Mortgage Loans
The Ultimate Moral Hazard: 70% of Greek Mortgages Are In Default
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 14:45 -0500Just as we warned earlier in the year, total uncertainty about the future of Greece has enabled a growing sense of moral hazard as "if the nation doesn't pay its debt, why should we" sweeps across the troubled nation. As Greeks' tax remittances to the government, which were almost non-existent to begin with, have ground to a halt, so The FT reports, so-called 'strategic defaults' have become a way of life among Greece's formerly affluent middle-class..."I still owe money on the car and motorboat I can’t afford to use. Even a holiday loan I’d forgotten about...I’m living with my mother looking for work and waiting for the bank to come up with another restructuring offer."
14 Reasons Why Jamie Dimon "Understands The Global Banking System"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2015 09:20 -0500Elizabeth Warren may or may not understand the "global banking system" as Jamie Dimon alleges, but the JPM CEO certainly does as the following 14 "reasons" clearly confirm...
How Jamie Dimon Became A Billionaire
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2015 09:19 -0500- CDO
- Christine Varney
- Citigroup
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Department of Justice
- Fannie Mae
- Foreclosures
- Freddie Mac
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Housing Market
- Institutional Investors
- Jamie Dimon
- LIBOR
- Mortgage Loans
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Prison Time
- Private Equity
- Real estate
- Robert Khuzami
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Time Magazine
Two years ago, bank analyst Mike Mayo asked JPM chief Jamie Dimon a simple question: why should affluent customers not pick UBS over JPM due to a mismatch in capital ratios, to which Dimon's response was even simpler: "that's why I'm richer than you." To which we then added: "No logic, no rationale: all about the bottom line, which to Jamie at least is all that matters. The bottom line was indeed all, because as Bloomberg calculated overnight, over the past several years, Jamie Dimon quietly became not just "richer than you", but "much" richer: his net worth is now well over $1 billion!
A Generational Storm Is Coming
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/13/2015 21:32 -0500Either you break free from the jackass things your parents have done to you... or you deserve what you get.
Government Using Subprime Mortgages To Pump Housing Recovery - Taxpayers Will Pay Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/05/2015 16:45 -0500- Bond
- default
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Foreclosures
- Freddie Mac
- Gambling
- Great Depression
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Insurance Companies
- Janet Yellen
- Keynesian Stimulus
- Maxine Waters
- Medicare
- Mel Watt
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- Mortgage Loans
- Rating Agencies
- Real estate
- recovery
- Student Loans
- Subprime Mortgages
- TARP
To paraphrase H.L. Mencken, anyone who wants the government and Federal Reserve to create a housing recovery, deserves to get it good and hard, like a four by four to the side of their head. Subprime mortgages, subprime auto loans, and subprime student loans driven by preposterously low interest rates are the liquefying foundation of this fake economic recovery. Most rational people would agree that loaning money to people who will eventually default is not a good idea. But it is the underpinning of everything the Fed and government apparatchiks have done to keep this farce going a little while longer. It will not end well – Again.
Days Of Crony Capitalist Plunder - The Deplorable Truth About GE Capital
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2015 12:05 -0500- AIG
- American Express
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bernie Sanders
- Bond
- Book Value
- Capital Markets
- Capital One
- Central Banks
- Citibank
- Commercial Paper
- Corporate Finance
- Corruption
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Gambling
- GE Capital
- General Electric
- General Motors
- GMAC
- Great Depression
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- Housing Prices
- Jeff Immelt
- Lehman
- Main Street
- Meltdown
- Milton Friedman
- Money Supply
- Mortgage Loans
- Neel Kashkari
- None
- Private Equity
- ratings
- Real estate
- Reality
- Ron Paul
- Salient
- Sheila Bair
- Student Loans
- TARP
- Treasury Department
- Yield Curve
GE’s announcement that its getting out of the finance business should be a reminder of how crony capitalism is corrupting and debilitating the American economy. The ostensible reason the company is unceremoniously dumping its 25-year long build-up of the GE Capital mega-bank is that it doesn’t want to be regulated by Washington as a systematically important financial institution under Dodd-Frank. Oh, and that its core industrial businesses have better prospects. We will see soon enough about its oilfield equipment and wind turbine business, or indeed all of its capital goods oriented businesses in a radically deflationary world drowning in excess capacity. But at least you can say good riddance to GE Capital because it was based on a phony business model that was actually a menace to free market capitalism. Its deplorable raid on the public purse during the Lehman crisis had already demonstrated that in spades.
Our Current Illusion Of Prosperity
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/01/2015 21:25 -0500Current policy coming from the Fed seems to be geared to create a never-ending series of booms and busts, with the hope that the busts can be shortened with more debt and easy money. Yet one major driver behind the financial crisis in 2008 was too much debt - much of which led to taxpayer-funded bailouts. In spite of this, the best the Fed can come up with now is to lower interest rates to boost demand to induce households and governments to borrow even more. Interfering with interest rates, however, is by far the most damaging policy. The economy is not a car, and interest rates are not the gas pedal. Interest rates play a critical role in aligning output with society’s demand across time. Fiddling with them only creates an ever-growing misalignment between demand and supply across time requiring an ever larger and more painful adjustment.
