Fact Finder wrote:Thank you very much.
A de-regulated bank would not have made those loans, and in fact they were not. Hence red-lining.
Once regulated, banks did.
Then came the easy money when they sold it off to Freddie/Fannie,( see me and you). Because of the easy money supply (see Govt/welfare), predatory lending started.
When you give things away don't be surprised when a line forms outside your door. Grand Social Experiments (see GSE's) almost never work.
I think we can safely say that this one failed as well.
My, what a simplistic free market fairy tale. If only the biggest financial crisis in nearly a century could be reduced into such black and white terms.
FF, you clearly have not looked into the crisis very deeply, or, once again, you simply don’t mind feeding your fellow MR posters a line of cornfed shit.
Fannie and Freddie gambled with subprime mortgages to be sure. And they paid the price.
However, to imply that they were the reason for the ensuing multi-billion Tarp / AIG bailout, along with the global credit markets freezing is nothing short of laughable.
Over half of the subprime mortgages originated in the private sector – that is, unregulated lenders that weren’t bound by the Carter-era Community Reinvestment Act (see links below). Neither the CRA, nor ANY regulation for that matter, caused the too-big-to-fail investment banks to then buy up these subprime mortgages, bundle them into complex derivatives, and give them false Triple A ratings, or force AIG to start insuring those toxic subprime mortgages. Nobody forced investment banks like Bear-Stearns and Lehman to do anything – and of course, it was these giant firms that drove the secondary subprime market, which eventually jeopardized the global financial system, and capitalism, itself.
As for Greenspan...we’re talking about a man who was referred to as the “oracle” and literally, could move financial mountains based upon what he said (“irrational exuberance” anyone?). With the markets hanging on his every word, he had a responsibility to warn the people. By 2004, the FBI thought the subprime crisis was serious enough to launch an investigation. Later, so too did several states (who were overruled by the comptroller of currency). Meanwhile, Greenspan at the Fed, whose primary responsibility was to oversee the stability of the financial system and prevent crashes, swears he saw and heard nothing.
Riiiiight.
He was also warned about credit default swaps and the very derivatives gambling (a.k.a. financial weapons of mass destruction) that helped bring us to where we are at, and he chose to ignore it. Other posters already mentioned the extended period of low interest rates
As I’ve stressed repeatedly, nobody from either party walks away with clean hands, but not everyone in this farce is equal. As a regulator of first resort, Greenspan fucked up.
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2008/12/ ... b/article/
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2008/12/ ... he-sequel/
http://www.businessweek.com/investing/i ... reinv.html
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2008/10/12/5 ... annie.html
http://www.dallasfed.org/ca/bcp/2009/bcp0901.cfm#12