How long until former presidents become responsible for the US economy again?

Question by Chewy Ivan 2: How long until former presidents become responsible for the US economy again?
Conservatives blamed the economic collapse of 2008 on President Clinton, seven and a half years after he left office. Yet only a year and a half out of office, they claim President Bush is no longer responsible for the economy. When will President Bush become at least partly responsible for the economy again?
For Jaker: The Republicans controlled Congress from January 1995 to January 2007, less than a year before the last recession began. Is it really a Democrat-controlled Congress that caused all the problems?

Best answer:

Answer by jaker
They cite things Clinton did as encouraging the housing bubble but he is by no means totally responsible for what the Congress did after he left office. Bush happened to be in office when that bubble burst and he is really no more responsible than Clinton. The real blame rests with the dem controlled Congress.

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Q&A: How hard is to get a finance for a machinery for $65 000?

Question by poopi: How hard is to get a finance for a machinery for 000?
I’m planning on getting a machine for $ 65000, I’ve never had any loans or buy a new car. My credit scores are not good in 2 bureus are 670 and Expirian is 570. I’m trying right now to improve my credit scores but it’s not easy, takes time. I applyed in City Financial for a personal lon (not that I need one) but just to try to get the loan and pay it off. But I was denied. So I decided to use more of my credit card so it will show in my cradit report that I had a bigger loan ($ 7000). And then pay off the credit cards. If you have any ideas what shoul I do I’ll appreciate you answer. Thank you in advance.

Best answer:

Answer by das_coon
It will be very hard to get a loan for 65,000 with little credit history. What will make it even harder is if you can’t show income.

The manufacturer of the equipment may have finance available through them, since if you default, they can take back possession. Most banks will consider a piece of machinery a poor securitization option because there is such a limited market.

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Q&A: Did the housing slump or oil prices play a greater role in causing the recession?

Question by chacalaka: Did the housing slump or oil prices play a greater role in causing the recession?
How does the rise in unemployment and the state of other economies in the world contribute?

Best answer:

Answer by oldtimer
The United States Congress bears the biggest burden of the recession. Regulation and legislation forcing mortgage companies to loan money to people with no hope of being able to afford the homes, making it mandatory to loan to anyone considered a minority whether they were credit worthy or not.
Two names are at the root: Chris Dodd and Barney Frank.
The very temporary oil price spike should again be lain at the feet of our congress. Were they halfway competent and knew anything about trade and commerce, drilling in the “US would have prevented the runup.

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Can someone please help me in simple words with the helpof an example: What is asset securitization?

Question by MUNJAL S: Can someone please help me in simple words with the helpof an example: What is asset securitization?

Best answer:

Answer by jeff410
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/securitization.asp

Its the bundling of assets and then selling them to investors. They are backed by the income from the assets, such as mortgages. Its a way of turning them into cash quickly for the sellers.

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How do you find yourself on the stock market?

Question by Little Bug: How do you find yourself on the stock market?
Someone told me that people can put stock on your life or something, and on your house. Is this true or is he just playing with me because I’m naive? How can I check into this???

Best answer:

Answer by Summer with Viktoriya
No, you cannot put stock on your life.

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Would a tax on stock trading slow down the churning and encourage investment instead of gambling?

Question by goddessinglasses: Would a tax on stock trading slow down the churning and encourage investment instead of gambling?
Should the slicing up of mortgages be banned? How could these transactions become more orderly and transparent, while making some $ $ .
Heard that on the radio. Actually, it sounds like too much investing willy nilly was going on. So, yes, maybe it needs to be slowed down.

Now, put aside your neocon stuff and give us some ideas. Stop reacting- start thinking. I asked the question to get ideas, not this recycled propaganda.
* I am also told that this is working in England.

Best answer:

Answer by curtisports2
Yeah, the answer to encourage investment is another tax. Sheesh.

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What loans should the banks have made to avoid the real estate crash?

Question by julio_slsc: What loans should the banks have made to avoid the real estate crash?

It is not wise to provide a non-answer with little detail.

Best answer:

Answer by Wisdom
They should’ve given out loans to people that could actually afford to pay them back.

That’s actually all the answer there is.

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Why did the Clinton and Bush deregulation regime lead to misallocation of capital ending in financial collapse?

Question by ideogenetic: Why did the Clinton and Bush deregulation regime lead to misallocation of capital ending in financial collapse?
Is it now obvious that markets do not know best how to allocate capital?

“And what I’m saying to you is, yes, I found a flaw. I don’t know how significant or permanent it is, but I’ve been very distressed by that fact.” – Alan Greenspan, finally realizing the flaws of capitalism that Marx understood in the 19th century.

