Gretchen Skeaton SW Washington Real Estate

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Gretchen Skeaton

  • Path to $8000 Credit....Need to Get Moving

    Path to the $8000 Federal Tax Credit: On 12/2/2009 Credit is gone! Need to be in new home 12/1/2009!

    10% of Sales Price of Your Primary Residence Up to $8000! (10% of Home Sold for $80,000 or Greater)

                  

     

     

     

     

    Buyer Qualification

    Single Filer:$75,000

    Joint Filers: $150,000

     

    Reduced Credit for

    Single Filer: up to $95,000

    Joint Filers: up to $170,000

    Must be  Primary

    Residence

    Not owned a Primary

    Residence in the Past

    3 Years

     

    Consult Tax Accountant

    Seller Qualification

    Seller not a Blood

    Relative

    Step Relative does

    Qualify

    Consult a Tax

    Accountant

    Property Qualification

    Type of Residence:

    -Detached Home or

    -Attached Home or

    -Condo or Co-Op

    Located in United States

     

    Purchase between

    1-1-09 and 11-30-09

     

    Occupy/Occupancy

    Permit by 12-1-09

    (Moved In)

     

    Not a Second or

    Vacation Home

     

    Can not sell for 3 years without some Penalty.

     

    Consult a Tax Accountant

    Apply for Refund

    IRS Form 5405

    Claim Credit with an Amended Tax Return or

    Claim Credit in 2010

    Consult a Tax Accountant

     

     

    Why Buy Now? Appears we are the point where Interest Rates, Home Prices, and Supply = Greater Affordability

     

    At this writing the Fixed Interest Rate is 5.12% for Conventional loans and 5.24% for FHA loans.

     

    Average Fixed Interest Rate over the last 30 years is 8.75%

     

    Home Prices are approaching 2005 or 2004 prices depending on SW Washington or Portland, OR location. Inventory is beginning to decline when 2009 months of inventory is compared to 2008 months of inventory.

     

  • Gretchen's Good Home Buy of the Week of 1/5/2009

    I regularly preview homes to keep myself informed on the residential real estate inventory in the Vancouver Washington area and as I mentioned in other blogs, I am seeing some very good buys! So here is my good buy of the week.

                                                                                    

    This home is located in the Heights Neighborhood. This is how the Heights Neighborhood is described on the City of Vancouver's website on the its Communty section page:
    "The Vancouver Heights Neighborhood, located in the south central portion of the city, feels like a comfortable “home town” within a big city. As a microcosm of the larger community, it includes over 1600 residences, 45 businesses, public facilities, and open spaces. Vancouver Heights was voted as the Neighborhood of the 150th in 2007 in a contest where residents voted on neighborhood association entries printed in The Columbian as part of Vancouver's 150th celebration."

    The average price of a home in the Heights Neighborhood is $258,086 and the average year built for this neighborhood is 1977.

    My pick for the week is priced at $199,900. MLS# 8101330
    The lot size is almost a quarter of an acre, 0.21 acres which gives you space for a garden; gives you space for children to play; and you are not looking directly into your neighbor's home or feel like you are part of their summer barbeque. A yard meant to be enjoyed! Another plus is that it is located right across the street from a park.

    This 3 bedromm, 1.5 bath 1028 sq. ft. well maintained home has
    -three sided fireplace between living room and kitchen, warmth that can be shared and viewed from multiple areas
    -hardwood floors, a popular feature you will love
    -forced air gas heat, gives you great comfort
    -large 2 car garage and a tool shed, storeage place for your projects

    This home has been cherished for years and is looking to be cherished in the future!

    Call me at 360-608-8541 or email me at GretchenSkeaton@comcast.net if you would like more information or a personal tour.

  • One of the top 10 of America's Best-Long Term Real Estate Bets...Portland, OR/Vancouver, WA area

    According to an article in Forbes.com written by Matt Woolsey on December 16, 2008, the Portland OR area which includes the Vancouver, WA area is the 9th best bet. The #1 Best Bet is Seattle, WA. Why? According to Woolsey, the top 10 best bets are such because they grew in value and avoided large swings of excess and stress, meaning these cities did not overbuild....were less volatile. Supply and demand was governed/managed. In some cities, the geography helped govern the supply, as he states of Seattle. In Portland, the areas' conservative building patterns and vacancy fluctuations make it a steady market, a kind of stability.

    Job growth and construction rates are important determinants of an area's future health, he also states.  For Portland/Vancouver area from Moody's Economy.com, the projected job growth for 2008-2017 will be 1%.  As I read this article, it reinforced a document I read by John Burns that showed this areas' growth as steady with no large swings as is often seen in our Southern border state, California.

    Woolsey states in the article that prices are likely to continue falling nationwide for at least a year as the mortgage and housing markets shake out of their hangovers. He further states that the cities on the best bet list possess the strongest fundamentals for when the market settles. If you want to read the full article go to http://www.forbes.com/2008/12/16/cities-ten-homes-forbeslife-cx_mw_1216realestate_print.html. In the article, click on In Depth: America's Best Long-Term Housing Bets to get the details on the 10 cities.

    So buyers, the Vancouver/Portland area is a great area to buy and now is the time to buy before the Shake Out is complete. Look for a great home within your budget. There are numerous such homes...affordability is real. Do you have some savings, 3-5% of the sales price; have you reduced your debt,and have you been paying your bills on time, (those old fundamentals)? There are loans available. I invite you to attend the Home Buying Seminar scheduled for January 24, 2008 from 9 AM-2 PM. Call/email me for details.

    And Sellers, it just might be a great time to move up, move on, or get more space or luxury. As long as those same fundamentals are in place, you can be set to make that move. If you have equity in your home and are willing to forget what the home sold for at the height of the boom...rather look at the unusal appreciation of approximately 5%. I'd be happy to work up some numbers for you.

  • Commentary on the Real Estate Market Trend for the Vancouver, WA and Portland, OR Areas

    My commentary concerning the December 2008 Real Estate Market Trends for the Vancouver, WA and Portland, OR:

    It certainly is an interesting time for our country and maybe the world due to poor decisions made by many people during the most recent real estate boom! And as I mentioned in my last newsletter, I have decided to give little credibility to the real estate news reporting.  

    What I know, here in the Pacific Northwest:
    1.     Financing for homes is available and offered at a historically low interest rate!
         Several loan consultants have been sending me emails saying they have loans available.
          If I was considering purchasing a home, I would definitely purchase now!!
         At the Home Buying Seminar of which I am one of the presenters, the loan consultant presented several programs.
    2.     Homes available to purchase (Inventory) is high!
         Fewer homes are selling (4-8%/month).
         Inventory currently includes short sales and bank owned properties impacting the homes available that have yet to sell.
         Once the short sale and bank owed property inventory is depleted/reduced, the inventory picture will be more normal.
         The reduction in inventory impacts that supply and demand factor that affects sales and especially prices.
         As I preview properties, I have seen some really nice homes that are reasonably priced!!!
    3.    The 15%/year appreciation in the price of homes could not continue...homes would not be affordable at that rate.
         I recall forecasters in 2006 saying the bubble would soon bust. It did bust in Pacific Northwest in Aug/Sept. 2007.
         Looking back at the data, I see the August and September 2007 decline and not before and it felt like a bubble
          popping.
    4.    The forecasters are now saying things are beginning to stabilize and with all the variables, when is hard to determine
        The Pending Home Sales Index is a forward-looking indicator of homes sales and that indicator is showing an
             index number improvement starting in August 2008. It's interesting to look at the index numbers starting in 2005.
              In 2006 the index started to decrease, in 2007 it decreased more and 2008 the declining trend continued during
              the 1st and 2nd quarters. These index numbers are for the Western part of the USA.
         Price projections are challenging to predict with so many variables.And one commentator, Lawrence Yun of National
             Association of Realtors, stated buyer pessimism could cause prices to overshoot the downward price correction.
              I have seen the same commentary from others as well. The end of the bust may be as dramatic as the bubble bust.
           I did a market analysis of my home and seeing the price reduction was not a comfortable feeling until I used a bit
              of reason. Instead of looking at the impressive appreciation rate of the past, I looked at an average appreciation rate
              of  5%. With that in mind, my home still was valued at approximately $50,000 over what we paid for the home in     
                in 2003.
    Check out my Market Trend Reports for the Vancouver and Portland Areas which can be seen on my website:
    (Take a Look and help increase traffic to my website) November 2008 Market Trend Reports
    PS: The next WSHFC Sponsored Home Buyer Seminar is scheduled for January 24, 2009 from 9 AM to 2 PM.
        Those attending the December 13, 2008 seminar said it was very informative.
         Presenters besides Roger Pyles, loan consultant, Realtor, Gretchen Skeaton were
         Norm Shakelford, inspector with Quality First, Brad Hill, an appraiser with Cascade Appraisal, Chris Kocalis with
         AL Insurance and Angie Ashton, escrow officer representing Columbia Title Company.
          Call/email me for details if you or someone you know would like to learn more about the home buying
           seminar.  Participants receive a certificate that can be used by those entities requiring attendance of  a
           home buying seminar.
    Wishing you and yours a Christmas Holiday FULL of Joy!!        
               
    Gretchen Skeaton, MT (ASCP), MSM
    GRI, CRS, AHS, e-PRO
    Licensed in both Washington and Oregon
    360 608-8541 or 503 750-3212
    For more real estate information, check out my website, www.GSkeatonRealEstate.com
    Call or Email me to discuss taking advantage of this Market.
  • More on the Financial Challenges we are now experiencing

    In todays Inman News, 11/24/08, Patrick Duffy writes a book review of the book Financial Shock: A 360 degree look at the subprime mortgage implosion and how to avoid the next financial crisis by author: Mark Zandi

    It is much more succinct than the article I posted of the NPR interview last week on my website blog.

    Duffy states: "the book is so comprehensive, it still provides an excellent framework from which to understand the root causes of the crisis, from the mistakes made by Alan Greenspan to the rapid rise of irresponsible lenders who rewrote the rules of underwriting based on their own short-term interests.

    And let's not forget a compliant political system and the home buyers eager to join the ranks of owners despite any potential long-term consequences of poor financial decisions.

    Beginning with a chapter that explains just how subprime mortgages evolved, Zandi writes in plain English and manages to weave a story with its share of heroes-turned-villains, including politicians pushing for an "ownership society"; a Federal Reserve chairman enamored with deregulation; an enormous amount of global money in search of a big return; financial alchemists getting drunk on their own supposed genius; home builders who ignored the lessons of the past; and bond ratings agencies who kept the entire machine humming because the profits were simply too large to pass up."

