The latest news is that Bernanke and Paulson believe that ad hoc, "one time" bailouts of failing firms isn't going to work. So they have proposed a plan to to buy $700 billion worth of mortgage-linked investments. As best I can understand it, the idea is that being relieved of these bad investments will allow banks to start lending again, which will hopefully put a stop to falling housing prices, which is causing this whole mess. Here's some analysis from NYT. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/21/business/21econ.html?pagewanted=2But what I would like to know is....WHAT CAUSED HOUSING PRICES TO BECOME SO INFLATED IN THE FIRST PLACE???[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 1:13 AM. Reason : ``]
9/21/2008 1:10:33 AM
personally, i'm down with a shitty housing market and not bailing people out on the taxpayer dimeyou know, because taxes suck, and i don't own a house, but i probably oughta buy one (even if it's just rental property)
9/21/2008 1:25:40 AM
^^ one analysis that I casually heard (IOW I don't stand by it) was that lenders were advertising easy-to-get loans and encouraging people to by houses as investments (which is easy to believe when you consider the ridiculous amounts of advertisements about "no credit, no problem!"), which increased the demand for houses, without a corresponding increase in supply, which caused the prices of houses to increase too.
9/21/2008 1:33:43 AM
9/21/2008 3:45:50 AM
9/21/2008 10:07:22 AM
9/21/2008 10:30:43 AM
It all goes back to illegal immigration. See, who built all these houses? Mexicans. Without those darn Mexicans, not nearly as many new houses could have been built, sub-prime loans wouldn't have been given out for these new houses, and the world would be a better place. Mexicans are destroying our Economy!.
9/21/2008 10:48:34 AM
9/21/2008 10:55:08 AM
9/21/2008 10:58:36 AM
^^^^ Explain how the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act led to rising home prices. [Edited on September 21, 2008 at 11:00 AM. Reason : .]
9/21/2008 10:59:54 AM
I'd just like to point out that falling housing prices are not a problem, they are the solution.There are a lot of reason why housing became inflated, but a big cause is the combining of loose credit given to people who didn't reserve it and a general attitude among the population that housing was an investment.In fact, the very precence of Fannie and Freddie, which were established with the goal of promoting affordable housing, had in fact the complete opposite result. By promoting home ownership and extending credit at extremely low rates, they are increasing the demand and thus the price of the very item they are trying to make affordable.And now that housing prices are dropping, and thus the supply of affordable housing is increasing, everyone freaks out.
9/21/2008 11:16:16 AM
Investment insurance.Coming soon from AIG.
9/21/2008 1:21:31 PM
9/21/2008 1:33:20 PM
Damn, I hope this bailout doesn't pass.In a bit of breaking news I just heard Obama in Charlotte say 'No to blank checks' about 5 minuts ago. That's a pretty bold position to take and I hope more follow suit to squash this bullshit payout. Most dems are for moving this through, I just heard Chris Dodd support it on TV.
9/21/2008 2:09:19 PM
There have been a couple good blogs of economists who are having some reservations about this thing. Evidently Bush's plan "give me $700 billion without any conditions and I'll do the best I can with it" is not good economic policy.
9/21/2008 2:16:44 PM
With these lenders being bailed out by the government, I wonder if they are going to bail out the people who owe them money in the future when they can't pay.
9/21/2008 2:33:51 PM
I think I read (pls. correct me if I'm wrong) that the bailout, in its current form, would make actions by Paulson completely free of judicial and congressional oversight.Yeah, from the bill:
9/21/2008 2:37:08 PM
yeah, we don't need a financial Patriot Act
9/21/2008 2:43:35 PM
Considering the Fed shouldn't exist according to the Constitution anyway, giving them that kind of power would be the absolute stupidest move possible.I'm sure some of you have heard of this movie, but it has a huge part of the Federal Reserve and what it's true purpose is. http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/ Some of you probably hate that movie, but it's got some really good points.
9/21/2008 3:39:53 PM
Ha, that movie is so stupidhttp://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=160597
9/21/2008 6:04:16 PM
kwsmith2Thanks for the article! It goes a long way in answer my question. However, there are still a few things I don't understand. 1) Was securitization what drove the rise in housing prices (being able to pass-off mortgages to other institutions allowed banks to make more loans which allowed more people to buy houses which pushed home prices upward)? If so, why are housing prices falling now? 2) I imagine that the answer to the first question has something to do with people defaulting on subprime mortgages, raising the supply of available homes and also reducing the demand for homes by making banks less willing to make loans. If that is the case, why are all these people defaulting at once? And if giving these people mortgages was such a bad idea, why would banks make the loans in the first place???
9/21/2008 8:03:29 PM
seems like people being able to buy houses by means of relaxed credit would necessarily drive the price of houses up, because demand is higher.prices would then fall once the defaults started. it's no secret that there are tons of homes for sale right now, and many of them are defaults. so, now we have way too many houses, so the price drops drastically.why the sudden defaults? Mainly cause the ARMs all just reset to ridiculously high rates, at about the same time.and finally, why would the banks make the loans? From what I understand, it wasn't banks making the loans. It was other shady kinds of lenders who would then pass the loan on to someone else. There was no risk involved for those lenders, because they would get their money almost immediately. If you could get a loan from a bank, then your credit was probably fine, so you didn't get any bullshit ARMs. My folks have an ARM, but their rate just reset down, because they had their loan from a credit union.[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 8:20 PM. Reason : ]
9/21/2008 8:17:14 PM
9/21/2008 8:25:25 PM
i kinda wish the housing market would suck until i buy a house on the cheap etc
9/21/2008 8:44:48 PM
Private profits and public risk...the Bush economic policy.
