Re: Michael Hudson on Freddie/Fanny
This is the problem, not the technology available to evaluate risk and approve loans. Bayesian networks, for example, are as accurate (and often much moreso) at predicting a borrowers ability to pay back a loan as a human. It would not be productive to go back to a time when loans took much more human effort to evaluate and the results were less accurate.
The real problem is the incentive structure: it used to be that risky loans would sit on the books of the institution that made them and they eventually would be punished if there was a default. This was plenty of incentive for the lender to think long and hard about whether to make such a risky loan.
Now, the debt is often securitized and sold off to the next sucker. The people making the loans know from the software that these people are very high risk borrowers - that's why the rates are so high. But it's not their ass when it goes belly up. Plus, they have used scandelous loan structures so that the default is delayed for long periods, often years.
And even if the debt is not securitized, the institutions making these loans have gotten so big that the consequences have become divorced from the actions. When you are giving some crook $2M for creating as many loans as he can and he knows that when they default he will not be on the hook to pay it back, you know where his priorities lie. These guys want to get rich during the boom - the crash is someone else's problem.
When I said that it is only fair to let the people who made the bad loans suffer when they tumble, I did not mean that the borrower should be let off the hook; they should have to file for bankruptcy, have their credit ruined, etc etc. The point was that the money is gone and never coming back. The person who should suffer the financial loss should be the person who made the loans in the first place - not the taxpayer.
This is partly impossible because most of that money is long gone bonus money given out during the boom by the big banks. These institutions are near criminal: an absolutely disgusting amount of their profits over the years went straight to their own wallets and skipped the shareholders. The SEC needs to impose rules regulating the incentive structurse available to bankers to compensate themselves.
When these loans default, as everyone knew they would, the bonuses created from that "profit" should be helping to offset the loss. Unfortunately, I don't forsee the investment banking crowd ever having to declare bankruptcy en masse when loans default.
Originally posted by FRED
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The real problem is the incentive structure: it used to be that risky loans would sit on the books of the institution that made them and they eventually would be punished if there was a default. This was plenty of incentive for the lender to think long and hard about whether to make such a risky loan.
Now, the debt is often securitized and sold off to the next sucker. The people making the loans know from the software that these people are very high risk borrowers - that's why the rates are so high. But it's not their ass when it goes belly up. Plus, they have used scandelous loan structures so that the default is delayed for long periods, often years.
And even if the debt is not securitized, the institutions making these loans have gotten so big that the consequences have become divorced from the actions. When you are giving some crook $2M for creating as many loans as he can and he knows that when they default he will not be on the hook to pay it back, you know where his priorities lie. These guys want to get rich during the boom - the crash is someone else's problem.
When I said that it is only fair to let the people who made the bad loans suffer when they tumble, I did not mean that the borrower should be let off the hook; they should have to file for bankruptcy, have their credit ruined, etc etc. The point was that the money is gone and never coming back. The person who should suffer the financial loss should be the person who made the loans in the first place - not the taxpayer.
This is partly impossible because most of that money is long gone bonus money given out during the boom by the big banks. These institutions are near criminal: an absolutely disgusting amount of their profits over the years went straight to their own wallets and skipped the shareholders. The SEC needs to impose rules regulating the incentive structurse available to bankers to compensate themselves.
When these loans default, as everyone knew they would, the bonuses created from that "profit" should be helping to offset the loss. Unfortunately, I don't forsee the investment banking crowd ever having to declare bankruptcy en masse when loans default.
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