Quote from ThePipProphet:
I agree, there is blame to be shared by everyone. However, the ones with the money(or control of) makes the rules and they gave to much rope to the real estate industry and the industry hung itself.
As I am sure you are aware QQQBALL, this problem is so convoluted you can point a finger anywhere and be right based on your point of view.
I will be happy when lending totally goes back to the early days when one had to actually prove the ability to pay or have enough equity in the property as to have low risk for the investor.
one solution is to have continuing liability for a portion of the loan to the originator... so a mortgage broker brings a deal to the bank & the bank retains liability for maybe a portion of the loan (and has to set aside reserves) when they package & sell a portfolio of loans. this then blows back on the lending dept, appraiser, etc.
one problem has always been that mortgage brokers can exert extreme pressure and then if things go bad, they say that "we just placed" the loans... it seems to me we had less problems when there was more portfolio lending - that is when the bank made the loan & stuck the deal in their value (or wherever). regular people dont realize how much fraud and fakery there.... even down to rents /lease rates getting juiced, vacancy & collection loss under-estimated, expenses under-guesstimated (and too low cap rate)... you juice the NOI, you jucie the debt-service coverage & juice the loan amount & LTV. add that to extended prices and it could get Fugly. so someone looks at the loan & thinks, "hmmm, 70% LTV", when in fact its considerably higher.