    Patrick Duffy further mentions Zandi's policies to address or prevent in the future:

    "So now that we're in the midst of unraveling and deleveraging the system of subprime mortgages, complex securities and credit default swaps, how do we prevent a repeat of this ugly scenario? Fortunately, Zandi provides his own 10-step program of policies to address a host of issues: from tossing out shady brokers to providing basic financial education in high schools across the country. These steps include the following:

    1. Adopt a voluntary mortgage write-down plan

    2. Establish clear mortgage lending rules

    3. License all mortgage brokers

    4. Expand data collection by the government

    5. Reform the fractured foreclosure process

    6. Invest in financial literacy starting in high school

    7. Modify mark-to-market accounting when price discovery is unreliable

    8. Raise financial transparency and accounting

    9. Overhaul and simplify financial regulation

    10. Pay attention to asset bubbles and act accordingly

    Seems to me this book would be a good read!

  • An explanation of how we got to the current challenges in our Financial System and the Real Estate Market!!

    This is the first logical explanation that I have seen explaining the current crisis with lenders and financial institutions and the need for the US federal government bail out. It is long and worth reading!

    It all started with a giant pool of money in India, China, Saudia Arabia...to name a few and a decision by Alan Greenspan.

     This is a transcript of an interview on NPR (National Public Radio) courtesy of Rich Levin

    This American Life Episode Transcript

    Program #355

    The Giant Pool of Money

    [Ambient sound of piano playing and crowd murmur]

    Ira Glass: So Adam, where are we?

    Adam Davidson: I recorded this at the Ritz Carlton in lower Manhattan. It’s a black

    tie dinner, just a few weeks ago.

    Ira Glass: And you, by the way, are NPR’s International Business and Economics

    correspondent.

    Adam Davidson: That’s right. I was there for my job. They’re giving out awards for

    all these financial securities, including the one that nearly brought down the global

    financial system. You know, the whole sub prime mortgage crisis.

    Jim Finkel: This guy is a legend. He’s a granddaddy of our industry.

    Adam Davidson: I’m sitting at this dinner with Jim Finkel. He’s kind of nervous

    because he’s up for CDO of the Year for the CDO he created, Monterrey. Now, the

    CDO, that’s what we’re talking about, that’s the financial instrument that was central

    to this global credit crisis we’re in.

    Ira Glass: And they’re giving awards for this? These guys are giving each other

    awards for doing that?

    Adam Davidson: Let me just say, they’re aware that there’s a certain irony, giving

    awards to the instrument that almost destroyed the world’s economy. They did

    consider canceling this year but it’s been a really tough year, it’s been really gloomy

    for them.

    Jim Finkel: Honestly, I know this sounds...I was happy to see there were no

    major suicides, people weren’t jumping off bridges, there weren’t personal

    disasters.

    Adam Davidson: That same week, a few days earlier across the river in Brooklyn, I

    went to a completely different kind of gathering. It was not black tie. It was put on

    by the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America. It was people on the

    opposite side of the mortgage crisis. People facing foreclosure, trying to figure out

    how to keep their homes. I met this one guy Richard, he’s a Marine. This big guy,

    over six feet tall. When he came back from Iraq a few years ago he bought one of

    these fancy new mortgages with an adjustable rate. Recently his rate reset. It’s gone

    up by more than $2,000 a month and he’s fallen behind on his payments.

    Richard Campbell: At one point, my son had $7,000 in a CD and I had to

    break it. That really hurt. I was saving that money for his college. I put

    $2,000 back but it’s like you can’t have a future. They put you in a situation

    where after a while you’re going to fail. It’s hard.

    2

    Adam Davidson: It’s clear these two groups are connected. Jim at the black tie

    dinner and Richard the marine. The sub prime crisis has connected them.

    Ira Glass: Right. And I know this is what sent you and one of the producers of our

    show, Alex Blumberg, on a big reporting mission these last few months. You saw

    that. That there’s this long chain of people that starts with these Wall Street guys

    and ends with people who stand to lose their houses. All along that chain there were

    bankers and brokers and investors and homeowners. Everybody deluded themselves,

    thinking they could throw out the old rules of banking.

    Adam Davidson: Right. In all the coverage of this we hadn’t heard much from the

    people all along the chain. We wanted to know what where they thinking when they

    were doing all this? And why did they think it would work? And simply, how did it all

    work?

    Ira Glass: So, this is what we’re devoting our program to today. From WBEZ

    Chicago, it’s This American Life distributed by Public Radio International. I’m Ira

    Glass. And today’s show is a special co-production we’re doing with NPR News – your

    place of employment Adam.

    Adam Davidson: Very proudly so.

    Ira Glass: You and Alex Blumberg are going to be explaining step by step how this

    all worked and we’ll meet some of the people who created this economic disaster.

    Let me turn the show over to the two of you, which is great for me because I’ve

    pretty much lost my voice anyway. Alex Blumberg will kick things off.

    Music

    Alex Blumberg: The thing that got me interested in all this was something called a

    NINA loan. Back when the housing crisis was still a housing bubble. A guy on the

    phone told me that a NINA loan stands for No Income, No Asset, as in, someone will

    lend you a bunch of money without first checking if you have any income or any

    assets. And it was an official, loan product. Like, you could walk into a mortgage

    broker’s office and they would say, well, we can give you a 30 year fixed rate, or we

    could put you in a NINA. He said there were lots of loans like this, where the bank

    didn’t actually check your income, which I found confusing. It turns out even the

    people who got them found them confusing. For example, a guy I met named

    Clarence Nathan. He worked 3 part time, not very steady jobs, and made a total of

    roughly 45 thousand dollars a year roughly. He got himself into trouble and needed

    money, so he took out a loan against his house. A big one.

