mycroft, on 2013-November-06, 12:06, said:
Okay, I fit in my "I can see the problem, therefore I'm blind" bubble as much as at least two of the previous two posters, but how many of those "gamblers in the real estate market" were buying the homes they lived in, that the professionals told them (because they got paid by the sale, and *their company sold off all the risk, so there was no reason for the company to care*) were affordable? For the first time?
I can't be the only one - the only two differences being that in Canada, the banks can't do a lot of the stuff that happened in the U.S. and the U.K. so the minefield wasn't as thickly strewn, and I actually *could* afford the mortgage given me (and I knew enough to make sure I got a straight-up fixed-rate, not anything I couldn't understand).
So much of the world operates on keeping the consumers uneducated, and then claiming it's their fault that they did something that (with the correct education, like they have) was obviously stupid. If there's one thing you can credit lawyers as a profession for (and there may only be one thing), it's that having set up the world so that lawyer "always" beats no-lawyer, they at least really push for you to *get one* if you even think you need one.
So one thing you should know - You sold a mortgage when you bought a house. That sale becomes a liability for you and an asset to the buyer - who typically resells it to another buyer, sometimes retaining the obligation to "service" the loan, which means collecting payments and passing them on to the new owner, as well as other related obligations. So you were not "given" a mortgage.
You are also right about another key perception of the market. Lenders (direct lenders, such as banks) in the US became obligated to lend where they might not otherwise have lent - to buyers who they deemed not good credits, because of an act of Congress (well meaning, of course, but with unexpected consequences). That is where things like the mortgage insurance industry comes into the picture - think of them as credit reinsurers. Once the assets are sold, they get repackaged into packages more suitable to the ultimate investors - some of whom have long term liabilities, such as pension funds, life insurance companies. They typically have credit quality requirements to meet which may be either regulatory or investor imposed. So step in rating agencies, who have models based upon nearly 100 years of the performance of the mortgage market. (One nasty wrinkle - there was no history to back liar loans. They did include modelling to handle loss of market value, which for the most part was based on the loss of home values in the great depression when loan to value ratios where much lower, and some recent housing recessions that were not even close to as severe as the 2006+ recession.)
The mortgage finance system is way too complex to explain here, but fundamentally you could pull out any single component and the crash could not have happened. That is why it is important to understand that the problem is systematic. Blaming a single culprit would only be done by someone who does not understand what really happened. Remove the ratings agencies, or the law that Congress passed, or "liar" borrowing, or long term buyers of mortgages - pension funds, etc., or the intermediaries - investment banks, or even the law preventing banks from going bankrupt, and the entire problem becomes far less likely. I have left out a number of other less direct problems that contributed to the CREDIT CRISIS, because explaining them has nothing to do with mortgages.