Best answer:

Answer by Bo Bo
What they called deregulation wasn’t.

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What is happening at the stock exchange?

Question by bb: What is happening at the stock exchange?
1 – what has actually caused the problem?
2 – why can’t it be solved?
3 – why is it so serious that I should worry as a little person in Sweden?
4 – Why are the investment banks so scared to continue as usual?

Best answer:

Answer by what?
1 – people who are too lazy to get off their ass and get a job that will let them pay their mortgage
2 – who says it can’t be solved?
3 – because the guy in sweeden probably has some money invested somewhere
4 – they aren’t. if not for mark to market, no investment bank would have gone under.

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What does this mean in plain English?

Question by sweetnsassy: What does this mean in plain English?
“Owing to a form of financial engineering called securitization, many mortgage lenders had passed the rights to the mortgage payments and related credit/default risk to third-party investors via mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and collateralized debt obligations (CDO). Corporate, individual and institutional investors holding MBS or CDO faced significant losses, as the value of the underlying mortgage assets declined. Stock markets in many countries declined significantly.”

Best answer:

Answer by bud68
It means mortgage lenders made reckless loans to unqualified buyers, packaged the loans into complex bond-like securities and peddled them to investors as “investment-grade” securities. These securities have now tanked.

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Explain securitization and how it relates to the global financial crisis?

Question by Adam G: Explain securitization and how it relates to the global financial crisis?

Best answer:

Answer by gorilla
When an organisation lends money it makes a legal charge on an asset ie the house for a mortgage. This is of value as the house could be sold and the bank receives interest payments relating to the debt. Over a period of time there could be thousands of such debts and the organisation may decide to sell a “parcel” of these to raise capital for other things or to improve the liquidity in its balance sheet. This is called securitization.

The global problems arose when some US companies lent money for houses to people without the ability to continue mortgage payments (it was called trailerpark lending) on the promise that the mortgage could be renewed at favourable interest rates (less than rent) and falsely inflated the values of the properties thus increasing the debt of the customer. They then securitized the lending but the value was much less than they claimed and when the property values fell, people defaulted as the debt was more than the value of their property and the banks who had purchased the parcels in good faith found that they were sat on useless paper( assets were much less than the expected value). This reduced the value of their balance sheets and also reduced their liquidity which led to distrust in the financial community as no-one knew which bank was sat on reduced value assets. The lending lines between banks were based on good faith but these were cancelled as no bank wanted to be pulled under due to the failure of another. This created a situation where credit disappeared from the system so the banks could not lend to their own customers.

It gets a bit more involved but I hope that answers your question.

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Q&A: Can someone explain in layman’s terms, what securitization of mortgages is/means?

Question by ee: Can someone explain in layman’s terms, what securitization of mortgages is/means?
From what I’ve read banks supposedly ‘pooled’ their mortgages and loans and sold them to others at a profit. I don’t understand why others would pay them at a rate where they make a profit. I don’t understand why ‘pooling’ mortgages results in a value that results in a profit being made when it is sold. Why not just keep them, why sell them in the first pladce?
Any help would be really appreciated, if not answers then even links to other websites.

Best answer:

Answer by Ju
Sorry i know little about mortgages ,nothing to help you,very sorry.

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Q&A: What is securitization of sovereign debt in context of euro crisis ?

Question by sid: What is securitization of sovereign debt in context of euro crisis ?
Please explain in lehmann s language 🙂

Best answer:

Answer by Calliso
Means they don’t have enough money and are trying to blind side normal people with slang, then they call it a educated, learn diferent terms so no one else knows what the —-your talking about so massive cover up operations can be initiated in tronsdental alighnment with the human race!!!! ok did you get that.

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When and how did the Clinton administration allow for the securitization of subprime mortgages?

Question by ortisthetortoise: When and how did the Clinton administration allow for the securitization of subprime mortgages?
Please cite sources (specific legislation, executive order, etc. – not just “CRA changes in 1995”)
I can’t seem to find these “CRA changes of 1995” in any law or order. Trying to figure out if they are fact or folklore
….changes specific to subprime securitization that is…

Best answer:

Answer by rhsaunders
It didn’t; securitization has been legal from the beginning. Which did not mean that it was smart, or that there were mechanisms in place to appropriately value such securities.

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Can someone recommend a good book that thoroughly describes financial terms/concepts (for investing)?

Question by Mister Chartreuse: Can someone recommend a good book that thoroughly describes financial terms/concepts (for investing)?
An introductory book, which describes terms/concepts like securitization, derivatives, bond-markets etc.

