Shakedown artists screamed "racism" when
banks hesitated to approve loan requests from minorities with poor credit scores-
DemocRats caused the current problem
There was no such thing as a developed Subprime mortgage industry until the US congress
created it by ordering banks to issue loans to people who were not credit worthy.
Community activist groups (such as the Public Interest Research Group and Acorn) and civil
rights law firms (such as Miner, Barnhill & Galland) had make their living by accusing
banks of racism when the banks hesitated to approve loan requests from minority citizens
with poor credit scores. Fair Housing laws, championed by American Heros like Martin
Luther King, Jr., had long-ago outlawed the practice of redlining, which is
refusing to sell or rent to blacks in certain neighborhoods. But a new generation of
activists modified the concept of redlining, applying it not just to race-based home sale
covenants, but to any refusal to lend to a minority member, even for sensible financial
reasons.
The Community Reinvestment Act was created as a result. Initially the act was used, not to
get banks to lend to minority households, but to get them to cut checks to community
groups. Left of center activist agencies, which had pushed for the act in the first
place, used it as a shakedown tool. So long as the banks kept paying off to the activists,
the activists would hold off on sending complaints to the bank regulators CRA files.
Eventually, under Clinton, the CRA was renewed and, not surprisingly, made more
punitive. Banks were required to make Subprime mortgage loans now too, or else suffer a
low CRA rating and be punished accordingly. The Fed played its part. The Home
Mortgage Disclosure rules created an unfunded mandate for banks to track and publicly
disclose the race and gender of its mortgage clients. Now the shakedown artists had
an easy source of complaints and a club with which to beat the banks into submission. The
bankers complied and the Subprime mortgagage market was born.
But the bad paper remained principally on the balance sheets of the originating banks for
a couple of years. The banks and their shareholders were directly hurt, but not the
general public, at least in the beginning, that is until the bank regulators once again
intervened and encouraged banks to push the paper out to unsuspecting investors.
First the Fed issued guidance which warned the banks that their capital requirements would
be severely raised in response to the Subprime mortgages. In other words, banks were told
that to the extent that they issued mortgages to high risk borrowers, to that extent they
would not be allowed to put as much of their money into income-producing activities. The
banks had already been told by the Fed that they would have to set aside more money for
mortgages in general, and now they were being hit again for the Subprime variety.
Second, the Fed issued guidance on how to mix Subprime mortgage paper in with good paper
and sell the resulting composite security to the general market. This is how the
toxic waste of bad debt was pumped out into the world. This is why credit
markets are now having trouble clearing. This is why banks are taking massive write-downs
of the loans which still exist on their books. This is why foreign investors dont
want to buy US mortgages, or bank stocks, and consequently dont want to buy the
dollars in which they are denominated either. If you add to this a Security and Exchange
Commission ruling which compels banks to mark to market, which means they are
forced to show large losses in times of market panic, you give a legal mandate for
short-term thinking. You create a more serious crisis for the system and a fatal blow to
the weaker banks.
This crisis has the fingerprints of congress and its bureaucratic enforcers all over it.
It also has the fingerprints of a generation of activists and fair
housing lawyers as well, such as Barry (now known as Barack) Obama. That
part of the story is yet to be told.
By Jerry Bowyer
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/JerryBowyer/2008/04/01/meet_barry_obama,_fair_housing_lawyer
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