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Today’s Washington Post:
“Credit Crunch In U.S. Upends Global Markets
The turmoil in the U.S. credit markets turned global Thursday, prompting central banks in Europe and the United States to pump more than $150 billion into the financial system to keep it operating smoothly.”
The Sub-Prime Crisis Is Really A “Sub-Crime” Crisis. It Is Time To Investigate and Prosecute This Scandal.
There comes a time when the frame of a news story changes. It happened in Iraq when the “war for Iraqi freedom” became seen as a bloody occupation, not a beneficent liberation. It is happening as the war on terror is increasingly perceived as a war of error, and when voting problems are reframed as electoral fraud.
And it will happen in the economic arena too, when we see the “subprime” credit crunch for what it is: a sub-crime ponzi scheme in which millions of people are losing their homes because of criminal and fraudulent tactics used by financial institutions that pose as respectable players in a highly rigged casino-like market system.
Suddenly, after years of denial and inattention, the press has discovered what they call “the credit crisis.” Vague words like “woes” are still being used to mask a financial calamity that some analysts are already calling an apocalypse, as lenders go under and the Stock Market melts downs.
A French bank froze BILLIONS Thursday saying, “The complete evaporation of liquidity in certain market segments of the U.S. securitization market has made it impossible to value certain assets.” Translation from the French: We are all in deep shit.
On Thursday morning, President Bush was asked about this at a press conference. He blamed borrowers for not understanding the documents they signed. If you have ever tried to read the documents banks prepare for mortgage closings, you will know that they are written by risk minimizing lawyers to be too long and dense to be understood. (Later in the day, the market reacted to his upbeat assessment with the Dow plunging 387 points.)
The financial insiders who watched were more than skeptical. Here are some quotes from a discussion on the Mi-implode website. One of the discussants calls our fearless leader, “President Pumkinhead:”
“Why’d president pumpkinhead have a news conference in the morning? Probably hoping no one would see it and he wouldn’t have to lie to as many people.”
Another described what he was watching with more than disbelief:
“He’s being hit with a lot of questions on mortgages, credit crisis, and the economy… and of course the economy is ‘in for a soft landing’, he’s been assured by the treasury that ‘there is plenty of liquidity’, yadda-yadda-yadda.
But he is stumbling over his words more then usual, not making eye contact, not finishing his sentences… and when he wonders a bit, he quickly goes back on script. It is very odd to watch, to say the least.”
“Odd?” Not for him, but, of course, there are more than one man to hold accountable. This is a deeper structural problem that implicates a whole industry and the process of “financialization” it promotes. This crisis is an example of what goes around comes around as the companies that suspended their usual “standards” and “rules” and self-styled “due diligence” knowingly sucked money out of people with poor credit records and who now find their own companies imploding and collapsing worldwide. Many of the victims are people of color. They were targeted by predators.
Underscore that this was done deliberately, with forethought and malice, a well orchestrated plan to create armies of “suckers” and steal—yes, I said it—their monies to leverage even bigger deals. Their greed had no limits, until the scheme collapsed.
Behind it all were the so-called “Masters of the Universe,” the wise men of Wall Street who worked behind the scenes to turn mortgage brokers and small lenders into part of what will one day be seen as a criminal network worthy of prosecution under the RICCO conspiracy laws used against the mob and drug dealers.
Read this account from the Wall Street Journal:
“Lou Barnes, co-owner of a small Colorado mortgage bank called Boulder West Inc., has been in the mortgage business since the late 1970s. For most of that time, a borrower had to fully document his income. Lenders offered the first no-documentation loans in the mid-1990s, but for no more than 70% of the value of the house being purchased. A few years back, he says, that began to change as Wall Street investment banks and wholesalers demanded ever more mortgages from even the least creditworthy — or ’subprime’ — customers.
All of us felt the suction from Wall Street. One day you would get an email saying, ‘We will buy no-doc loans at 95% loan-to-value,’ and an old-timer like me had never seen one,’ says Mr. Barnes. ‘It wasn’t long before the no-doc emails said 100%.’”