I want to understand these things to the end of knowing how to interpret/read company balance sheets, market speculation/volatility, currency markets etc, so that I can have some general financial/investment wherewithal.

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Best answer:

Answer by cactusgene
‘Investing for Dummies’ is a good book for a novice and it is available on Amazon. The advanced concepts you mention above are quite complex, but try the links below:

http://www.amazon.com/Investing-For-Dummies-Eric-Tyson/dp/047090545X
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortgage-backed_security
http://www.bis.org/publ/bppdf/bispap63e.pdf

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Can someone please explain what synthethic CDO’s are?

Question by Alex G: Can someone please explain what synthethic CDO’s are?
It’s for my project on the Great Recession. I understand the tranches & securitization process behind regular CDO’s so you don’t have to start at the beginning. Thanks so much

Best answer:

Answer by Mike
Synthetic CDOs are just side bets on mortgages. Typically they have a similar structure as regular CDO except the “senior” tranche is called the “super senior” tranche”. Typically a synthetic CDO is comprised of mortgages from other CDOs. Sometimes the synthetic CDOs are packaged with only the lower tranches of another CDO which then may be known as “CDO squared”.

Typically a synthetic CDO is protected by “credit default swaps” but seldom is the “super senior” tranche protected. It was assumed that since the “super senior” tranche was rated AAA, that tranche would not default but with all the manipulation, it was guaranteed to default.

Most of the problems during the credit crisis were caused by the synthetic CDOs and not the regular CDOs. The “super senior” tranches were the ones that were selling for 20 cents on the dollar (if they could find buyers).

http://www.tavakolistructuredfinance.com/ifr2.html
http://clickbroker.blogspot.com/2008/04/super-seniors-take-control-of-cdos.html
http://www.math.utexas.edu/users/zariphop/pdfs/ProtterTheFinancialMeltdown.pdf
http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/market-movers/2008/12/01/whats-a-super-senior-tranche?tid=true
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2008/04/merrills-reckless-mortgage-bond-binge.html
http://www.roubini.com/financemarkets-monitor/253166/is_merrill___s_cdo_transaction_with_lone_star_consistent_with_markit_abx_pricing_

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Some questions regarding basic terminology in finance?

Question by Son of a B1tch: Some questions regarding basic terminology in finance?
1) Credit
2) Credit expansion
3) “Pooling” as in pooling debt.
4) Securitization

What do these mean?

Best answer:

Answer by Sean Roberts
1) Credit is providing someone with goods or services with the understanding that they will pay you in a preagreed time in the future.

2) Credit expansion is an economic term. It means the part of any increase in the money supply which is not due to a balance-of-payments surplus. The money supply can increase through a balance-of-payments surplus, on either current or capital account.

3) Debt pooling is an arrangement by which a debtor would deposit funds for the purpose of distributing such funds among his creditors. It is used in bankrupcy.

4) Securitization is the financial practice of pooling various types of contractual debt such as residential mortgages, commercial mortgages, auto loans or credit card debt obligations and selling said debt as bonds, pass-through securities, or Collateralized mortgage obligation (CMOs), to various investors. This is one of the things that led to the horrible recession we’ve gone through.

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Q&A: Was the securitization of subprime loans the greatest scam in history?

Question by Kuntree: Was the securitization of subprime loans the greatest scam in history?
If not what was the greatest scam?

Best answer:

Answer by wg0z
maybe. the private loans thing was many people, and the final figures
are not yet tallied.
Bernie Madoff gets my vote for now.

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Securitization: Why do banks make losses then?

Question by kehoejck: Securitization: Why do banks make losses then?
“As unemployment rose during the Depression, many homeowners could not make their balloon payments, causing a wave of sales and foreclosures. The federal government stepped in, creating the Federal Housing Administration (Fannie Mae) to insure long-term mortgages, and the Home Owners Loan Corporation to sell government-guaranteed bonds to purchase non-performing mortgages. This was the beginning of the securitization that is a central feature of today’s mortgage market; lending risk is passed on to investors in mortgage-backed bonds rather than being held in the institution that originates the loans.”

So how much exactly as a rough % do banks sell as Mortgage Backed Securities and if the risk is being passed on to investors why exactly are the banks racking up such huge losses? Any help is greatly appreciated.

Best answer:

Answer by Thinker
It varies. You’d have to look at the financial statements from a given bank to determine how much they sell and how much they keep.

For example, Washington Mutual, which is in BIG trouble financially, had a habit of making loans that other lenders would be afraid to make. As a result, they were able to charge a somewhat higher rate of interest than if they were making better quality loans. But when the loans went bad, they got hurt.

Best of success.

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