    Clarence Nathan: Call it 540 for round figures

    Alex Blumberg: And you basically borrowed that from the bank and they

    didn’t check your income?

    Clarence Nathan: Right. It’s a no-income verification loan. They don't do

    that. It's almost like you pass a guy in the street and say: lend me 540,000

    dollars? He says, what do you do? Hey, I got a job. OK. It seems that casual

    even though there are a lot of papers that get filled out and stuff flies all over

    3

    with the faxed and emails. Essentially, that's ... that the process.

    Alex Blumberg: Would you have loaned you the money?

    Clarence Nathan: I wouldn't have loaned me the money. And nobody that I

    know would have loaned me the money. I know guys who are criminals who

    wouldn't loan me that and they break your knee-caps. I don’t know why the

    bank did it. I’m serious ... 540 thousand dollars to a person w/bad credit.

    Alex Blumberg: As it turns out, Clarence's friends, acquaintances and shadowy

    criminal contacts would have been right not to lend him money. At the time I talked

    to him, Clarence hadn’t made a payment in almost a year, and his house was in the

    process of foreclosure.

    Stories like this have been in the news for months. They often feature an innocent

    homeowner who was duped by a lying, greedy mortgage banker. Or, if you’re more

    of a Wall Street Journal editorial page type, an innocent mortgage banker who was

    duped by lying, greedy homeowner. No doubt, both categories exist, but Clarence's

    case is more nuanced...and much more common:

    Clarence Nathan: Nobody came and told me a lie: just close your eyes and

    the problem will go away. That's wasn’t the situation. I needed the money.

    I'm not trying to absolve myself of anything. I thought I could do this and get

    out of it within 6 to 9 months. The 6 to 9 month plan didn’t work so I’m stuck.

    If somebody had told me I couldn’t borrow the money I probably would’ve

    had to do something else more drastic and dramatic and not be in this

    situation now. The bank made an imprudent loan. I made an imprudent loan.

    We’re partners in this.

    Alex Blumberg: This imprudent partnership is new, and is at the heart the current

    housing crisis. For most of the history of banking, bankers wouldn’t have loaned

    Clarence their money either. They didn’t let people like Clarence near their money, in

    fact, people with part-time employment, and unpaid debts in their past. And then,

    suddenly, in the early 2000’s, everything changed, banking turned on its head and

    went out looking for partnerships with people like Clarence...loaning him half a

    million dollars without even checking to see if he had a job. What happened?

    Music

    Alex Blumberg: To help explain out what happened, here's my partner for this

    hour, Adam Davidson, the international business reporter for NPR. Hey Adam.

    Adam Davidson: Hey Alex.

    Alex Blumberg: So, I guess the first thing we have to talk about is the global pool

    of money, right?

    Adam Davidson: Right. The global pool of money. That's where our story begins.

    Most people don’t think about it but there’s this huge pool of money out there, which

    is basically all the money the world is saving now. Insurance companies saving for a

    catastrophe, pension funds saving money for retirement, the central bank of England

    saving for whatever central banks save for. All the world’s savings.

    4

    Ceyla Pazarbasioglu: It's a lot of money. It's about 70 trillion.

    Adam Davidson: That is the head of capital market research at the International

    Monetary Fund, the place to go if you want know how much money is in the world.

    Adam Davidson: How do we pronounce your name?

    Ceyla Pazarbasioglu: That will take two minutes at least. It's Pazarbasioglu.

    Ceyla Pazarbasioglu. I'm very impressed.

    Adam Davidson: And, by the way, before you finance enthusiasts start writing any

    letters, we do know that 70 trillion technically refers to that subset of global savings

    called fixed-income securities. Everyone else can just ignore what I just said. Let’s

    put 70 trillion dollars in perspective. Do this. Think about all the money that people

    spend everywhere in the world. Everything you bought in the last year, all of it. Then

    add everything Bill Gates bought. And all the rice sold in China and that fleet of

    planes Boeing just sold to South Korea. All the money spent and earned in every

    country on earth in a year: that is LESS than 70 trillion, less than this global pool of

    money.

    Alex Blumberg: Wow, that is a lot of money.

    Adam Davidson: It is a lot of money. And that money comes with an army of very

    nervous men and women watching over the pool of money: investment managers.

    This army is nervous because they don't want to lose any of that money and they

    also want to make it grow bigger. But to make it grow, they have to find something

    to invest in. So, for most of modern history, they bought really, really safe, really

    boring investments: things called treasuries and municipal bonds. Boring things. But

    then, right before our story starts, something changed, something happened to that

    global pool of money.

    Ceyla Pazarbasioglu: This number doubled since 2000. In 2000 this was

    about 36 trillion dollars.

    Adam Davidson: So, it took several hundred years for the world to get to 36

    trillion. Then, in six years, to get another 36 trillion.

    Ceyla Pazarbasioglu: Yeah. There has been a very sharp increase.

    Adam Davidson: How's the world get twice as much money to invest? Lots of

    things happened, but the main headline is all sorts of poor countries became kind of

    rich making TVs and selling us oil: China, India, Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia. Made a lot

    of money and banked it. China, for example, has over a trillion dollars in its central

    bank, and there are office buildings in Beijing filled with math geniuses-real math

    geniuses-looking for a place to invest it. And the world was not ready for all this

    money. There's twice as much money looking for investments, but there are not

    twice as many good investments. So, that global army of investment managers was

    hungrier and twitchier than ever before. They all wanted the same thing: a nice low5

    risk investment that paid some return.

