The blog of Brian Kirsten

Understanding the Credit Crisis...

Or why the subprime meltdown could mean a world of hurt for us Americans.

As is often the case with innovations, though, there was soon too much of a good thing. Those same global investors, flush with cash from Asia’s boom or rising oil prices, demanded good returns. Wall Street had an answer: subprime mortgages.

Because these loans go to people stretching to afford a house, they come with higher interest rates — even if they’re disguised by low initial rates — and thus higher returns. The mortgages were then sliced into pieces and bundled into investments, often known as collateralized debt obligations, or C.D.O.’s (a term that appeared in this newspaper only three times before 2005, but almost every week since last summer). Once bundled, different types of mortgages could be sold to different groups of investors.

Can’t Grasp Credit Crisis? Join the Club (Link courtesy of BoingBoing)

Filed under  //   Financial   Investing   Money   Ranting  

Robert Kiyosaki and the housing market

"Do you think the Federal Reserve should intervene to save the economy by dropping interest rates?" My reply then as well as now: "No. This is a capitalist system, not a communist one. Anyone who expects the government to bail them out every time their greed and stupidity causes them to lose money is being foolish."
Check out the full article. Read Rich Dad Poor Dad
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The scariness that is mortgage lending…

Taken from the Prosper.com forums: (The full post)

One of the things I've observe walking the neighborhoods in my neck of the woods is the push effect caused by loose lending standards. There was a neighborhood of $150K to $200k homes I walked that had become populated by what appeared to be ghetto people. It was once populated by middle class families but they had put their modest homes up for sale and traded up when the loose lending standards allowed the low income to buy homes in formerly working class middle income neighborhoods. I imagine these middle income families then invaded a higher priced neighborhood, again with the help of loose lending standards, and then displaced the upper middle class to even more expensive neighborhoods and so on and so forth. When the market fully collapses, everyone will fall back into the neighborhoods they really belong based on income and class. That may leave lots of homes heavily discounted due to the excessive construction caused by the housing boom.
I don't completely agree with his thinking but it's something to think about.

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