Again, ignoring the Fed, Fannie and Freddie role in melting down US Real estate sector is like thinking better building codes could have saved a lot of the homes at Nagasaki from the blast.
It just does not take new facts into account.
Frank proves again a central tenet of wingnut thought, he knows nothing, reads nothing, and yet has opinions on everything. So where do these wingnut opinions come from? They come from corporate think tanks that are only too happy the likes of Frank believe. If he had read he would have seen the reply below countering his last feed from wingnuttery land. Of course the wires in his head would spark and cross and confuse, but just maybe he would learn and then leave the land of Oz.
AUGUST WEST
5:10 PM ET
October 20, 2010
Fannie and Freddie at the root of the sub-prime crisis?
Talk about being dead wrong! Fannie and Freddie were NOT at the root of the sub-prime crisis. This is disinformation spouted by shills and ignoramuses. Sub-prime loans were originated by the unregulated private banking sector. In fact, neither Freddie nor Fannie originated loans, period. They bought loans from the private sector, or guaranteed interest and principal payments on MBSs issued by the private sector that rested on mortgages originated in (drum roll, please)...the private sector!
Nor did either Fannie or Freddie ever press banks to originate sub-prime loans. The private sector did that all by themselves. Fannie and Freddie may have relaxed the standards in their Seller-Servicer Guides, but at most--or at worst--they only approached the standards of the private sector. Sub-prime loans came from WaMu, IndyMac, Wachovia, Wells, and all the other private sector banks.
Neither Fannie nor Freddie ever told anyone to not verify borrowers' income or to inflate appraisals. They never ordered any bank to issue "no doc" loans. These were private-sector "innovations." Mortgage toxicity is a purely private-sector innovation.
Simpulo's error is so egregious as to call into question anything he writes on thus subject."
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