0
0

CRA caused the housing crash


 invite response                
2009 Oct 16, 12:40am   62,116 views  403 comments

by Honest Abe   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

YES, the "only" institutions which were regulated by CRA were large commercial banks, BUT that CREATED the DEMAND that small mortgage companies happily filled. CRA loans were bundled as securities and sold all around the world...but the starting point of the entire food chain was the government forcing commercial banks to make unwise loans.

What happens to prices when suddenly MILLIONS of people can now buy the same product? Thats right - bidding wars -and prices skyrocketed, didn't they? With skyhigh prices many conventional borrowers chose Alt-A and Option Arm loans for the following reasons: (1) to get into the house, and (2) cope with skyhigh payments. Other's with equity borrowed in order to buy commercial properties. The cancer spread and it all started with CRA, kinda like when you toss a pebble into a pond - the ripple effect. By some estimates all this housing activity accounted for more than 40% of ALL jobs in the U.S. since 2001. Its ALL inter-related. 

CRA had nothing to do with housing bubbles in other countries, however all have similar CAUSES to our own collapse. Central government planing, high inflation, and central banks are the involved...and they too are 100% government related - gee what a coincidence. America also has central government planing (gov't intervention), high inflation and The Fed, which create's money out of thin air then loan's it to the gov't, at interest, putting us all in debt, $1.4 BILLION... PER DAY on INTREST payments alone.

Still not convinced that the Community Reinvestment Act is the cause of our housing and economic crash? Ask yourself this: If ALL loans made in the last 35 years required (1) 20% down, (2) a fixed interest rate, (3) prudent lending requirements and (4) no CRA...would we in America have our current economic meltdown?   Abe.

#housing

« First        Comments 400 - 403 of 403        Search these comments

400   Â¥   2010 Apr 7, 10:52am  

CRA loans were by definition lower-value compared to the big stuff being moved 2004-2006.

Though in South Central LA prices in the ghetto peaked at $400K or so.

Here's an example house at random:

http://www.zillow.com/homedetails/charts/20617286_zpid,10years_chartDuration/

The mortgage meltdown was caused by lenders making loans the borrowers couldn't repay.

CRA had nothing to do with this. 80/20 no-down, negative-am, cash-out refis, stated-income/stated-asset, and the complete abandonment of underwriting standards did.

I don't think institutions underestimated the risk as much as there was an agency problem -- the risk the lenders were running wasn't a problem for the loan industry.

There was so much money flowing into the MBS that nobody cared about the risk. This was the global saving glut engendered by the rapid expansion of money supply since 1995:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/M3

Honest Abe's unwillingness to learn these facts is becoming quite humorous.

401   Â¥   2010 Apr 7, 10:54am  

E-man says

Only two things can kill the housing market now: 1) high interest rate (above 7.5%) and 2) job market doesn’t improve. Of course, I don’t see much appreciation in the near future, but I don’t see a big drop in home price either. Therefore, put me in the “NO DOUBLE DIP” camp.

Other things that can kill the housing market:

1) Higher taxes
2) Mandatory Insurance Enrollment
3) Higher Energy costs
4) Reduced government spending

Good luck.

402   Leigh   2010 Apr 7, 12:01pm  

Antoher thing that might kill the market (again) or more accurately in Portland, Oregon is 'prevent recovery' is the realization that homes are still unaffordable! The only homes that seem to be selling are those at the low end,

403   Leigh   2010 Apr 7, 12:02pm  

Sheesh, Abe, what part of 'redlined neighborhood' do you not understand?!?!

« First        Comments 400 - 403 of 403        Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions