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Banks and lenders--Countrywide, big banks, little banks, Fannie, Freddie--came up with ninja loans, liar loans, adjusting ARMs, no-interest time-bombs, etc. Why did they come up with those loans? Two reasons: they could make a LOT of money--by charging higher interest and fees, and because of massive consumer demand. People WANTED these loans.
WHY did people want them? Because they wanted a house--or, many of them, they wanted a bigger, nicer house. But they really couldn't afford the houses they were buying on their incomes, but extremely low interest rates + no interest or no down payment loans + home equity prices that seemed, for years, to ONLY go UP all combined to make people think they COULD afford something they really couldn't. People bought the homes, then used them as ATMs and pulled out their "equity" so they could buy other stuff they couldn't afford.
So much money was pouring into the real estate market, that builders went nuts, building FAR too many homes in the hopes of selling them for a ridiculous profit. As long as house prices kept going up 7-10% (or more) per year, everything was fine.
Yes, the banks were complicit. They threw all their rules about lending standards and credit risk out the window and loaned to people they had no business loaning money to. And Congress egged them on, wanting "all Americans" to "own" a home, even if they couldn't afford it.
The Fed kept interest rates far too low for far too long, and that helped fuel the insanity of the bubble. Credit was too easy to get. And Fixed Income investors began searching for "safe" investments that could give them a better yield than cash or T-bills.
Enter Wall Street. They began to "securitize" all these crappy mortgages, wrapping them all up into bonds (CMOs) and selling them as "safe" investments, even though there were a significant number of mortgages in the mix that were in high risk of foreclosure, especially if interest rates went back up or (unthinkably) if home prices dropped. This distanced the bank that originated the loand from the actual borrower; now if you had a mortgage, you didn't know who you owed the money to--it could be a hedge fund in Singapore. Wall Street started making a fortune selling these CMO's, and then they came up with a way to put insurance contracts on companies that invested in and held a lot of these smelly CMOs, in the form of credit default swaps.
All this insanity was predicated on home prices increasing. But what comes up must come down. Bubbles eventually pop.
Wall Street didn't create the bubble. We did. They sure as hell profited from it, as did the banks, the whole real estate industry, the builders, the politicians like * who pretended that this was real economic growth, and the American public profited, too--for a time. We got to buy and live in bigger homes that we couldn't afford, without that pesky 20% down payment, credit was loose, and that goosed our 401(k)s.
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