Jerry Lundegaard
Banned
Down with the Federal Reserve!!!
My arguement is that CRA contributed the housing crisis which is very different then the CRA caused the housing crisis. Here are some facts/fictions.
FACT: Studies show that CRA loans have higher delinquencies and defaults and act as a major drag on bank earnings. In 2008, CRA loans accounted for just 7% of Bank of America's total mortgage lending, but 29% of its losses on home loans. Also, banks with the highest CRA ratings tend to have the lowest safety and soundness ratings.
FICTION: Only 6% of subprime loans were originated by banks subject to the CRA, so the vast majority of risky lending was not tied to the law.
FACT: Among other things, the figure does not count the trillions of dollars in CRA "commitments" that WaMu, BofA, JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Wells Fargo and other large banks pledged to radical inner-city groups like Acorn, Greenlining and Neighborhood Assistance Corp. of America (NACA) after they used the public comment process to protest bank merger applications on CRA grounds.
All told, they shook down banks for $4.6 trillion in such commitments before the crisis, boasts a report by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, or NCRC, the nation's top CRA lobbyist (which conveniently removed the report from its website during the FCIC hearings).
Any time you need to include "radical inner-city groups" in a sentence to describe a group like ACORN, you're not actually stating fact.
Just went the the movie JUST IN TIME it has a great significance to where we are today.
What you get a chance, read the wikipedia article on the CRA, and in particular the section its relationship to the 2008 housing crisis. Among other things, it mentions CRA loans are more sound that the privately financed exurban loans.
...Or put it another way. There are Civil War re-enactors and World War II re-enactors, and now we have 1960s re-enactors....
This sure is worth a good laugh:
https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2011/10/30/occupy_wall_street_shrugged.html
I think they are actually having a general back account closing day on Nov. 6 or something now. It is interesting how people on both sides thrive in some areas of decentralizing(food co-ops, states rights, etc.) but then also embrace massive wars or big government generally. I think if you could get the banking system more decentralized and working well, you could start convincing the big government weeines that doing likewise with the government might be a good thing.
Do you mean the movie "In Time" with Justin Timberlake? It sounds interesting, in concept at least.
Are you referring to the article on Fannie Mae that's linked in an earlier post? I read it. Seems the writers of that article subscribe to a similar "Fair and Balanced" philosophy as Fox News. Some good basic facts and a good time-line of events interspersed with lots of interpretation, esp. in the first half of the article.
My own personal feeling is that the housing crisis was caused by hyperinflation of housing prices. To a great extent, this was caused by relaxed lending standards. I personally don't believe that the Community Reinvestment Act was the primary mover that led to the easing of lending standards, it's more just an excuse after the fact.
(edit: I think this wikipedia article on the subprime mortgage crisis gives a better, and more dispassionate, explanation of the events: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subprime_mortgage_crisis)
Anyhow a friend of mine went to an envelope stuffing "party" the other night where everyone brought all the postage paid return envelopes that come with bank credit card offers and stuffed them with other junk mail and sent them back. She said they had over 500 pieces of mail they were sending out, and they're hoping if more people do this, the mail processor in Sioux Falls, SD will have to hire some extra help!
Are you referring to the article on Fannie Mae that's linked in an earlier post?
Is there supposed to be something hypocritical about asking everyone to contribute?