So, the question isn't IF its who, who's holding the paper? I've read that it was packaged and sold off (MBS), etc but at some point we should start seeing where the ppl who are holding these loans are @.
With the clearly mispricing of risk in the mortgage industry (hungry for volume and fees, like everything else) it has to explode somewhere.
Now I understand there are firms like New Century, where they do the dirty work and sell to the bigger banks like MS or GSCO, who than can "put" back the loans to New Century, and then New Century can go bankrupt keeping the big bankers clean.. but with the serious amount of $$ involved, its got to hit someone balance sheet much harder than it has (or it is).
The question is, WHERE are the loans ending up/who's holding the paper. No one seems to know.. yet.
I am mentioning the majority of the paper, not just slivers of it. I dont think the end-banks were holding it since they would sell it off to get fresh capital and do it again, I think its somewhere else. Everyone is saying "hedge funds" but thats rather obtuse. (everyone == media)
With the clearly mispricing of risk in the mortgage industry (hungry for volume and fees, like everything else) it has to explode somewhere.
Now I understand there are firms like New Century, where they do the dirty work and sell to the bigger banks like MS or GSCO, who than can "put" back the loans to New Century, and then New Century can go bankrupt keeping the big bankers clean.. but with the serious amount of $$ involved, its got to hit someone balance sheet much harder than it has (or it is).
The question is, WHERE are the loans ending up/who's holding the paper. No one seems to know.. yet.
I am mentioning the majority of the paper, not just slivers of it. I dont think the end-banks were holding it since they would sell it off to get fresh capital and do it again, I think its somewhere else. Everyone is saying "hedge funds" but thats rather obtuse. (everyone == media)