Central Banking Refuted In One Blog - Thanks Ben!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/01/2015 12:47 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BLS
- China
- Commercial Paper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Discount Window
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Foreclosures
- Gambling
- Gobbledygook
- Great Depression
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Starts
- Janet Yellen
- M1
- Main Street
- Market Crash
- Meltdown
- Milton Friedman
- Money Supply
- Mortgage Loans
- Open Market Operations
- Reality
- Recession
- Sears
- Unemployment
- White House
- Yield Curve
Blogger Ben’s work is already done. In his very first substantive post as a civilian he gave away all the secrets of the monetary temple. The Bernank actually refuted the case for modern central banking in one blog. The truth is the real world of capitalism is far, far too complex and dynamic to be measured and assessed with the exactitude implied by Bernanke’s gobbledygook. In fact, what his purported necessity for choosing a rate “somewhere” actually involves is the age old problem of socialist calculation.
The Moment When The San Francisco Fed Finally Figures Out What "Debt" Is
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2015 16:33 -0500
"Leverage is risky. Purchasing assets with borrowed money can amplify small movements in prices into extraordinary gains or crippling losses, even default."
- San Fran Fed
Breaking Bad (Debt) - Episode 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/01/2015 19:25 -0500- Auto Sales
- Bond
- Chrysler
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Eric Sprott
- Federal Reserve
- GMAC
- Housing Market
- Insurance Companies
- Mortgage Loans
- Obama Administration
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Private Equity
- Rating Agencies
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Risk Management
- Subprime Mortgages
- TARP
- Unemployment
- Washington D.C.
Under normal circumstances, after 2008's conflagration of the calamitous collateralizations, we shouldn’t have seen such irrational, reckless, greedy behavior from Wall Street for another generation. But, Wall Street didn’t have to accept the consequences of their actions. They were bailed out and further enriched by their puppets at the Federal Reserve, the lackey politicians they installed in Washington D.C., and on the backs of honest, hard-working, tax paying Americans. The lesson they learned was they could continue to take excessive, reckless, unregulated risks without concern for losses, downside, or consequences.
SNB Decision Sparks Calls For Polish Mortgage Bailout; Central Bank Against It
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2015 21:20 -0500As we noted last week, the Swiss National Bank's decision to un-peg from the Euro (thus strengthening the CHF dramatically) will have very significant repercussions - not the least of which is for Hungarian and Polish Swiss-Franc-denominated mortgage-holders. The 20% surge in Swiss Franc translates directly into a comparable jump in the zloty value of loan principles and and monthly payments for about 575,000 Polish families owing a total $35 billion in mortgages denominated in the Swiss currency which has prompted calls for Poland's government to bail them out. Never mind the FX risk, the low-rates were all anyone cared about and now yet another 'risk-free' trade has exploded, Deputy PM Piechocinski says, if the franc "remains above the 4 zloty level, the government may provide support" to debtors but Poland's Central Bank is not supportive of the bailout.
What The Soaring Swiss Franc Means For Hungarian And Polish Mortgages
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/16/2015 09:42 -0500Spoiler alert: nothing good, because what until yesterday was, indicatively, a 1 million mortgage (in HUF or PLN terms) is suddenly a 1.2 million mortgage. But what about the details? Here they are, courtesy of Goldman Sachs.
Frontrunning: January 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 07:51 -0500- Apple
- Arch Capital
- B+
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Beige Book
- Blackrock
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Conference Board
- Councils
- CPI
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Devon Energy
- Duke Realty
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Evercore
- Fitch
- Global Economy
- Gundlach
- Hong Kong
- JetBlue
- Keefe
- Middle East
- Mortgage Loans
- Nationalism
- New York State
- Oaktree
- OPEC
- President Obama
- Private Equity
- ratings
- RBS
- Realty Income
- Recession
- Reuters
- Verizon
- Viacom
- Volatility
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Whiting Petroleum
- World Bank
- U.S. Index Futures Decline on Commodities Slump, Growth Concerns (BBG)
- Al Qaeda claims French attack, derides Paris rally (Reuters)
- Charlie Hebdo With Muhammad Cover on Sale With Heavy Security Precautions (BBG)
- How an Obscure Tax Loophole Brought Down Obama's Treasury Nominee (BBG)
- ECB’s bond plan is legal ‘in principle’ (FT)
- Charlie Hebdo fallout: Specter of fascist past haunts European nationalism (Reuters)
- DRW to acquire smaller rival Chopper Trading (FT)
- Oil fall could lead to capex collapse: DoubleLine's Gundlach (Reuters)
The Most Elementary Question Must Not Be Asked
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/07/2014 10:35 -0500You almost have to step outside of economics, even out of the financial world as a whole, to pose what is the most elementary question about our economy today. That can’t be right. The most elementary question is not how we can achieve growth, it’s whether we need growth, and what we would need it for that is important enough to destroy our entire societies and economies for.... We’re in dire need of fresh blood and smart new ideas to clean up the mess the present ideologies and their puppets and puppetmasters have created.
Big Banks Busted Massively Manipulating Foreign Exchange, Precious Metals … And Every Other Market
Submitted by George Washington on 11/12/2014 14:12 -0500- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- CDS
- Citigroup
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Credit Default Swaps
- Credit Suisse
- default
- Department of Justice
- Deutsche Bank
- Double Dip
- Elizabeth Warren
- Enron
- European Union
- fixed
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Insider Trading
- Japan
- Joseph Stiglitz
- JPMorgan Chase
- LIBOR
- Markit
- Matt Taibbi
- Morgan Stanley
- Mortgage Loans
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Precious Metals
- ratings
- Ratings Agencies
- RBS
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Switzerland
- Uranium
- Yen
Putting Things In Context ...