    But then something happened to make matters worse, at this precise moment, one

    guy took one of that army's favorite investments and made it a lot less attractive.

    Alex Blumberg: So, this is where we have to talk about Alan Greenspan, right?

    Adam Davidson: We have to.

    Alex Blumberg: Alright. But I'm going to promise the people here that this is the

    last time you're going to hear Alan Greenspan in this story. So bear with us.

    Adam Davidson: Here is one of his speeches that really drove that army of

    investment managers crazy.

    Alan Greenspan: The FOMC stands prepared to maintain a highly

    accommodative stance of policy for as long as needed to promote satisfactory

    economic performance.

    Adam Davidson: You might not believe me, but that little statement: that is Central

    Banker speak for “Hey, global pool of money - screw you.”

    Alex Blumberg: Come on, that’s not what he said

    Adam Davidson: It is! I speak central banker and that’s what he’s saying.

    What he’s technically saying is he’s going to keep the Fed Funds rate at the absurdly

    low level of one percent. It tells every investor in the world: you are not going to

    make any money at all on US treasury bonds for a very long time. Go somewhere

    else. We can’t help you.

    And so the global pool of money looked around for some low-risk, high-return

    investment. And among the many things they put their money into, there was one

    thing they fell in love with. To get it, they called Wall Street - a guy like this:

    Mike Francis: My name is Mike Francis. During the beginning of the mortgage

    implosion, I was an executive director at Morgan Stanley on the residential

    mortgage trading desk.

    Adam Davidson: Mike was one link in a chain that connected the global pool of

    money to its new favorite investment, these residential mortgages, the US housing

    market, and guys like Clarence Nathan.

    Think how attractive a mortgage loan is to that 70 trillion dollar pool of money.

    Remember, they're desperate to get any kind of interest return. They want to beat

    that miserable 1 percent interest Greenspan is offering them.

    And here are these homeowners, they're paying 5, 7, 9 percent to borrow money

    from some bank. So what if the global pool could get in on that action?

    6

    There are problems. Individual mortgages are too big a hassle for the global pool of

    money. They don't wanna get mixed up with actual people and their catastrophic

    health problems or debilitating divorces, and all the reasons which might stop them

    from paying their mortgages.

    So what Mike and his peers on Wall Street did, was to figure out how to give the

    global pool of money all the benefits of a mortgage – basically higher yield - without

    the hassle or the risk.

    So picture the whole chain. You have Clarence. He gets a mortgage from a broker.

    The broker sells the mortgage to a small bank, the small bank sells the mortgage to

    a guy like Mike at a big investment firm on Wall Street.

    Then Mike takes a few thousand mortgages he’s bought this way, he puts them in

    one big pile. Now he’s got thousands of mortgage checks coming to him every

    month. It’s a huge monthly stream of money, which is expected to come in for the

    next thirty years, the life of a mortgage.

    And he then sells shares of that monthly income to investors. Those shares are

    called mortgage backed securities. And the 70 trillion dollar global pool of money

    loved them.

    Mike Francis: it was unbelievable. We almost couldn’t produce enough to

    keep the appetite of the investors happy. More people wanted bonds than we

    could actually produce. That was our difficult task, was trying to produce

    enough. They would call and ask “Do you have any more fixed rate? What

    have you got? What’s coming?” From our standpoint it's like, there's a guy

    out there with a lot of money. We gotta find a way to be his sole provider of

    bonds to fill his appetite. And his appetite’s massive.

    Alex Blumberg: The problem was, to make a mortgage backed security, you

    needed mortgages, lots of them. So for Mike Francis to satisfy his demand, and take

    his quite hefty fee from the global pool of money, he needed to buy up as many

    mortgage pools as possible.

    And to do that, he called a guy one link below him, on the mortgage backed security

    chain, a guy named Mike Garner, who worked at the largest private mortgage bank

    in Nevada, called Silver State Mortgage. And to give you a sense of how fast this

    business was growing, Mike got into the mortgage business straight from his

    previous job as a bartender.

    Mike Garner: One of my regulars in the bar, he actually hired me from the

    bar. He said he needed some guys, and we started talking about how much I

    made. He beat what I was making. I didn’t know anything about the

    mortgage business. I was as green as you could be.

    Alex Blumberg: Mike Garner’s job was to buy up individual mortgages, mainly from

    brokers, bundle two or three hundred of them together, and sell them up the chain

    to wall street, to guys like Mike Francis.

    7

    Adam Davidson: Too many Mikes here.

    Alex Blumberg: So many Mikes. Actually just two. Mike Francis on Wall Street and

    Mike Garner, the guy we’re talking about now.

    Adam Davidson: He’s in Nevada.

    Alex Blumberg: And in the beginning, he'd only buy mortgages that were pretty

    standard and pretty safe. Mortgages where people had come up with a down

    payment and proven they had a steady income and money in the bank.

    And they sold so many mortgages that there came a point in 2003 where just about

    everybody who wanted a mortgage and was qualified to get one .... had gotten one.

    But the pool of money had just gotten started. They wanted more mortgage backed

    securities.

    So Wall Street had to find more people to take out mortgages. Which meant lending

    to people who never would’ve qualified before.

    And so Mike noticed that every month, the guidelines were getting a little looser.

    Something called a stated income, verified asset loan came out, which meant you

    didn't have to provide paycheck stubs and w-2 forms, as they had in the past. You

    could simply state your income, as long as you showed that you had money in the

    bank.

    Mike Garner: The next guideline lower is just stated income, stated

    assets. Then you state what you make and state what’s in your bank account.