You don’t read many accounts like this of businessmen bashing Wall Street in the business press. Could it all have been stopped? Of course, if there were real regulators and rules protecting consumers and the public interest. And if there was a social movement that championed exonomic justice.
And also, if there were investigative journalists like the ones who just wrote a series on the “debacle” of the “debt bomb” in the Journal – but after the collapse, not before. And what do they admit now? That this is NOT just a subprime problem but far more serious and global.
They note that “credit problems once seen as isolated to a few subprime-mortgage lenders are beginning to propagate across markets and borders in unpredicted ways and degrees. A system designed to distribute and absorb risk might, instead, have bred it, by making it so easy for investors to buy complex securities they didn’t fully understand. And the interconnectedness of markets could mean that a sudden change in sentiment by investors in all sorts of markets could destabilize the financial system and hurt economic growth.”
Will the rest of the media follow up and explain what is really going on?
This is very serious folks, but far too many progressives, activists and politicians alike haven’t spoken out about the crime behind this rolling scandal. We should be calling for major debt reform in America, like Bono advocates for Africa. We should demand criminal penalties for the profiteers who started out to enrich themselves and seem to have ended up destroying the very system they misused. We should press the Congress to use its subpoena power to investigate the corporate criminals and their government enablers.
When they propose a bailout, we should demand a “jailout.” The Washington Post reports that the US has started a bail out “pumping more than $150 billion into the financial system to keep it operating smoothly.” Where is this money coming from? Not from the military budget you can be sure.
Blogger Carolyn Baker writes that we all must become more engaged with these issues saying she is:
“profoundly aware of the role of economic issues-perhaps more than militarism, healthcare, education, politics, or any other institution, in the dead-ahead demise of empire.
I also notice that few in the left-liberal end of the political spectrum have a firm grasp on economic issues which I suspect comes from a fundamental polarization between activism and financial intelligence.”
She writes about a book by a conservative named Michael Panzner called “Financial Armageddon” criticizing his analysis as limited, and by extension, many of the left’s avoidance of these issues as well.
She writes: “What is most disturbing to me about the book is what appears to be a total lack of perception regarding the role of fraud, theft, and malicious intent in the American and global financial train wreck which has been exacerbating over recent decades.”
Indeed! What are we going to do about this? How about starting with becoming more aware?
– News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org and directed the new film “IN DEBT WE TRUST: America Before The Bubble Bursts.” (Indebtwetrust.com). Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org. To get involved, visit Stopthesqueeze.org
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Mr. Schechter,
The situation is worse than you describe. Lenders have not only been making 100% loan to value (LTV). They have been making 106 -107% LTV.
What happens is that a borrower negotiates a purchase price of say $100,000. The problem is that this borrower has no money, not only for a down payment, but for closing costs either. Not a problem. The realtor just writes the contract for $106,000 with the stipulation that the seller pay the buyers closing costs.
The contract is then submitted to the lender and he/she calls me for an appraisal. I can’t make it work, the property is worth only $100,000.
Again, no problem. The lender just calls the appraiser down the street who can make any value.
Everybody is happy. The lender and realtor get their commissions. The dishonest appraiser gets his/her fee. The buyer gets his house.
I refer these “buyers” as “renters” as they have no investment in the property, not even a security deposit.
There is little incentive not to walk away when times get tough. The Corvette & Harley in the garage and the 60″ plasma television on the wall are what are really important.
Scott Fleming
Bay Area Appraisal
sfleming12@houston.rr.com
281-471-8173
NO WONDER AMERICA IS GOING TO HELL IN A HAND BASKET, LOOK AT THE CROOKS WE HAVE RUNING THIS COUNTRY.
This has been an open secret in Colorado for years. The largest builders acted as bankers for the Bush led Silverado Raid and then put the mone into the M1.
When the last market collapse took place they did duck and cover using Richmond Homes as the bag.When market cratered they walked away after investing in South American Commodites. Then they had eought to buy the Justices to appoint a dunder head crook president. Does anyone think anything like justice will be served? Tune in to Fox to watch the mass evictions.
