the proximate cause of our financial crisis, I think of things like "23 dead people got mortgages", or the
people who investigators found that did not provide the data that was sent in under their names, the
out and out wholesale abrogation of responsiblity that occurred in the "race to the cash".
From your link...
"Alex Blumberg: This is Glen Pizzolorusso, who was an area sales manager at an
outfit called WMC mortgage in upstate New York. Just to repeat, he was making 75
to a 100 grand a month. That's over a million dollars a year. Glen was just out of
college. His job was a lot like Mike Garner's, he was the same link in the chain, and
Glen loved his job.
Glen Pizzolorusso: What is that movie? Boiler Room? That's what it's like. I
mean, it's the cooling thing ever. Cubicle, cubicle, cubicle for 150,000 sq.
ft. The ceilings were probably 25 or 30 feet high. The elevator had a big
graffiti painting. Big open space. And it was awesome. We lived
mortgage. That’s all we did. This deal, that deal. How we gonna get it funded?
What’s the problem with this one? That's all everyone's talking about."
...
Alex Blumberg: Glen had five cars, a 1.5 million dollar vacation house in
Connecticut, and penthouse that he rented in Manhattan. And he made all this
money making very large loans to very poor people with bad credit.
...
Alex Blumberg: But Glen didn't worry about whether the loans were good. That's
someone else's problem. And this way of thinking thrived at every step of this
mortgage security chain. A guy like Mike Francis, from Morgan Stanley, he told me
he bought loans, lots of loans, from Glen's company, and he knew in his gut they
were bad loans. Like these NINA loans.
When I get into conversations with people who insist on looking at the little $1.3 trillion brick of sub-prime in the the $160 trillion Great Wall of Disaster that Wall Street and company brought us, I have real trouble understanding their point of view. They completely miss who is the enemy. In the published documents since the financial crisis hit it is clear that thousands of these signers didn't have a chance...and certainly everyone with any kind of mgmt responsiblity on Wall Street, and a not-insignificant number of those in the mortgage houses that were combing these neighborhoods for loans, knew long before everything blew up that if the housing market fell off, these loans would crater. And they just didn't ignore the probability of what would happen, they out and out told people it would never happen, and dug their bony, evil fingers deep into pensions and municipal\state governments.
People in two administrations have taken them off the hook they hung themselves on, and we are paying an awful price.
Thank you for posting this.