    They call and make sure you work where you say you work. Then an

    accountant has to say for your field it is possible to make what you said you

    make. But they don’t say what you make, just say it’s possible that they

    could make that.

    Alex Blumberg: It’s just so funny that instead of just asking people to prove

    what they make there’s this theater in place of you have to find an

    accountant sitting right in front of me who could very easily provide a W2, but

    we’re not asking for a W2 form, but we do want this accountant to say yeah,

    what they’re saying is plausible in some universe.

    Mike Garner: Yeah, and loan officers would have an accountant they could call

    up and say “Can you write a statement saying a truck driver can make this

    much money?” Then the next one, came along, and it was no income, verified

    assets. So you don't have to tell the people what you do for a living. You don’t

    have to tell the people what you do for work. All you have to do is state you

    have a certain amount of money in your bank account. And then, the next

    one, is just no income, no asset. You don't have to state anything. Just have

    to have a credit score and a pulse.

    Alex Blumberg: Actually that pulse thing. Also optional. Like the case in Ohio where

    23 dead people were approved for mortgages.

    8

    Adam Davidson: An interesting fact, here. Mike Garner's bank did not care how

    risky these mortgages were. This was the new era: banks didn't have to hold on to

    these mortgages for 30 years. They didn’t have to wait and see if they’d be paid

    back. Bank's like Garner's just owned them for a month or two and then sold them

    on to Wall Street. Wall Street would sell them on to the global pool of money.

    Alex Blumberg: Which is how we get half-million dollar, no income, no asset loans.

    Adam Davidson: And loans to dead people. So there's another thing going on:

    housing prices were rising, fast. Lots of people in the mortgage industry had this

    faith that housing prices, in the US, simply never go down. So, from the bank's

    perspective, even if the worst happens and someone defaults, the bank would then

    own the house which is now worth even more than when they gave out the loan.

    So, All Mike cared about was whether or not his customers--the Wall Street

    investment banks--would buy those mortgages from him. And he was under

    pressure to approve more and more loans. Because other guys in his company--the

    actual guys cruising strip malls all across Nevada buying mortgages from brokers,

    their commission depended on selling more loans. And occasionally, those guys

    would hear about some loan that some other mortgage company offered that they

    weren’t allowed to offer. And they'd complain to Mike.

    Mike Garner: Three of them would show up at your door first thing in the

    morning and say, I lost 10 deals last week to Meritius bank. They've got this

    loan. Look at the guidelines for this loan. Is there any way we can do this?

    We're losing deals left and right. I'd get on the phone and start calling all

    these street firms or Countrywide and say “Would you buy this loan?” Finally,

    you’d find out who was buying them.

    Alex Blumberg: So, Merrill Lynch would say no. And Goldman Sachs would

    say no. And you'd finally hit on somebody and they be like “Yeah, we’ll buy

    that loan.”

    Mike Garner: Yeah, and once I got a hit, I'd call back and say, “Hey, Bear

    Stearns is buying this loan. I’d like to give you the opportunity to buy it too.”

    Once one person buys them, all the rest of them follow suit.

    Music

    Alex Blumberg: So, what were you thinking when you're turning around and

    selling those to Wall Street. Were you ever thinking, “What are you guys

    doing?”

    Mike Garner: Yeah. And my boss was in the business for 25 years. He hated

    those loans. He hated them and used to rant and say, “It makes me sick to

    my stomach the kind of loans that we do.” He fought the owners and sales

    force tooth and neck about these guidelines. He got same answer. Nope,

    other people are offering it. We're going to offer them too. We’re going to get

    more market share this way. House prices are booming, everything’s gonna

    be good. And ... the company was just rolling in the cash. The owners and the

    production staff were just raking it in.

    9

    Tape – Glen Pizzolorusso: At the height I was making between 75 and 100

    grand a month.

    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: And when Glen wasn't working, he was doing his next favorite

    thing, spending ... preferably in the company of, and this is his term, b-list

    celebrities:

    Glen Pizzolorusso: We rolled up to Marquee at midnight with a line, 500

    people deep out front. Walk right up to the door: Give me my table. Sitting

    next to Tara Reid and a couple of her friends. Christina Aguilera was doing

    some, I’m-Christina-Aguilera-and-I’m-gonna-get-up-and-sing kind of thing.

    Who else was there? Cuba Gooding and that kid from Filthy Rich: Cattle

    Drive. What was that kids name? Fabian Barabia? We ordered 3, 4 bottles of

    Cristal at $1000 per bottle. They bring it out, you know hey're walking

    through the crowd, they're holding the bottles over their heads. There's fire

    crackers , sparklers. You know, the little cocktail waitresses. You know so you

    order 3 or 4 bottles of those and they’re walking through the crowd and

    everyone’s like: Whoa, who's the cool guys? We were the cool guys. They

    gave me the black card with my name on it. There’s probably 10 in

    existence. You know? And that meant that I spent way too much money

    there.

    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.

    Glen Pizzolorusso: We looked at loans. These people didn't have a pot to piss

    in. They can barely make a car payment and we're giving them a 300, 400

    thousand dollar house.

    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

    10

    he bought loans, lots of loans, from Glen's company, and he knew in his gut they

    were bad loans. Like these NINA loans.

    Mike Francis: No income no asset loans. That's a liar's loan. We are telling

    you to lie to us. We're hoping you don't lie. Tell us what you make, tell us

    what you have in the bank, but we won't verify? We’re setting you up to lie.

