Originally posted by CreditCretin
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That theory only applied if the bank held the note.
As we all now know, immediately after the loan docs were signed, the mortgages were sold off- letting the original lender off the hook-they made their money at the front end and then dumped the crappy loan into a security, mixed with a few "good loans", got it rated AAA, chopped it up and sold it to multiple schmuck Hedge Funds.
Oh yeah, they maintained the servicing rights, for the most part, so they could continue to profit until the loan defaulted.
The mistake the government made was allowing this type of activity (securitization of mortgages) to happen. Offering incentives to make loans to lower income families is hardly holding a gun to the bankers head. Their greedy little minds came up with a way to get the incentive, but bail out on the risk by selling off the loan immediately. They had their cake and ate it too.
If the old model of "you make the mortgage, you hold the note" existed, the crappy loans designed to fail would not have happened in the first place because the originators (like your friend) knew they would fail. Banks made the loans because they made money at the inception and then sold off the risk- not because the gov. held a gun to their heads
For those blaming the homeowner- we really don't know all the details but:
Placing the blame on some guy who's income, and financial acumen, is derived from getting pests out of your attic is a bit of a stretch, don't you think? His bank held his hand and willingly led him into a stupid decision, while their other palm was getting greased behind their back.
The bankers are college educated financial specialists. They should have known better.
So, yeah, I blame the originating bank.
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