nothing you posted addressed anything I said.....just more papering over Originally Posted by nevergaveitathoughtThat is because nobody forced them to make those loans like you lied...I ignored your lie. Now I will refute it.
"In 2003, Fannie Mae's estimated market share for bonds backed by single-family housing was 45%. Just one year later, it dropped to 23.5%. As a 2005 internal presentation at Fannie Mae noted, with some alarm, `Private label volume surpassed Fannie Mae volume for the first time.` ... There was no question about why this was happening: the subprime mortgage originators were starting to dominate the market. They didn't need Fannie and Freddie to guarantee their loans ... As Fannie's market share dropped, the company's investors grew restless ..."Non-conforming" loans meaning not conforming to prime lending standards.
Citigroup had been hired to look at what Citi called `strategic alternatives to maximize long term ... shareholder value` [at Fannie Mae]. Among its key recommendations for increasing ... market capitalization: ... begin guaranteeing `non-conforming residential mortgages`"[73]
LOL! WikiPostingFraud is quoting Wiki again! At least this time he cited to his source! Like Wiki is authoritative! THAT'S Funny!It was a quote from a book about the meltdown. Do you have anything substantive to add to the conversation. ..or shall nevergivesitathought give you the address where I might meet both of you tow dipshits and buy you both a beer?
Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
you hang (and kneel) in the Montrose area right or Houston Heights? Originally Posted by nevergaveitathoughtI'm not a God Damn bat so I don't hang anywhere. ..nor am I religious so you won't see me kneeling anywhere. I would like to buy you two numbnuts a round though. Seeing how you two have shown very little knowledge of the financial meltdown. ..maybe you two goobers would be fun to talk Yiddish with.
The rating agency's committed fraud. Do you not understand wtf happened? Do you just parrot right wing talking points? If so go stand in the corner with COG and nevergivesitathought.
Who are the "unsuspecting third parties" who bought the bundled loans? Do you think the people who manage your pension fund are just poor l'il widows and orphans? Are they as stupid as you are? Or are they supposed to be trained in finance and have a fiduciary duty to exercise care in how they invest? Originally Posted by lustylad
Care to discuss your right wing talking point myth? All COG can talk about is that I have read a book (or ten ) about the crisis and its origin. He seems to think that is some sin. Seems he gets all his talking points from Rush Limbaugh.
they bundled the loans because they didn't want to be stuck with them.. they made the loans initially because they were forced to
Originally Posted by nevergaveitathought
That is because nobody forced them to make those loans like you lied...I ignored your lie. Now I will refute it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_policies_and_the_su bprime_mortgage_crisis
In their book on the crisis, journalists McLean and Nocera argue that the GSEs (Fannie and Freddie) followed rather than led the private sector into subprime lending."In 2003, Fannie Mae's estimated market share for bonds backed by single-family housing was 45%. Just one year later, it dropped to 23.5%. As a 2005 internal presentation at Fannie Mae noted, with some alarm, `Private label volume surpassed Fannie Mae volume for the first time.` ... There was no question about why this was happening: the subprime mortgage originators were starting to dominate the market. They didn't need Fannie and Freddie to guarantee their loans ... As Fannie's market share dropped, the company's investors grew restless ..."Non-conforming" loans meaning not conforming to prime lending standards.
Citigroup had been hired to look at what Citi called `strategic alternatives to maximize long term ... shareholder value` [at Fannie Mae]. Among its key recommendations for increasing ... market capitalization: ... begin guaranteeing `non-conforming residential mortgages`"[73]
In a 2008 article on Fannie Mae, the New York Times describes the company as responding to pressure rather than setting the pace in lending. By 2004, "competitors were snatching lucrative parts of its business. Congress was demanding that [it] help steer more loans to low-income borrowers. Lenders were threatening to sell directly to Wall Street unless Fannie bought a bigger chunk of their riskiest loans"[74]
Federal Reserve data found more than 84% of the subprime mortgages in 2006 coming from private-label institutions rather than Fannie and Freddie, and the share of subprime loans insured by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac decreasing as the bubble got bigger (from a high of insuring 48% to insuring 24% of all subprime loans in 2006).[75] According to economists Jeff Madrick and Frank Partnoy, unlike Wall Street, the GSEs "never bought the far riskier collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) that were also rated triple-A and were the main source of the financial crisis."[76] A 2011 study by the Fed using statistical comparisons of geographic regions which were and were not subject to GSE regulations, found "little evidence" that GSEs played a significant role in the subprime crisis.[77][78] Originally Posted by WTF
lustladyboy, have you read The Big Short? Do you understand how some of these banks made loans, bundled and sold them to unsuspecting investors as AAA and then shorted those bets. These banks made a huge profit on these loans because AIG was the one insuring them. Instead of AIG going bankrupt like it should have...the taxpayers stepped in and paid banks like Goldman, when in fact they should have put people from these firms in jail. Is that the kind of shit you are defending? Just because the AIG bailout was repaid....does not mean that these bankers you are defending are savy (sic) investors as you claim, they were/are common crooks. Originally Posted by WTFYou're ducking the question as usual. I asked you to name one big bank that wound up “stiffing the public with their losses”. Just one. You can't do it. AIG is an insurance company, not a bank. So now you argue that the banks stiffed the public with AIG's losses instead of their own. That's a stretch, how does that work? If someone gives you a bailout loan and you use part of the proceeds to pay bills you owe me, does that make me responsible for your losses? Of course not, asshole.
You're ducking the question as usual. I asked you to name one big bank that wound up “stiffing the public with their losses”. Just one. You can't do it. AIG is an insurance company, not a bank. So now you argue that the banks stiffed the public with AIG's losses instead of their own. That's a stretch, how does that work? If someone gives you a bailout loan and you use part of the proceeds to pay bills you owe me, does that make me responsible for your losses? Of course not, asshole.
? Originally Posted by lustylad
The rating agency's (sic) committed fraud. Do you not understand wtf happened? Do you just parrot right wing talking points? Originally Posted by WTFHey dumbfuck, learn the difference between plural and possessive, ok? Your sloppy grammar and constant misspellings are grating on my nerves.