    Something about that feels very wrong. It felt wrong way back when and I

    wish we had never done it. Unfortunately, what happened ... we did it

    because everyone else was doing it.

    Alex Blumberg: It's easy to ignore your gut fear when you are making a fortune in

    commissions. But Mike had other help in rationalizing what he was

    doing. Technological help. Mike sat at a desk with six computer screens, connected

    to millions of dollars worth of fancy analytic software designed by brilliant Ivy league

    math geniuses hired by his firm, which analyzed all the loans in all the pools that he

    bought and then sold. And the software, the data ... didn’t seem worried at all:

    Mike Francis: All the data that we had to review, to look at, on loans in

    production that were years old, was positive. They performed very well. All

    those factors, when you look at the pieces and parts. A 90% NINA loan from

    3 years ago is performing amazingly well. Has a little bit of risk. Instead of

    defaulting 1.5% of the time it defaults at 3.5% of the time. That’s not so bad.

    If I’m an investor buying that, if I get a little bit of return, I’m fine.

    Adam Davidson: Wait Alex. I want to step in for a moment because this is a very

    important piece of tape. A big part of this story, of this whole crisis, is that a lot of

    really smart people, people who knew better, fooled themselves with this data. It

    was the triumph of data over common sense. Can you play that tape again?

    Mike Francis: All the data that we had to review to look at, on loans in

    production, that were years old, was positive.

    Adam Davidson: As we now know, they were using the wrong data. They looked at

    the recent history of mortgages and saw that foreclosure rate is generally below 2

    percent. So they figured, absolute worst-case scenario, the foreclosure rate may go

    to 8 or 10 or 12 percent. But the problem with is there were all these new kinds of

    mortgages, given out to people who never would have gotten them before. So the

    historical data was irrelevant. Some mortgage pools, today, are expected to go

    beyond 50 percent foreclosure rates.

    Music

    Alex Blumberg: To be fair, they knew there were risks. But investors have a system

    to assess those risks. They’re these special companies. Credit rating agencies.

    Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, Fitch. Their job, their main job, is to assess risk for Wall

    Street and the global pool of money. They rate every kind of bond according to its

    risk. Triple A is the safest, then there’s double A, single A, all the way down to single

    B and below.

    11

    And that’s all most investors look at - the letter grade. They trust the credit rating

    agencies. And these agencies blessed most of these mortgage-backed securities.

    Gave them AAA ratings - which means they were considered as safe as a US

    government bond.

    This was the magic of this whole system. You could take a pool of thousands of risky

    mortgages, and create a security that was called money-good, as safe as any

    investment out there. At least that's what people thought.

    But now we know those agencies relied on the wrong data. That same historic data

    that had nothing to do with these new kinds of mortgages.

    Adam Davidson: And then things got even worse. The thing that took this problem

    and turned it into a crisis was something else that was new, something called a

    Collateralized Debt Obligation. A CDO. And that brings us back to the guy we met at

    the awards dinner in the beginning, Jim Finkel.

    Jim Finkel: We’re heading to the trading floor of Dynamic Credit, where we

    have all of our mortgage analysts, our head trader, our CIO.

    Adam Davidson: Jim Finkel runs this CDO shop, Dynamic Credit. It takes up three

    modified apartments on the upper East Side of Manhattan. The trading room is like a

    factory floor for CDOs, it’s where they make the things. And this is what it sounds

    like:

    ROOM TONE.

    Adam Davidson: Maybe factory is the wrong term. But this is where he makes

    CDOs. But what is a CDO? He shows us on a computer screen.

    Jim Finkel: Here’s our deal Monterey...

    Adam Davidson: To start with, every CDO has its own name. Finkel loves his

    country house in the Berkshires, so he always names his CDOs after towns in

    western Mass. Like Monterey.

    Jim Finkel: Monterey CDO limited. 189 assets...189 tranches of different MB

    pools

    Alex Blumberg: Let’s translate some of that. A mortgage-backed security, you

    remember, is a pool of thousands of different mortgages. These are all put together

    and divided into different slices. Jim used the word tranche. Tranche is just French

    for slice - some of these slices are risky, some are not. OK, a CDO is a pool of those

    tranches. A pool of pools.

    12

    And Jim and most companies like his weren’t buying the top-rated tranches - the

    safest ones, the AAAs. They were buying the lower-rated stuff. The high-risk stuff.

    Jim’s company was buying tranches that came from Glen Pizzolorusso’s company.

    The guy who hung out at nightclubs with B-list celebrities. The guy who said he was

    selling mortgages to people who didn’t have a pot to piss in.

    Adam Davidson: There's another term the industry uses, no joke, they call these

    lower-rated tranches toxic waste. They're so high-risk, they're toxic.

    Alex Blumberg: So, a CDO is sort of a financial alchemy. Jim takes that toxic stuff,

    these low-rated, high-risk tranches, puts them all together. Re-tranches them, and

    presto: he has a CDO whose top tranche is rated AAA, rock-solid, good as money.

    If this seems too good to be true to you, you're in good company. Guys like

    billionaire investor Warren Buffet said the very logic was ridiculous. But back in

    2005, 2006, the global pool of money couldn't get enough of these things.

    And the CDO industry was facing the same pressures everyone else was at every

    other step of this chain. To loosen their standards. To make CDOs out of lower and

    lower rated pools. This is Jim's partner, Tonko Gast.

