Archive for the ‘Loans’ Category

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IndyMac Bank Falls In Housing Crisis.

July 13, 2008

US housing crisis is continuing entailing new and new victims. IndyMac Bank that was a high-flying mortgage lender specializing in exotic and risky loans falls in housing crisis now.

“It worked great during the housing boom. They made hundreds of millions of dollars in profits for a couple of years,” Ydstie says. “But when home prices started falling and loans began to go sour, they fell very hard.”

Weekend Edition Saturday, July 12, 2008 ยท On a day in which fear and turmoil swept through the financial markets, the biggest victim was a bank that specialized in risky mortgages. IndyMac Bank was seized by federal regulators late Friday. The bank is the largest mortgage lender to fail during the housing crisis and is one of the biggest banks to collapse in U.S. history.

“IndyMac was a high-flying mortgage lender specializing in exotic and risky loans sometimes called Alt-A loans,” NPR’s John Ydstie tells Weekend Edition guest host Linda Wertheimer. For some of those loans, IndyMac didn’t require borrowers to provide documentation of income.

“It worked great during the housing boom. They made hundreds of millions of dollars in profits for a couple of years,” Ydstie says. “But when home prices started falling and loans began to go sour, they fell very hard.”

John Reich, director of the federal Office of Thrift Supervision, said Friday that IndyMac “failed due to a liquidity crisis,” that is, it ran out of money. The OTS said it transferred IndyMac’s operations to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. because it did not think IndyMac could meet its depositors’ demands.
Depositors who had $100,000 or less in the bank won’t suffer any loss, but those who had deposits totaling $1 billion that were not insured are going to take a big hit: They’ll get a payment equal to half the uninsured amount.

Reich suggested interference by a U.S. senator may have played a role in the collapse. Two weeks ago, New York Democrat Charles Schumer wrote a letter contending that lax lending standards and deposits purchased from third parties had left the bank on the brink of failure.

Within 11 business days of the letter, there was a run on the bank: Depositors withdrew more than $1.3 billion. Reich charged that Schumer “gave the bank a heart attack.”

According to the FDIC, depositors will have access to their money this weekend through ATMs, debit cards and checks.

“IndyMac will open on Monday as a new entity under government control,” Ydstie says.

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Very Close.

March 14, 2008

Economic state today is not in a hopeless condition yet but really is very closed to it. This is a reality. The US Dollar, has been losing value for many years, but lately the results of this sad state of affairs have become increasingly more evident, writes Sheldon Liber in his columns Chasing Value and Serious Money. Concerns are mounting on a global basis not just in the United States. The euro, once pegged at a buck, is now trading at $1.55, while gold has passed $1,000 and oil has continued its charge, breaking through the $110 per barrel mark.

By Sheldon Liber opinion, the only way to reduce inflation is to have a balance between the amount of currency in circulation and the goods and services available to purchase with said currency. Every action by the Fed to create liquidity in the economy, generates a phantom value, and if not met with an increase in productivity, is devaluing the dollar and enslaving us to a future of working more for less benefit. That is why I so strongly believe we should fund roads & bridges NOT mad money stimulus. For more discussion you can also read Serious Money: Stimulate productivity not consumption, which I believe is an imperative. That is the gravity of the situation.

Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm.