Personally, I think this is amazing. Apparently, those folks targeted by the champions of subprime Barney Frank and Chris Dodd not only bought homes in the United States but bought them all over the world apparently (with China and Canada housing bubble popping imminent).Clearly, this government intervention must be stopped and our citizens must be barred from driving up the home prices in countries around the world to the detriment of those nations inhabitants.
8/4/2010 7:42:49 PM
I guess I assumed there would be Dodd/Frank haters on this board like most of the other political blogs/boards (and hell, sci.electronics.design even) that blame them for this whole housing crisis. I guess there aren't, so, gg wolfweb.
8/5/2010 5:49:40 PM
no articles have been written about them lately, thus the silence
8/5/2010 5:56:01 PM
You have to give me more time to wikipedia these guys. I want my response to be really clever.
8/5/2010 6:05:07 PM
I never blamed Dodd and Frank for the entire crisis, but they certainly helped the process along.Dodd and Frank denied that there was even a subprime mortgage in the run up to 2007. In 2003, they both were saying that Fannie and Freddie were perfectly okay, and that we shouldn't be pressuring them in any way. When the Bush administration tried to regulate Fannie and Freddie, Dodd and Frank both resisted it. They had both been pushing to have Fannie and Freddie give out even more loans to people that couldn't afford them.Did they cause the housing bubbles? No, not entirely. They had something to do with it. The two GSEs in question, which are now receiving unlimited money from the government, are a huge problem. Trillions are gone forever, sucked up by Fannie and Freddie. Maybe if we had done something about those sooner, we wouldn't be so far in the hole.Dodd was the head of the fucking banking committee throughout the whole thing too, so don't sit there and act like he had nothing to do with it. He had everything to do with it, and Dodd and Frank have proven time and time again that they're shills for the Federal Reserve. They play these games where they claim to want reform, yet they shut down any meaningful reform when it happens.Our banking system is a complete scam. The banks are allowed to survive because of bailouts, but even before the bailouts, it was a scam. They make money (interest) by loaning out money that they don't even have. That's the beauty of a fractional reserve banking system. It works great for the ruling class, but regular people are getting ripped off and they'll never know it.
8/5/2010 7:26:02 PM
You need to look up, the point of this thread had flown right over your head.
8/5/2010 7:31:32 PM
Frank and Dodd didn't exist in a vacuum. Governments all over the world pumped resources into their housing markets. While Frank and Dodd's names were synonymous with the U.S. version of this debacle, it was just one form out of many. That said, it was the most extreme form, no government spent nearly as much as we did pumping up prices, and I think your graph shows this out.[Edited on August 5, 2010 at 7:37 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/5/2010 7:36:52 PM
Sorry, but no. While those two may have been vocal proponents of easier credit, it isn't logically sound to conclude that there were equals in other government around the world that helped cause their bubbles. It's more likely there is a different common denominator.
8/5/2010 8:18:52 PM
Different, eh? Is it your belief that the other countries' governments on your graph did not fuel their housing bubbles in any way?[Edited on August 5, 2010 at 8:59 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/5/2010 8:58:39 PM
I'll certainly believe they did when I see evidence of it. It's much more likely that Wall Streeters seeking yield flooded not just the US but the world with their cash. How this can be pinned onto Dodd, Frank, or the CRA is beyond me.
8/5/2010 9:34:37 PM
Dude, complete your own thoughts now and again. Where did the investors get all the cash? Investors existed in 1998. They even had lots of cash. But they didn't run off to invest in housing at whatever the asking price was. Something had to have happened to change their behavior. What do you believe that thing was? I have seen the list of European government insured lenders, in effect their versions of our Fannie and Freddie, but I couldn't find it through a two minute search. All Google would give me were from Spain, where apparently a whole sector of their banking system has its bonds guaranteed by the government, just as Fannie and Freddie's were guaranteed here in America. They were called Cajas, and melted down predictably, wreaking havoc upon tax payers, just as Fannie and Freddie have.
8/5/2010 10:25:30 PM
Solid evidence right there! This is now a serious thread. I'd love to see your produce a reasonable explanation for housing bubbles in other countries. The Cajas blew up, so it looks like they didn't really have their bonds guaranteed afterall. Were they really that stupid, or was it something else?
