in anyway, a FEMA trailer? $100,000 doesn't buy a lot of house these days but it makes a hell a mortgage when you only make $30,000 a year.
All this shit you see on TV about how they help people save money or make the mortgage payments by cutting down on their visits to Starbucks, Bloomingdales, and Best Buy is about as representative of reality as Desperate Housewives.
Anybody who doesn't know better than to spend hundreds of dollars on a handbag or iphone when they're having trouble making their house payments deserves to lose it, but not that poor schmuck who thought his construction job in that booming economy was going to pay his mortgage.
jrnychick wrote: Why did they have 2 more, when they could not afford to feed and clothe the 4 they already had?
ohsherrie wrote:I didn't say Bush had anything to do with the dot.com thing. I said it was coming down early in his reign.
http://www.harpers.org/archive/2008/02/0081908
ohsherrie wrote:Stuart, shut the fuck up. You personify, indeed you even epitomize, everything that I've been accused of calling all conservatives. You set the standard for miltant ignorance.
ohsherrie wrote:Stuart, shut the fuck up. You personify, indeed you even epitomize, everything that I've been accused of calling all conservatives. You set the standard for miltant ignorance.
ohsherrie wrote:Stuart, shut the fuck up. You personify, indeed you even epitomize, everything that I've been accused of calling all conservatives. You set the standard for miltant ignorance.
Saint John wrote:The "economy." LOL.Once again, it all comes back to those that have chosen to educate themselves, save and plan ahead, and those that have not. The only "economy" I care about is mine, and it's doing great!!! I just can't figure out why some people blame the president because they're lazy.
Education in this country is free, so unless you're openly admitting that you lacked the upbringing and/or intelligence capacity to work hard and maintain excellent grades, you really have no excuse.
RossValoryRocks wrote:Saint John wrote:The "economy." LOL.Once again, it all comes back to those that have chosen to educate themselves, save and plan ahead, and those that have not. The only "economy" I care about is mine, and it's doing great!!! I just can't figure out why some people blame the president because they're lazy.
Education in this country is free, so unless you're openly admitting that you lacked the upbringing and/or intelligence capacity to work hard and maintain excellent grades, you really have no excuse.
But but but...Bush is to blame because companies can't compete in the US due to high taxes, over regulation and high wage demands by Union employees. Don't you understand?????? Companies aren't supposed to turn a profit, they are only supposed to give people jobs!![]()
ohsherrie wrote:Two of the primary economic indicators, other than the stock market (but the tax cuts and corporate welfare were going to take care of that) are the housing market and the unemployment figures.
strangegrey wrote:ohsherrie wrote:Two of the primary economic indicators, other than the stock market (but the tax cuts and corporate welfare were going to take care of that) are the housing market and the unemployment figures.
Sher, one thing to remember here is that both housing and unemployment are *trailing* indicators. Unemployment seems to be the one 'indicator' that's used on news casts as pure determinants of the economy...which is sad, because not only is unemployment, as I said, a trailing indicator...but there are a few different types of unemployment (some of which are not indicators of a bad economy, but a good one).
Im not saying that the economy isnt bad right now...It's actually worse off than I think most people are willing to admit. However, unemployment seems to be the first thing that people look at...when in reality, it should be one of the last.
Stu touched upon something that rings hard. Turning debt into marketable securities. The concept has a very Enronesque ring to it...i.e. to take something that really shouldn't be traded, and find a way to repackage it as a tradable commodity. If that doesn't stink of shenanigans, I can't think of what would.
strangegrey wrote:I think there's some accounting that comes into play here, Stu. Marking up debt (that would likely go down) and trading it, depending on how its treated, violates conservatism. I'm sure there are a few accountants at the other end of this whole mess that are going "oh crap, what did we do?"
Regardless, There's more than enough blame to go around....
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