----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Quote from Max E. Pad:
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I would love to for a person to explain to me how it is profitable for a bank to lend someone 500k for a house with zero down, and then foreclose on the house when it is only worth 250k, and sell it for half as much as they lent in the first place, when nothing has went towards the mortgage, and they have only taken in a couple years of interest. [/B]
Quote from trendlover:
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Because the big player banks finance to the mortgage originators.
This originators go get all the loans with this money (and they do not care if the bad credit or not, is about volume) Then they bundle this mortgages and sell back to the big banks. Ok, originators make their big money y transfer risk back to the big bank. No risk for them, is done deal, money made. Now the big banks have this bundles they pay for to the origintors. Now this big banks sell this bundles (with AAA rating for some) to institutional investors. See? The bank is taking this bad loans off the books, and make money. The big money is not from the interest of the loan for them.
Quote from Max E. Pad:
So making the claim that the entire thing was a plot by banksto steal peoples homes when they lent someone 500k for a home, so that they could foreclose on it when it was worth half as much is assinine.
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Ok yes that is stupid.
Quote from Max E. Pad:
Indeed they were trying to make money off the transaction but it wasnt a ploy to steal someones house, as that doesnt even make any sense,all of the homes that the banks were on the hook for the mortgage where they actually ended up foreclosing on them, ended up being a loss to the banks.

Quote from MarketMasher:
Who cares about the bank when you can pocket the bonus and walk away?
The bank is stuck with the problem, not the banker who got the pay. The guys left can go to Unca Sam for help when their counterparties go bust and can't pay the CDS, because the bank is too big to fail.
That's a pretty good formula if you run a big bank.![]()
Quote from Max E. Pad:
The system is not going to change until this whole game of "heads i win, tails you lose" changes, where CEO's can just take on exorbitant risk and if the company makes money off of the excessive gamble the CEO wins, and if the company goes bust they win with the golden parachute. Maybe we should change the order in which people can claim money in a bankruptcy so that a CEO is behind the common share holders, so he is last in line for a claim to his money.