No, it’s not a horror movie – it’s a FACT!
Biden’s medical records lack brain scans. I take this as proof that there is No There There.
Posted by boedicca on October 20, 2008
I note the double standard of the ObaMarxist Press Corps digging up Joe The Plumber’s tax $1,183 tax lien and the total pass them have given Charlie Rangel, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, regarding his failure to report rental income for umpty umpteen years.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: Joe The Plumber, Rangel, Taxes | Leave a Comment »
Posted by boedicca on October 7, 2008
There is a great deal of hyperventilating fingerpointing and populist pablum spewing regarding the current financial meltdown. I’m not surprised by Obama’s perfunctory attacks on The Greedy Rich, but am disappointed that McCain-Palin have neglected to bell the cat. Given the highly partisan state of the MSM, I doubt that the public will learn the proper lesson, but one can always hope that enough will be enlightened so that it will not be completely lost. Perhaps the internet will perform the role of Irish Monks during the Dark Ages.
For posterity, the article The Road To Slack Lending Standards, contains The Smoking Gun of the Boston Fed encouraging banks to loosen up lending standards:
Crucial to this change was a Federal Reserve Bank of Boston study which concluded that although lender discrimination was not as severe as suggested by the newspapers, it nevertheless existed. This, then, became the dominant government position, even though subsequent efforts by other researchers to verify the Fed’s conclusions showed serious deficiencies in the original work. One economist for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. who looked more deeply into the data, for instance, found that the difference in denial rates on loans for whites and minorities could be accounted for by such factors as higher rates of delinquencies on prior loans for minorities, or the inability of lenders to verify information provided to them by some minority applicants.
Ignoring the import of such data, federal officials went on a campaign to encourage banks to lower their lending standards in order to make more minority loans. One result of this campaign is a remarkable document produced by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston in 1998 titled “Closing the Gap: A Guide To Equal Opportunity Lending”.
Quoting from a study which declared that “underwriting guidelines…may be unintentionally racially biased,” the Boston Fed then called for what amounted to undermining many of the lending criteria that banks had used for decades. It told banks they should consider junking the industry’s traditional debt-to-income ratio, which lenders used to determine whether an applicant’s income was sufficient to cover housing costs plus loan payments. It instructed banks that an applicant’s “lack of credit history should not be seen as a negative factor” in obtaining a mortgage, even though a mortgage is the biggest financial obligation most individuals will undertake in life. In cases where applicants had bad credit (as opposed to no credit), the Boston Fed told banks to “consider extenuating circumstances” that might still make the borrower creditworthy. When applicants didn’t have enough savings to make a down payment, the Boston Fed urged banks to allow loans from nonprofits or government assistance agencies to count toward a down payment, even though banks had traditionally disallowed such sources because applicants who have little of their own savings invested in a home are more likely to walk away from a loan when they have trouble paying.
Of course, the new federal standards couldn’t just apply to minorities. If they could pay back loans under these terms, then so could the majority of loan applicants. Quickly, in other words, these became the new standards in the industry.
Of course, pointing this out must be racist.
Posted in Economy, Mortgage, Subprime | Tagged: Boston Fed, Lending Standards, Subprime | Leave a Comment »