8/5/2010 11:00:08 PM
LoneSnarkGreed wasn't invented until 1999Dummy
8/5/2010 11:13:16 PM
^^ Was who how stupid? Last I knew, Frank and Dodd have not been punished for anything. As such, I suspect their European counterparts have not either. As such, everyone walked away happy, except for the tax payer, but the tax payer that is going to pay is not yet old enough to vote. So I don't see that anyone has acted stupidly. Everyone involved has acted with full understanding of their actions, including Frank and Dodd. Especially when most voters are just like you, and can't imagine how Congress putting the national treasury at the service of private investors could possibly be a bad thing.
8/6/2010 12:14:24 AM
So...still no evidence of what lead to the property bubbles in other countries? Since we don't like government, we'll just go ahead and blame it on them, right?
8/6/2010 6:44:52 AM
Oh I see! You don't want to have a conversation with me, you want to have a conversation with Google, with me as the intermediary. Fine, don't respond to anything I say, just keep pointing out that my words lack citation. Nevermind that you have not posted a single link either. You don't like "Wall Streeters seeking yield", so you'll "just go ahead and blame it on them, right?" Well, fine, I'll spend more than two minutes Googling that for you... http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/11/AR2010051105049.html?hpid=artslot
8/6/2010 9:45:42 AM
8/6/2010 5:46:42 PM
what's up, baldy? nice waste of 5 bux, lol
8/6/2010 6:24:34 PM
8/7/2010 10:44:56 AM
Because never in the history of the world have their been bubbles without direct government intervention.And the body of evidence is simply tilted towards liberty and reduced regulations actually did lead to the blow up.This has been rehashed all over the internet and beaten to death. The only people that continue to cling to "the government did it" arguments are the libertarians. It's always the government did it with you people. Hey, did you realize lending standards were relaxed and Johnny Burger Flipper bought a house he couldn't afford? GOVERNMENT DID ITDude, my loan broker told me to lie about my incomeGOVERNMENT DID ITThe sad thing is...I fundamentally agree with you about governments...it's just that I see both governments AND markets as being bubbleicious where you seem the think the government is doing it by edict or something.
8/7/2010 10:57:11 AM
Yes, 1% interest rates (and the resulting 1-2% teaser rates on ARMs) had nothing to do with the housing bubble. Pure coincidence. Artificially increased demand for housing due to the CRA...nothing to do with the housing bubble.I'm happy to admit that private entities are also to blame for the bubble. In a free market, greed is always countered by risk...those that make bad investments are punished, and those that make good investments are rewarded. The crisis was never a case of private citizens being too greedy for no reason; the problem was that the risk, in many situations, was taken away, either through MBS or cheap money, and greed skyrocketed as a result.
8/7/2010 12:32:34 PM
8/7/2010 1:01:24 PM
8/7/2010 1:58:20 PM
8/7/2010 3:28:44 PM
8/7/2010 4:11:34 PM
8/7/2010 4:55:41 PM
troll troll troll your boat...
8/7/2010 8:56:04 PM
It's interesting to see how the rest of Europe is dragging Germany down.
8/8/2010 12:20:13 AM
My economic ignorance is gonna shine through despite my economic minor, but I can't quite grasp the concept of predatory lending. I understand the incentive banks have for making loans that can't be paid to an extent. However, there aren't, to my knowledge, any loans that are forced on someone. You still have to apply for said loan. If you know you can't afford the loan, how is that the fault of the bank? I do understand there are extenuating circumstances where something happens (lay offs, injury, etc) where payments become too much, but I missed the news stories in 2004 where everyone collectively broke their hips.
8/8/2010 3:45:31 AM
Oh, it's the ole personal responsibility argument. The types of people who are defaulting on loans cuts across all demographics, including prime borrowers http://tinyurl.com/2e5mvma, including rich developers http://tinyurl.com/yaoosqw as well as those who had no hope of affording it. For the predatory lending aspect of it, loan brokers only had to guarantee the loan didn't default for 90 days to keep the fees they received from the securitizers. This led them to come up with some very crafty loan terms including negative amortization to help lower the initial monthly payment. People that had no business owning homes went to these folks, saw only that they could afford the (initial) monthly payment, and either were cognitively dissonant on the fact the payment would eventually increase, or didn't have a good idea by how much it would increase because they didn't understand the loan terms.
8/8/2010 8:55:23 AM