Re: 2nd Term Part X - A link to a fore gone conclusion
The lender is assuming (wrongly as it turned out) that housing prices will keep going up, and if the borrower can't pay, no big deal. Repossess the house and then deal it. A bad business assumption, but again if we put people in jail for that you're going to be building a lot of new prisons.
Kep - Yes in the cases of selling debt that you'd personally rated as junk but marketed as high quality, I agree on legal consequences of that. Much like on some occasions lenders changed the stated income of the borrower without their knowledge to make the loan go through. However, this are limited examples that are a drop in the bucket to the overall problem. People will always try to scam you. Doesn't always have to be Nigerians trying to move gold through customs. People will try to sell you products you don't need, or get you to gamble away your money at a casino, or buy a too expense car or jewelry, etc. They will always tell you its a good idea. Your job, and I hope you're teaching your kids this, is to sniff out scams and live within your means. The American people as a whole didn't do that, and as maybe Scoobs said, even those of us who didn't partake in that ended up paying the price of our greedy neighbors.
Yes, banks and the govt could have done better. The source of the problem was the American people.
Sure you can look at the borrower, but why is the lender even offering a loan like this to someone they know can't afford it? If the borrower can't pay it back, it's the lender that's SOL and has to either garnish wages (if able to) or liquidate the collateral to try to recover what they lost, and in many cases, isn't able to do that. And before you tell me they sell off the loan, every transaction must have a buyer and a seller, including that one.
The lender is assuming (wrongly as it turned out) that housing prices will keep going up, and if the borrower can't pay, no big deal. Repossess the house and then deal it. A bad business assumption, but again if we put people in jail for that you're going to be building a lot of new prisons.
Kep - Yes in the cases of selling debt that you'd personally rated as junk but marketed as high quality, I agree on legal consequences of that. Much like on some occasions lenders changed the stated income of the borrower without their knowledge to make the loan go through. However, this are limited examples that are a drop in the bucket to the overall problem. People will always try to scam you. Doesn't always have to be Nigerians trying to move gold through customs. People will try to sell you products you don't need, or get you to gamble away your money at a casino, or buy a too expense car or jewelry, etc. They will always tell you its a good idea. Your job, and I hope you're teaching your kids this, is to sniff out scams and live within your means. The American people as a whole didn't do that, and as maybe Scoobs said, even those of us who didn't partake in that ended up paying the price of our greedy neighbors.
Yes, banks and the govt could have done better. The source of the problem was the American people.