Anonymous wrote:Not sure when the last time you bought a house was, but when we bought in 2004, most of the professional advice was to buy as much house as you could afford, and to use something like a 5-year ARM in order to stretch further. Then if you were still going to be in the house, you could refinance later with the equity you'd inevitably make on the increase in value. In retrospect was that bad advice? Yes. But housing bears were few and far between back then.
We bought a house we could easily make monthly payments on, and we financed with a 30 year fixed. If I had had a crystal ball back in 2003, I would have bought double the house we did buy (on the Hill). We'd have a bigger house and even more equity. If I'd followed that advice in 2006-2007, in Manassass, we'd be massively underwater and part of the problem.
It's very, very easy to second-guess people's choices when things go wrong, with the benefit of hindsight.
As far as professional malpractice goes: we have a home mortgage industry because they provide the positive benefit of using their expertise to mitigate risk. That they failed so spectacularly at that *is* evidence of professional malpractice.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure when the last time you bought a house was, but when we bought in 2004, most of the professional advice was to buy as much house as you could afford, and to use something like a 5-year ARM in order to stretch further. Then if you were still going to be in the house, you could refinance later with the equity you'd inevitably make on the increase in value. In retrospect was that bad advice? Yes. But housing bears were few and far between back then.
We bought a house we could easily make monthly payments on, and we financed with a 30 year fixed. If I had had a crystal ball back in 2003, I would have bought double the house we did buy (on the Hill). We'd have a bigger house and even more equity. If I'd followed that advice in 2006-2007, in Manassass, we'd be massively underwater and part of the problem.
It's very, very easy to second-guess people's choices when things go wrong, with the benefit of hindsight.
As far as professional malpractice goes: we have a home mortgage industry because they provide the positive benefit of using their expertise to mitigate risk. That they failed so spectacularly at that *is* evidence of professional malpractice.[/quote] Are you under the impression that your relationship with your mortgage company employee or loan officer is the same as that with your doctor, lawyer, accountant, or shrink? It's not. Their "expertise to mitigate risk" works for the company, not you. They can't lie to you, but have no duty to tell you what is best for you, or to protect you from yourself. A malpractice analysis simply doesn't apply, and wishing it does doesn't make it so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it is the bank's fault. They loaned the money and didn't turn down the people that couldn't afford and also rated mortgages as non risky when they were a risk. So what happened was prices went down because everyone defaulted who should never have gotten the loan to being with, increasing the inventory and driving down prices. FUCK THE BANKS, too big to fail my ass I want them all to fail.
Banks were definitely greedy as hell, and knew they struck gold with creative financing. But come one, you're telling me that people are just ignorant of their finances? They were being greedy as well. Both parties were at fault.
I always find this attitude to be a bit puzzling: you've got a multi-hundred billion dollar industry that is entirely oriented around mitigating risk while lending money on the one side, then on the other, you've got some schlub who probably has a hard time doing his taxes. In that context, sure you can argue "both parties were at fault". But one party is about 99% at fault, and the other 1%. Which one should we completely insulate from the consequences of their *professional* malpractice? Of course, it should be the banks.
Just irrational--and morally convoluted.
Anonymous wrote:
I always find this attitude to be a bit puzzling: you've got a multi-hundred billion dollar industry that is entirely oriented around mitigating risk while lending money on the one side, then on the other, you've got some schlub who probably has a hard time doing his taxes. In that context, sure you can argue "both parties were at fault". But one party is about 99% at fault, and the other 1%. Which one should we completely insulate from the consequences of their *professional* malpractice? Of course, it should be the banks.
Just irrational--and morally convoluted.
Assuming professional malpractice is quite a leap, though - if the bank lied or misrepresented something, I agree with you. For the sake of argument, I'll even throw in those that are too stupid to understand how a loan works (although I'm a little uncomfortable with the basic concept of relieving someone of a contractual responsibility based on intelligence, or lack of same). But if someone with a college degree is too lazy (likely) to educate himself as to the way the loan works, or (equally likely, around here) understood EXACTLY how it would work, but just banked on property values going up and refinancing (just as likely, at least around here), then your 99%/1% allocation of fault is quite a bit off.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it is the bank's fault. They loaned the money and didn't turn down the people that couldn't afford and also rated mortgages as non risky when they were a risk. So what happened was prices went down because everyone defaulted who should never have gotten the loan to being with, increasing the inventory and driving down prices. FUCK THE BANKS, too big to fail my ass I want them all to fail.
Banks were definitely greedy as hell, and knew they struck gold with creative financing. But come one, you're telling me that people are just ignorant of their finances? They were being greedy as well. Both parties were at fault.
I always find this attitude to be a bit puzzling: you've got a multi-hundred billion dollar industry that is entirely oriented around mitigating risk while lending money on the one side, then on the other, you've got some schlub who probably has a hard time doing his taxes. In that context, sure you can argue "both parties were at fault". But one party is about 99% at fault, and the other 1%. Which one should we completely insulate from the consequences of their *professional* malpractice? Of course, it should be the banks.
Just irrational--and morally convoluted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it is the bank's fault. They loaned the money and didn't turn down the people that couldn't afford and also rated mortgages as non risky when they were a risk. So what happened was prices went down because everyone defaulted who should never have gotten the loan to being with, increasing the inventory and driving down prices. FUCK THE BANKS, too big to fail my ass I want them all to fail.
Banks were definitely greedy as hell, and knew they struck gold with creative financing. But come one, you're telling me that people are just ignorant of their finances? They were being greedy as well. Both parties were at fault.
After all the wailing and gnashing of teeth over those evil banks which gave out all these terrible loans (and I don't totally disagree with that, by the way), you suggest that lending institutions be permitted (or even required) to refinance a loan no matter what the value of the underlying collateral is.
Anonymous wrote:I agree. Not sure why that would make a difference. Just that you can't move?
Anonymous wrote:it is the bank's fault. They loaned the money and didn't turn down the people that couldn't afford and also rated mortgages as non risky when they were a risk. So what happened was prices went down because everyone defaulted who should never have gotten the loan to being with, increasing the inventory and driving down prices. FUCK THE BANKS, too big to fail my ass I want them all to fail.