So………what is the average middle class retired American to do? Are all the Social Security funds, the retirement funds, etc. in danger? How about bank savings of individuals? Will the banks eventually be forced to close as in the 1930’s? What’s the prognosis for the retiree not in debt but depending on above funds to pay bills?
Well ….so many schucks think they are “middle class” yet don’t have a pot to piss in. Turned your backs on the (mostly)blue collar black folks in St Louis….welcome to the shark-infested waters
of course I meant schmucks
I believe individuals have to be more responsible. It is important to take time to read all contracts entered into. Don’t put the blame on others. If you need a lawyer to interpret the language for you, do so, it may cost a few extra dollars but well worth it.
We don’t anymore government controls.
Ahhh, the rotten stench of cenorship.
Fuck you, Danny.
You overrated pouge.
Most lovingly and sincerely,
Dwayne Chandler.
And you wonder why you have no
freedom, no democracy, a destroyed
Constitution.
Unless comments meet your standard
of liberal White respectability
they are deleted?
Yes, no, maybe?
Without quetion, the answer is
yes.
Fucking impotent sheep.
Go play your pointless dead leftist
games.
And you wonder why you have no
freedom, no democracy, a destroyed
Constitution.
Most lovingly and sincerely,
Dwayne(waiting to see how long it takes the champions of free speech and democracy to delete this post)Chandler.
ps: You see, unlike the cowards
who post anonymously, I display
my name and e-mail(dwayne.chandler@us.army.mil) for all to see.
Dwayne:
Clean up your language and not sound like danny boy , otherwise RIGHT ON!
It is a shame to blame Bush for this too, I would bet danny would blame Bish for his OWN STD’s.
JON R.
Good Grief — Even the final independent investigation showed Bush won by the numbers and unlike here in Wash. State he didn’t recrute bums , felons , and prostitutes off the street as democrats did. Yes does not like my posts ether, and removes them.
Interesting article, but missed a good bit of the point.
As an attorney who worked in the banking and mortgage industry and a current mortgage professional, I had said many months ago when this story on “sub prime” first broke that this is not a subprime issue, it is a Wall Street scandal.
The large houses that securitize, also underwrite the securitizations, and get paid for that. They also provide warehouse lines for the lenders who originate the loans, and earn fees for doing that. Those loans are then sold into the securitization pools. They then direct their investor clients like pension funds, and large institutional money to buy into the securitization pools and puff the value and performance of the funds. They get paid for that too in the form of commissions. They are getting paid on every side of the deal, and it is in their benefit to not disclose the risks.
It is a wall street scandal which mirrors the MCI deal. However, this time the media has a sexier head line. It is “mortgage meltdown”.
I submit it is based on fraud.
Subprime loans are not the problem.
The problem is the multiple layers of Wall streeters who profit from misrepresenting the risk associated with them.
They should be rated as junk bonds, not touted as “high yield instruments.”
The people who are being evicted from their forclosed houses would not have been able to buy the house absent the subprime loan.
So all the high regulator types need to decide if you want perfect “vanilla paper”, then the subprime illiterate and the poor, and the ignorant credit users will not be able to be part of the american dream. They will not be able to buy a home, and that will slow the housing market, as well as all the attendent industries.
So pick your poison carfully.
Regulation, or truthful disclosure by wall street. Perfect credit, or no house.
The other REAL problem the media, including the Wall street journal, is avoiding is that people are living WAY beyond their means. Their credit card debts are increasing because they can’t cover their expenses on their income. Their jobs got shipped overseas, and the Credit card was covering the spread from the new 12 dollar an hour job and the 60,000 a year job that left.
People have been using their house as a piggy bank to pay off the credit cards and start over again.
Once the valuation of the house stops increasing, Voila! no more cash out to clear the decks, and poof! Forclosure.
It really doesn’t pertain only to subprime.
