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 In this market, is a house worth it if there's eerie voices in it and the walls occaisionally drip blood?

Additional Details
It's a perfectly nice house, otherwise. Good neighborhood, near the ...


 Seller wants to stay past closing date... how much to charge?
I know it is mainly an individual's choice on how much to charge if the person you are buying a house from puts in a request to remain in the house a few days longer. I would just like to hear ...


 I like dis boy but he don't like me he like my friend but my friend don't like him?
how can i get ...


 I own a house with my boyfriend and i want out of the house and the relationship. Can i sign the house over?
i am 24 yrs old and my boyfriend and i bought a house together 18 months ago and now i want out of the relationship. With the market how it is right now it is almost impossible to sell. I want out ...


 I need to break my lease!! how can i do that??
Im in a lease at my apartments but the crime is getting real bad. my car got broken into and one of my good friends got raped near where i stay. there has been a big rise in crime since i have lived ...


 If I sell my house for $550,000 dollars, how much can I expect to get after closing of the sale?
...


 Refinancing with poor credit?
I am in an adjustable rate morgage, I have been for 3 years now. It is a 80/20 loan. Paid 115 and it similiar homes are going in the high 130 or low 140. My credit scores are 559 at low and 585 at ...


 How does a foreclosure affect a co-signer?
Hi,

I was just curious of how you can save yourself, as a cosigner, from a foreclosure?
Does anyone have any idea?

Thank you very much....


 Landlord/realty ignoring phone calls for maintenance requests. What to do?
What can be done if the landlord who is actually a realty is ignoring phone calls and voice messages left to them? There were more than four instances within the span of 6 days and they won't ...


 If you were facing foreclosure, what would you do?
Would you use Google to find a company to save your house or sell your house to? Is there a particular site you would go to?...


 I bidded on a house and now I cant afford it what do i do?
The other day I went to an auction and bidded 20000 over budget. The real estate person was really hassling me and I dont know why but I paid to much. I have not signed anything and I have not paid a ...


 Say I make $708.27 per month and I just bought a house. Generally what % of my pay check would go to ?
paying on my house every month?
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HYPOTHETICALLY! ***This is for a project.***...


 Mortgage ?
Can I cosign on a mortgage when I have no credit? As in no bad credit, no good credit?
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I would be cosigner. Hubby is the major bread winner.

I have never ...


 Rent increases?
My landlord increased my rent twice already, once every 6 months since I moved to my apartment. Now they want to increase the late charges from $50 to $100! a couple of months ago we got a letter ...


 When a tenant gives 'written notice' when wanting to terminate a rental agreement. Does by email count?
We want to move out asap. The contract states 1 months written notice (nothing about it being signed). I emailed about 2 weeks ago, can I now write a signed letter and back date it?...


 Is there a sales tax on buying real estate?
If you buy a house, do you need to pay a sales tax on top of everything else?...


 I want to refinacne my mortgage in CA, are you a loan officer?
I got a 7% F mortgage for 15 years and i want to refinance it because i want to take out cashout of 90000 out of my equity of $250000. My credit score right now is 692. I want to contact some good ...


 Can a landlord raise the rent any amount he wants in a private house?
So far he has tried to raise my rent 100 every year since I moved in! I have no lease but isn't there some kind of guideline he must follow as a landlord?...


 What is a good rate for a 100% mortgage, including closing costs and no money down?
...


 What does sub prime mean?
...



DearAbby
Who is at fault for the Subprime Mortgage Crisis?
I've heard opinions that the subprime mortgage crisis is the result of predatory lending, uneducated borrowers, over-valued homes, and a lack of government regulation. What do you think is the main cause? Are there other causes than the ones I mentioned? How do we avoid this situation in the future?
Additional Details
It sounds like there are a lot of groups to blame, but how do we keep this sort of crisis from recurring?
                     
 




TruthMastaT
How can we keep the "mortgage crisis" from happening again? Those who study mortgage trends have said that there has been a pretty consistent pattern of a "bust" in mortgages about every 18 years since World War II. We've seen problems like this before and we will survive this "crisis." If you're looking for a mortgage right now, rates are still very good. The world is not ending (as the politicians who are itching to "help" would have us believe).

In my opinion, the best way to prevent this from happening again, is for the Free Market system to be allowed to punish bad decisions and reward good decisions (as it always does). Government regulation is just something politicians and anti-business people like to propose because it makes them feel good. In reality, the mortgage industry is already highly regulated... and yet the "mortgage crisis" occurred. One of the many regulations that the government has is to disclose VERY clearly and plainly the interest rate of the loan and any adjustments to the interest rate... and yet borrowers claimed that they "didn't understand what they were signing."

