There’s always something to howl about.

Sub-Prime Borrowers Got Lucky- They Didn’t Pay Enough

I floated an idea about a federal bailout, along the lines of Chrysler in 1980, of Countrywide Financial Corporation. I wanted to highlight two things in this post: Countrywide is in trouble and their trouble is our trouble. My premise is that the collapse of CFC goes beyond the 55,000 employees. I may have been guilty of thinking like Charles Erwin Wilson.

Jeff Brown replied, “Countrywide ain’t no Chrysler” and proved that my premise may be an insult to Adam Smith. His idea of a bailout was more along the lines of a Tom Clancy novel with Ben Bernanke playing Jack Ryan, Angelo Mozilo playing Dr. Strangelove, and Bank of America playing the United States Marine Corps. Life often imitates art so my money’s on Jeff’s covert bailout plan.

What really happened to the mortgage market ? They didn’t properly price loans for the risk they assumed. While Hilary Clinton is crying about the “poor borrowers” what about the poor lenders who got caught in the middle of this mess? Borrowers said “We’ll buy it if you give it to us on the cheap !”, Wall Street said “We’ll take the extra yield!”, and we all said “This time it’s different !” Extrapolations proved that a two bedroom condo on the Las Vegas Strip would sell for at least $5 million in this new economy, fueled by leverage.

Read Ralph Alter at The American Thinker:

The dirty little secret of the sub-prime crisis is the fact that sub-prime lenders failed to charge interest rates high enough to offset their expected level of defaults. Make no mistake: sub-prime lending is going to have borrowers who fail. Even conforming borrowers sometimes default. Enabling lenders to charge enough to make profitable loans to less qualified borrowers will result in a higher level of foreclosures. But it will also enable legions of “sub-prime Americans” to realize the American dream of home-ownership.

Who were the losers of the explosion of non-prime lending? The 10-15% of the homeowners who were able to buy homes, with loans that they couldn’t or WOULDN’T repay, will end up in foreclosure, renting shelter; they are right back to where they were in 2004. The whole thing was…a failed experiment for them. No loss there.
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The big winners? Why the non-prime borrowers, of course. Some 85-90% of new homeowners succeeded at this experiment and will continue to own a home. Of course, they bought it with a subsidized rate.
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Countrywide’s problem? They just didn’t charge enough money.

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