So let us put the focus where it should be. Fraudulent misrepresentations on Wall Street driven by greed, and self dealing, and a faltering job base that prohibits many from making ends meet.
The Bush legacy is just starting to come home to roost. The expolsive real estate boom, has been driven by very low interest rates, and that has caused insane “appreciation” which has allowed those misplaced by outsourcing of their jobs to survive a while longer, by raiding their piggy bank to pay off the accumulating debt.
This little game has masked the true damage of the current regimes “economic policy”. At least for the past few years, and perhaps a bit longer.
We need criminal investigations and indictments, as well as real economic policy to devolop employment and job growth within the US, not just growth to multinational corporations who buy their tax code from our US congress.
With an attorney general who refuses to indict criminals and enforce the laws that would inconvenience his friends, what else should we expect?
Where is Eliot Spitzer when we need him?
Alexander Rahman
Carteret Mortgage
Raleigh NC.
www.carteretmortgage.com/ALDR
I watched this whole mortgage crisis develop from the beginning when interest rates hit all time lows. As demand went up so did greed; it had its grips on most everyone involved, from the realtors, mortgage brokers, flippers, builders, and developers. Everyone was after the fast buck. Blaming those first time home buyers with less than perfect credit is absurd; they were the victims of inflated home prices (thanks to greedy realtors, property appraisers and flippers) and shady mortgage deals.
I think the Fed’s intentions in lowering interests rates was to help first time home buyers while stimulating the economy, unfortunately it aslo stimulated greed amongst those who didn’t need help. I was discouraged to see how wide spread the general disregard for responsible capitalism had grown; it was like the entire American economy had become a game of poker where huge pots were to be won without providing any tangible benefits.
Shawn Kahler
From the no. 1 grassroot website in America (www.tradecrisis.org) We have follow jobs leaving America since 1967.The reinvention of the manufacturing base is the no. 1 economic crisis in America. Economic
growth in America each year especially job growth each month add capital to the expanding trade deficit each year. The manufacturing sector can
not produce goods to cover the economic
growth each year Therefore more capital
is needed the cover the the outstanding trade deficit growth. We believe this is the underlying factor for decline of the economic base. If this is not
not stop the trade deficit in the next decade will reach over trilon dollars a year and continue to climb. This potential is possible the worst economic crisis since the civil war.
1A illegal immigration What will happen
when we go into recession the average American will file for unemployment. What will the illegal have when he is umemployed. There may be 3 to 5 millions illegal unemployed. WHO WILL PAY THEIR RENT BUY THEIR FOOD AND CLOTHES. Their may be as many as 3 to 500,000 illegal in our larger cities,(New YorkCity, Chicago, and Los Angeles
and smaller amount in small cities. What the federal government do? What will the state and city do. Who will get the jobs and the economy start to recover. What will the average American do when his unemployment runs out and he look across the street and see a construction site with 20 illegals working every day. THE REAL EXPLOSIVE PROBLEM WILL BE IN LOW AND MODERATE INCOME WHEN THE ILLEGAL FLOOD THE NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION AND GET ALL OF THE FOOD,TEMPORARY HOUSING AND BEDS
AND BENEFIT THAT NORMAL AMERICAN HAVE
USE AS A SAFETY NET IN AMERICA DOING THE 20TH CENTURY.
MARVIN REESE,PRESIDENT
www.tradecrisis.org
Progressives and real conservatives should organize a campaign for change around this issue.
A 2003 study by Office of Federal Housing Oversight lost Armando Falcon his job, because he told the truth about the exposure major financial institutions had to Mortgage backed security derivative schemes (must read):
http://www.ofheo.gov/Media/Archive/docs/reports/sysrisk.pdf
Danny:
You really get some people’s BP up! I think some of their language was a wee bit overboard.
I can understand that. I dont agree with 95% of what you write. But I still read you to understand the wacko left.
By the way have you dropped from your e-mail list?
I thought you lefties were all for diversity.
Paul Harrington
Hesperia, Calif.
I’d prefer reading in my native language, because my knowledge of your languange is no so well.
By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.