Now to your question... In summary, EVERYONE involved played a part in the "bust" to some extent or another.

BORROWERS -- Rather than living within their means, many borrowers decided that they wanted to have a bigger, more expensive house than they could afford. In order to afford these houses, they often turned to loan products such as "Interest Only" loans. With IO loans, you basically pay the minimum amount possible every month and the principal is never reduced. To complicate matters, some loans featured "zero down" where the borrower had absolutely NO equity in the property. Here is an illustration of a typical problem: A property is worth $800,000 at the time of purchase. The borrower takes out an Interest Only loan for $800,000 (putting nothing down). Then the property value drops to $700,000. Now the borrower has a loan for $800,000 for a property that is only worth $700,000. The borrower has ZERO equity in the property so guess what... they walk away from the property and the lender ends up taking the loss.

MORTGAGE COMPANIES (BAD OR POOR UNDERWRITING GUIDELINES) -- In an effort to make as many loans as possible (and to sell these loans to foolishly eager investors), many mortgage companies relaxed their guidelines beyond reason. Some loans had a Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio of 100 (or higher on rare occasion!). If the property was worth $100,000, then an LTV meant that $100,000 was loaned to the borrower (as stated before, no equity). The lower the LTV, the less risky (and more desirable) the loan is. Another arguably stupid mortgage product was the "80-20" loan. A loan with an LTV of 80 or lower is not considered risky in the mortgage business. Therefore, Mortgage Insurance (MI) is not required for loans with an LTV of 80% or less. (If a borrower has an LTV of 85 and pays it down to 80, then they can drop the MI from the loan.) MI is basically insurance against borrower default. For example, if a borrower defaults on his loan and the lender forecloses and sells the property and loses $2000 in the process, then the MI company will cut a check to the lender for $2000 to make the lender "whole." Rather than requiring borrowers to carry MI on their loans (which would have mitigated risk), the mortgage companies allowed the borrowers to take out a second loan on the same property (a "second lien" or Home Equity Line of Credit or HELOC). This HELOC money was then used as the "money down" on the first loan so that MI could be avoided. For example, if the property is worth $100,000, the borrower might get a HELOC for $20,000 and put that money down on the first loan, thereby lowering the LTV to 80 (thereby exempting them from MI). Another popular loan was an Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM) or "Fixed-Adjustable" (where the Interest Rate is fixed for a few years and then starts to adjust (up or down) based on a financial instrument). Borrowers were allegedly given a low "teaser rate" and then (because they bought too much house) couldn't make the payments with the higher interest rate when the rate adjusted. (It seems hard for me to believe that an interest rate adjustment would be so severe that it would prevent someone from making their payments, but that's what the borrowers allegedly claim.) Maybe this is too many detailed examples, but suffice it to say that a lot of stupid mortgage products were offered by mortgage companies (and accepted by borrowers).

INVESTORS -- In their quest to make a "fast buck", investors bought up tons of these mortgages since these riskier "sub-prime" loans brought higher returns (higher interest rates). These investors should have performed a "due diligence" on the loans they bought; but they didn't. When investors purchase loans, there is usually (if not always) a "buyback" provision. This means that if a loan goes bad and the investor finds that there was some irregularity in the underwriting (the loan decisioning process) that the mortgage company who sold them the loan is required to "buy back" the loan. The problem is that most mortgage companies are "cash poor" (meaning that they borrow the cash that they lend from a "warehouse lender" temporarily until they can sell the loan to an investor and pay back their warehouse lender). So when these loans started going bad (hundreds of millions of dollars worth!), the investors demanded the mortgage companies buy back the loans (according to their agreement). So mortgage companies were now looking at buying millions and millions of dollars worth of loans back when they had little or no money of their own! So what happened? Countless mortgage companies declared bankruptcy. With all of the hullaballoo around bad mortgages, investors decided to stop buying sub-prime mortgages. Since there was nobody buying these mortgages and since mortgage companies don't have their own cash, mortgage companies found that they could no longer make these sub-prime loans. The sub-prime market dried up almost instantly.

RATING AGENCIES -- The job of rating agencies is to investigate the creditworthiness of investments (many of which included mortgage debt). These agencies did not do their due diligence and ended up giving these investments an artificially high rating. So investors thought the investments were less risky than they were. Investors will always buy investments that have a high return and low risk (but obviously they weren't low risk).

