You keep referring me to another thread, all I want is a simple answer to my question, what regulations did Bush cut?
How about these regulations? This press conference was just at the start of the housing bubble. See the guy on the left of the picture? The guy holding the chainsaw to the stack of regulations? He spent his career as a Washington lobbyist for banks and financial firms. he basically spent his entire career lobbying Washington to "cut red tape" for his clients and set the markets free to bring us all unparalleled prosperity! In a stunning fox/henhouse move when he took office in 2001, Bush put guys like this in charge of all the various bank regulators. The chainsaw guy was actually responsible for regulating AIG. AIG, the firm that cost taxpayers so much money when the Bush administration socialised their losses, were based in New York and london so naturally th chainsaw guy had them overseen by one guy working from an office in the midwest, when a firm like that would obviously need dozens of regulators to be effectively regulated. AIG decided they didn't want to let him through their front door and called the chainsaw guy to call him off, which worked out so well for us.
The guy Bush appointed to run the SEC also let the country's biggest financial firms lever up their debt:assets ratio from a standard 10:1 to 30 and 40:1, allowing them to take on massive risk and really rack up the losses when the bubble burst.
Bush also pushed for less regulation of the subprime market:
Bush seeks to increase minority homeownership
In a bid to boost minority homeownership, President Bush will ask Congress for authority to eliminate the down-payment requirement for Federal Housing Administration loans.
In announcing the plan Monday at a home builders show in Las Vegas, Federal Housing Commissioner John Weicher called the proposal the "most significant FHA initiative in more than a decade." It would lead to 150,000 first-time owners annually, he said.
Nothing-down options are available on the private mortgage market, but, in general, they require the borrower to have pristine credit. Bush's proposed change would extend the nothing-down option to borrowers with blemished credit.
The FHA isn't a direct lender, but guarantees loan payments for mortgages on moderately priced owner-occupied property. The FHA guarantee now permits private lenders to finance as much as 97% of the purchase price of a home for millions of low- and middle-income borrowers.
In the proposal soon to be delivered to Congress, Bush would allow the FHA to guarantee loans for the full purchase price of the home, plus down-payment costs. As a practical matter, the FHA would guarantee mortgages as high as 103% of the value of the underlying property.
USATODAY.com - Bush seeks to increase minority homeownership