9/21/2008 8:50:51 PM
^ Its disingenuous to equate the bailouts with either Bush or republicans simply because Bush is our president. If the majority of democrats were voting against the bailouts, then your depiction would be accurate. Otherwise, like the most polices that are enacted, this one is bipartisan.[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 9:09 PM. Reason : .]
9/21/2008 9:08:37 PM
9/21/2008 9:09:07 PM
^ Can you explain how this affected house prices?[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 9:11 PM. Reason : .]
9/21/2008 9:11:13 PM
^ The deregulation of the mortgage industry led to an unusually high demand for housing (people who were not previously "qualified" for loans were now able to get them. see: supply and demand.)This is one of many factors, but I think the majority of the experts agree that it was a key contributing factor.[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 9:17 PM. Reason : .]
9/21/2008 9:16:53 PM
I apologize. That was kind of snippy.But opening a bunch of high-risk borrowers to a new market, with a limited ability to grow supply in a short period of time (like how long it takes to build a house.)Also the banking crisis is tied to this act, in the way some of the futures markets, and other investors were taking capital, that was from a bad loan, putting it down as a down payment on another loan, which was then invested in other places in the market.To be fair, that's about 50/50 hard facts mixed with a relatively widely held opinion among the money experts.
9/21/2008 9:26:27 PM
It were the I-banks, not the retail banks, that have failed, so if the repeal of Glass Steagall caused the housing crisis, would you not expect the retail banks, who were most affected by the repeal, to be the ones failing?[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 9:36 PM. Reason : ']
9/21/2008 9:29:00 PM
True, but:
9/21/2008 9:37:11 PM
SteveChaos,
9/21/2008 9:39:03 PM
sounds like a great time to get a new house.
9/21/2008 9:45:10 PM
9/21/2008 9:52:10 PM
9/21/2008 10:00:51 PM
http://www.amazon.com/Free-Lunch-Wealthiest-Themselves-Government/dp/1591841917
9/21/2008 10:31:14 PM
again, the prices plunged because people defaulted on their loans. you then had more way more supply than you had demand.
9/21/2008 10:40:53 PM
9/21/2008 11:23:54 PM
^listening. so far it sounds like people got HUGE loans from shady banks with no income verificationand we have to bail that shitstorm out?? wow. hopefully there's some better news in this program
9/21/2008 11:35:58 PM
^keep listening
9/21/2008 11:39:31 PM
^^ I certainly hope you didn't get the impression from this program that it was promoting the theory that bailing out those loans is the best way to go. I certainly didn't. I certainly don't think that is the best way to go (I'm a big L Libertarian). The ridiculous greed at even the bottom of the system is shown at 23:40-26:40.Just listen to the rest without any jaded view upon it (please) and just respond with what it told you about the current crisis. Maybe you fully understood this background, which is possible, but maybe you're like many Americans who don't fully understand the entire global financial system (which is much more likely if you're a simple technical Engineer, Medical provider (such as my wife), or blue collar worker such as many of my friends).[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 11:42 PM. Reason : ^^]By the way, thanks for taking the time to listen to something posted by someone else about a third party report on the WolfWeb Soapbox.[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 11:49 PM. Reason : We are telling you to lie to us, basically, and I wish we had never done it. -- 23:40 - 26:00]
9/21/2008 11:40:10 PM
1/2 million dollar no income verification loanyeh i'm gonna go get one. brb. LOL
9/21/2008 11:50:45 PM
why cant the gov just pay 0 dollars and 0 cents and let this just correct itself the regular way?
9/21/2008 11:56:02 PM
You'd be surprised how many people did that exact same thing thinking it was a good idea. The entire time the higher ups in the system were thinking "Hell yeah, there's another guy who is going to give us 5% average return on our investment".Then they all "suddenly realized" how they got duped by people you just impersonated 'in jest'. All of a sudden these mortgage loans that everyone down the chain for years had realized were bad investments actually became bad investments (read: Moody's, S&P, etc). Suddenly the average American taxpayer has to 'bail out' these multi-billion dollar corporations and even go further and 'bail out' regular mortgage loans (in the most recent bi-partisan bill) to save the financial system.
9/21/2008 11:59:07 PM
^idk.but i went to the car dealership this weekend to test drive a car at leath audi...the guy ran my credit and his eyes got real big and he says "damn son, you could buy this whole lot if you wanted"i lold
9/21/2008 11:59:11 PM
i mean shit...700 billion?give me like 1 percent of 1 percent or something, shit...
9/22/2008 12:00:57 AM
^^ But yes, you're a sane person so you got the lulz...You know how many people are not sane out there.. when they hear that shit they don't get the lulz and the first thing they think is "get me into the first Escalade you have in stock".700 billion? I doubt that will scratch the surface once everything is actually uncovered. I sure hope it's an accurate number... actually I hope against all hope that it is. If it isn't, then we're going to be having a conversation on a whole different level here in a few more years.
9/22/2008 12:04:10 AM
it's called "price correction"i can't wait to score a million dollar home for 400k in a few months. lol
9/22/2008 12:06:14 AM
9/22/2008 12:08:31 AM