bankdecay

Let’s stop blaming the victims of predatory lending

Reblogged from squashed

squashed:

This is important.

The primary cause of the subprime collapse—which heralded in the Great Recession was bad loans not bad borrowers. At the peak of the subprime boom lenders structured loans in a way that virtually guaranteed that those loans would fail because it was profitable. Borrowers—particularly minority borrowers—were steered toward these designed-to-fail loans even when they would have qualified for a prime loan. It doesn’t matter how good your credit is or how high your income is. I can write you a loan with terms so bad that I know you won’t be able to pay it back. I’m afraid this post may require tossing around some numbers—but please bear with me. Even if correcting the banks efforts to shift blame isn’t sufficient, this stuff is worth knowing if you plan on someday getting a home loan.

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  1. cigarettesandorangejuice reblogged this from squashed
  2. somerandomhash reblogged this from squashed
  3. slackjot said: To avoid foreclosures, banks are having people do ‘remods’ of their mortgages in which the bank capitalizes the interest, adding it to the borrower’s principal. That pushes them even further underwater. How does that help?
  4. diatribetic reblogged this from squashed
  5. capnmidori reblogged this from squashed and added:
    the “victims”...I hadn’t just gone through...home myself....
  6. globalwarmist reblogged this from squashed and added:
    idiot like me when
  7. indianajosh reblogged this from squashed and added:
    follow Squashed’s blog,
  8. bankdecay reblogged this from squashed
  9. roseyt reblogged this from squashed
  10. baileyeverywhere reblogged this from squashed
  11. thecallus said: “Bad borrowers” was bad language. I should have said “unqualified”. The intent was to state that the borrowers should not have received such large and / or risky loans.
  12. squashed posted this