Quote from Algorithm:
As I have stated before....
WHO CARES IF PEOPLE ARE LOSING THEIR HOUSES WITH THOSE MINIMAL DOWNPAYMENTS?
The environment got overheated and many people that should never have been buying houses in the first place did so. They got into those houses with minimal downpayments due to the fact that lenders chose to raise their risk exposure in order to lend more money. The people on the hook are not those that got into the "cheap money" mortgages, it's the lenders.
The unemployment rate is below 5%. Those that are getting foreclosed upon were overextended and didn't buy within their means due to the fact that they were able to overextend cheaply. They will simply lose their homes and go back to renting. Hey, it was their decision to buy a 250K home versus a 175K one. They aren't really out anything due to the fact they would never have been in a house in the first place unless the exotic moorages were around.
Many on these boards simply don't get it. The risk isn't on the homebuyer, it's on the lenders. Those lenders in turn distributed that risk amongst pension funds, large individual investors and hedge funds.
Look I'm not going to shed a tear for a family that got into a house that they never could have afforded in the first place and lost it due to some stupid exotic loan. That is a much different scenario than a family losing their house because they can't make the note because the bread winners lost their jobs. Those are two separate situations. The job market is stable, no recession and those that are losing their houses ARE NOT BEING TOSSED TO THE CURB. They are going back to renting.
Many here at ET simply don't understand risk pricing and distribution (hence most here are not running hedge funds, THANK GOD).
Now I will wait for all those that are going to tell me that the national unemployment numbers are bogus.
BTW, Bush has little to nothing to due with the housing market and monetary policy. Greenspan cut rates deeply due to the compounded effects of the stock market bubble bursting and 911. The housing bubble was simply an overheating of monetary policy that was engineered to decrease the effects of recession. People don't tend to go out and spend money when buildings are literally falling down around them. Oh, and the BRIC countries would never have expanded to the extent that they have thus far with a strong US dollar.
Federal pork spending and the Iraq war, that's a whole 'nother kettle of fish. The current housing market situation was created by the lenders and extenders of credit. It too shall pass just as the bubble bursting in 2000-2001. As long as we don't bail any lenders out through government regulations and policy, this will make those that deserve to survive stronger and those that improperly managed risk perish.
Place your bets and...
Good Luck!