THE GOVERNMENT -- The government has always put pressure on mortgage companies to make loans to poor and/or minority borrowers. Because these borrowers typically have worse credit and/or less income and/or greater debt, they had to go to the "sub-prime" market to get a mortgage loan. Is it so hard to imagine that a borrower with less income, more debt and bad payment habits will default on a loan (especially when they've put little or no money down)? Of course not. But the government continues to "wish away" laws of basic economics and common sense. In order to "do right" by poor people and minorities, the government expected mortgage companies suspend their normal sound underwriting guidelines and business sense. (Obviously, the sub-prime problem goes beyond just poor borrowers, but my point is that the government contributed to the crisis to some extent.) The government is now poised and ready to exacerbate the crisis beyond what it is now by "freezing" interest rate adjustments. Here is an illustration of the problem: Let's say you have $5000 in cash. I'm a bank and I tell you that if you deposit your $5000 with me that I will pay you 1% during the first 2 years but then I will pay you 7% after those 2 years. So you deposit your money at the low rate of interest. After two years (when you're about to get your higher interest rate), the government comes in and says, "Sorry. You're not getting your 7% as promised. In fact, you can't take your money out of that bank; you must leave it there and only collect 1% for another 10 years." What will happen when you have another $5000 to deposit? Will you put it in my bank? Absolutely not. Why? Because you don't know if you'll really get the return you agreed upon. In the same way, if the government steps in and says to the investor/lender, "Sorry... you're not getting the return on your money that you negotiated... and you can't take back your money; you've got to leave it at the low rate," then guess what the investor is going to do. He will never invest in mortgages again! He will take his money to China or municipal bonds or any other vehicle in which he can get a RELIABLE return on his money. If he DOES decide to put money into mortgage debt again, he will demand a higher return to compensate for the greater risk that the government will step in and "help" again. (In other words, Interest Rates on mortgages will go up for EVERYONE!) Thank you Big Government Democrats and George Bush!

REGIONAL PROBLEMS -- Some regions in the USA had events that made the mortgage problems particularly bad. For example, inflated property values in California started deflating. Condos in Florida didn't sell as thought and many sit vacant. Companies providing jobs in the "rust belt" (such as Michigan) have moved or gone under; thereby leaving the local homeowners with no income with which to make their mortgage payments.

Sorry for such a long answer. Hope it all makes sense.

Thanks!


Greg S
Rating
Basically it is the fault of people loaning money to people that were high risk. And people that couldn't afford loans taking them anyway. In both cases the root cause is greed.


---
I think the biggest reason is the greed of the lenders and all the other people (brokers, appraisers, etc.) who got a piece of the profits from selling houses to people who couldn't afford them. I think any regulation will only be a band-aid for today's problems. Just like the Saving and Loan scandal of the 80's, this will revisit us again under a different name.


Elsa D
You forgot the American ethic of "We Are Entitled".

People bought homes WAY beyond their means because they felt like they deserved them simply because they existed.

Many of those same people are still feeling entitled, but facing foreclosure. They are waiting for the government (taxpayers) to "save" their homes. They are entitled to live in them for nothing, simply because they are Americans and deserve to live off of those of us who contribute to the tax base.


Turbo Baby
Rating
Borrowers who can not handle their money not their credit whom were given 100% financing by predatory lending practices.


goz1111
Rating
One part of the reason was all these institutions esp the big wall street investment firms that wrote these subprime notes to package and resale as bounds to investors, creating a huge market for these junk loans


chatsplas
Rating
It's not just uneducated borrowers. It's people thinking they were owed a home, that if they wanted one, they should have one. People with poor credit make one poor choice after another, and just being in their own home doesn't make them wiser. They continued making poor choices, not paying their obligations and lost their homes.

It's not just predatory lending, either. It was lack of reasonable underwriting standards. It's bundling loans up into securitized packages and selling them, making them remote from the property and home owners.

It is many inter-related factors.


billywindsor
The cause is a combination of all the things you mention.


murigenii
Greed and envy. Greed of those who wanted to make the fast buck. This includes buyers that bought beyond their means, planning on selling in a couple of years to make a profit. Envy of those who wanted bigger and bigger houses so their envy was sated and others would envy them.


treealbero
Rating
The lenders and the borrows, and even those economists in the government who damn well should have known it was bad to encourage people who couldn't afford it to buy a home. If you don't have a decent downpayment, steady income, and some sort of savings for emergencies, that home will own you, not you it.

I would hope the banks learned their lesson, but if they're bailed out, they're apt to repeat this disaster within a few decades.


Chris R
Trust me, everything financial right now is because of the Federal Reserve & the world bank in this country.

They keep printing the money, jacking up the M3 level (while they quit reporting it in 06). That's why the value of the dollar has sunk.

The Fed lent all these banks money to lend to all of us for the subrime crisis. Now it's slapping this country in the face and the FED is bailing out Bear & Sterns with PRINTED money which de values the dollar even more & causes inflation.

Think of it as an "inflation tax" coutesy of the Federal Reserve.


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