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The first case study focuses on Washington Mutual (WaMu), the nation’s largest savings bank, and its overt strategic decision to go big into selling high risk, high profit mortgages. Here you will find a detailed description of every type of dangerous mortgage foisted onto the public. Your blood pressure also will climb when you read how the bank used focus groups to help its mortgage brokers find better ways to sucker customers into risky mortgages even though the applicants had qualified for and wanted safer fixed-rate mortgages.
The report also details outright fraud committed by brokers – forging documents, making phony loans, stealing money – who then got rewarded again and again by the bank for their high sales records, even after they were caught! Nobody cared because the loans quickly were sold to Wall Street – the riskier the loan, the higher the interest rates and the more Wall Street would pay.
The second case recounts the pathetic tale of the Office of Thrift Supervision, the regulatory agency that was supposed to halt WaMu’s shoddy and corrupt practices. The report shows that OTS knew of these deceptive practices in great detail for five full years and still failed to stop the pillaging. Why? Because OTS’s top regulators didn’t believe in regulations. Banks should regulate themselves.
The third case study which focuses on the two largest rating agencies (Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s) is a story of prostitution. Here we learn how the rating agencies turned trick after trick for the big Wall Street banks, doling out favors (AAA ratings) to thousands of “innovative” securities based on the junk mortgages that WaMu and others originated and packaged. Then when it became obvious to everyone that the crap was still crap, the whores went virtuous by drastically downgrading thousands of toxic assets overnight.
The report accuses them (Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs) of packaging and selling toxic securities while, at the same time, betting that those securities would fail. Furthermore, the report argues forcefully, that “Investment banks were the driving force behind the structured finance products that provided a steady stream of funding for lenders originating high risk, poor quality loans and that magnified risk throughout the U.S. financial system. The investment banks that engineered, sold, traded, and profited from mortgage related structured finance products were a major cause of the financial crisis.
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SS109 wrote: Due to the discount brokers, Wall Street wasn't making as much money, so they needed to find new sources of income.
Personally I was smart enough to stay away from the ARM's and I sure wasn't buying mortgage debt when we were having a huge price bubble in real estate.
In financial markets, it has always been caveat emptor but now the spin is the Wall Street smart guys taking advantage of the gullible.
Consider this, if it was such a winning strategy, why did these firms fail and have to be bailed out?
Anytime you sell a security or an option, you think it is overvalued, otherwise you would hold onto it.
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SS109 wrote: Due to the discount brokers, Wall Street wasn't making as much money, so they needed to find new sources of income.
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AspenValley wrote:
SS109 wrote: Due to the discount brokers, Wall Street wasn't making as much money, so they needed to find new sources of income.
Oh, and this is priceless! It's like a defense attorney pleading that his clients all got laid off, so they needed to find new sources of income and decided to rob banks.
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SS109 wrote: Not trying to defend GS and others, but not trying to place all the blame on them.
Too many people were qualifying for loans they couldn't pay back, especially per Fannie & Freddie, the goverment was foolishly pushing home ownership, both Dems and Repubs, so this created absurd prices because of the increased demand, which decreased people's ability to pay off the loans.
And I also think Bernanke and Greenspan combined with the executive branch keeping interest rates artificially low also screwed the pooch, but if you want to blame the whole thing on Wall Street, you go right ahead.
Just like wars can't be blamed on only one thing, neither can recessions or depressions.
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SS109 wrote:
AspenValley wrote:
SS109 wrote: Due to the discount brokers, Wall Street wasn't making as much money, so they needed to find new sources of income.
Oh, and this is priceless! It's like a defense attorney pleading that his clients all got laid off, so they needed to find new sources of income and decided to rob banks.
I am not trying to justify their actions, just explaining them.
And do you believe Wall Street was the only reason for the Great Recession?
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