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- Jan 30, 2008
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Allison D.|1299647275|2867989 said:Ksinger, what I read in that report doesn't suggest that lenders didn't tell borrowers that their ARM loan would go up or that after the i/o period, their rate would jump to prime +(pick a number). This appears to imply that most of the withholding from BORROWERS was related to fees, i.e. closing/doc, etc......FEES, not consequence of variable interest rates or ARMs. i don't know HOW that couldn't possibly be disclosed since it's all over the blessed paperwork at time of signature (or at least it was in my case).
The entire second paragraph you bolded (and in fact most of the report) doesn't have anything to do with duping consumers; it's about duping investor groups to offload the high risk loans. The duping came from the thinking that "if I end up with too much risk, I can just offload it to the next guy (investor)."
Well, that surely is not the entire report, which I have not read, it is only the conclusion section. I do find it hard to believe that if fraud was being perpetrated one direction to such a level, that it was not also being perpetrated to a great degree in the direction of the consumer. I do recall, (in the mess of stuff I've read over the last few years) that there was quite a bit of actual fraud in the direction of consumers, with actual paperwork fraud going on - like stuff NOT being in it, but I'd have to go way back and try to dig it up. (I used to save stuff like that that interested me, in text files for later reference. I need to get back in the habit.)
In any case, the point of me and others and that report, putting a special and larger part of the responsibility of the overall meltdown on the mortgage industry, was, as the report noted, "tone at the top matters", the fact that the lenders also knew what THEY were doing was wrong, and even had the foresight at the top where policy is made, that their lending practices were likely to blow up the entire market, and ruin their own companies, and they did it anyway. They didn't make a single mistake like an individual might do, they made the wrong choice millions of times over - as the report said, refusing to take into account human nature, and repeatedly indulging their own basest impulses. I just see everyone going on endlessly about the individual who made one bad choice, and no one even mentions the individuals at the top of these lending juggernauts, and their minions, who made millions of what they admitted they KNEW were fiscally irresponsible decisions every day for a decade - decisions that in turn allowed the human nature on the other side of the equation to go south - . And of course they skated, as they knew they would. Because the rules are different for the connected and the already rich.