    Tonko Gast: In 2005, we had an internal debate here because there were

    two banks coming to us, why don’t you do a deal with us, BBB securities, you

    get paid a million bucks in management fees per year. Very clear, just like

    that, in 2005. And we declined those deals. We just don't believe those BBB

    RMBS assets are money-good. And we thought if we do a CDO of those, that's

    gonna blow up completely. We were early in '05 by not wanting to do those

    deals. People were laughing at us. Saying you're crazy. You’re hurting your

    business. Why don’t you want to make ... Per deal, you could make a million

    dollars a year.

    Adam Davidson: Did someone do that deal?

    Tonko Gast: Absolutely! Everybody. Not everybody, but a lot of people did.

    Ira Glass: Coming up, how 5 million dollars can get you into 100 million dollars of

    trouble. In a minute, from Chicago Public Radio and Public Radio International, when

    our program continues.

    ID BREAK

    Ira Glass: Well it’s This American Life. I’m Ira Glass. And although I feel fine, I have

    lost my voice this week. Today’s show, a special co-production with NPR news. A

    step-by-step look at what exactly happened during the sub-prime mortgage crisis.

    One of our producers Alex Blumberg co-reported this story with NPR reporter Adam

    Davidson. The story continues.

    Alex Blumberg: From 2003 to 2006, the housing market was in a classic

    speculative bubble. Home loans were easy to get, so more and more people were

    13

    buying houses. The increased demand for houses caused the price to increase. The

    rising prices created even more demand, as people started to look at homes as

    investments -- investments that never went down in value. In 2003 and 2004, 2005,

    they didn't. You could buy a house with no money down, turn around and sell it a

    year later for in some areas double what you paid. People who'd never invested in

    real estate before started buying multiple properties as investments. There were

    shows on TV about how to do it. Here's a promo.

    Tape: Promo from “FLIP THIS HOUSE” with song.

    Alex Blumberg: This is A&E’s “Flip this House,” Discovery had the cleverly titled

    “Flip That House.” There were other ones. “Property Ladder,” “Design to Sell.” Bravo

    came late to the game, debuting their show, “Flipping Out,” in November of 2007,

    well after the bubble popped.

    Tape: more promo

    Alex Blumberg: The problem was that even though housing prices were going

    through the roof, people weren't making any more money. From 2000 to 2007, the

    median household income stayed flat. And so the more prices rose, the more

    tenuous the whole thing became. No matter how lax lending standards got, no

    matter how many exotic mortgage products were created to shoehorn people into

    homes they couldn't possibly afford, no matter what the mortgage machine tried, the

    people just couldn't swing it. By late 2006, the average home cost nearly four times

    what the average family made. Historically it was between two and three times. And

    mortgage lenders noticed something that they'd almost never seen before. People

    would close on a house, sign all the mortgage papers, and then default on their very

    first payment. No loss of a job, no medical emergency, they were underwater before

    they even started. And although no one could really hear it, that was probably the

    moment when one of the biggest speculative bubbles in American history popped.

    Strangely, the first people in the mortgage-backed security chain who noticed, were

    the ones near the top. The people on Wall Street, like Mike Francis. He can

    remember almost to the day:

    Mike Francis: It would be somewhere around Halloween of 2006. We started

    seeing our securities that were 6, 7, 8 months old start to perform poorly. We

    started to dig into the details. Wow, property values stopped increasing.

    Something is turning around bad here. What do we do?

    Alex Blumberg: The problem was that once property values starting going down, it

    set off a reverse chain reaction, the opposite of what had been happening in the

    bubble. As more people defaulted, more houses came on the market. With no

    buyers, prices went even further down, and as prices declined, Mike Francis cleared

    up a mystery. Remember, even though he didn’t trust these NINA loans, the bonds

    that he turned them into, they performed well. Well, there was a reason.

    Mike Francis: it’s obvious that they performed well, now, because their

    property kept increasing in value. Over time, they could take cash out to pay

    the bill.

    14

    Alex Blumberg: In other words, they could take out another loan from the bank,

    against the value of their house, which because of the bubble, was now worth more

    than they bought it for. These loans, called home equity lines of credit, became very

    popular in the early to mid 2000's. Partly because they were easy to get. But partly

    because people needed them to continue making their original mortgage payments.

    To pay off their debts, they went into more debt.

    And in late 2006, early 2007, as prices began their plunge and alarm was spreading

    across mortgage backed securities desks all over Wall Street, the people on Wall

    Street, like Mike Francis, started backing away from some of the riskiest mortgages

    that they would accept in their pools. Which had a devastating effect on the

    mortgage companies, which had proliferated to sell them loans, a devastating effect

    on people like Mike Garner, the mortgage banker in Nevada. For one simple

    reason.

    Mike Garner: All these mid-sized companies like us, we're not using our own

    money to fund these loans.

    Alex Blumberg: The way it worked was that a small bank, like Silver State

    mortgage, where Mike Garner worked, would borrow money from a big bank, say

    Citibank, or Washington Mutual. Silver State would use this borrowed money to buy

    up a bunch of loans, and then pay back the big bank once it sold the pools to Wall

    Street. Now these smaller banks were highly leveraged, in most cases 20 to 1.

    Meaning, in Silver state’s case, even though it only had 5 million of its own dollars, it

    could borrow 20 times that, 100 million, to buy loans with. So in late 2006, Mike is

    busily at it, borrowing, buying, selling, paying back, and borrowing again, when the

    e-mails started coming:

    Mike Garner: We’d get an e-mail from a street firm, just say Credit

    Suisse/First Boston. It’d say, after whatever date, “As of December 29th, we

    are no longer buying Stated Income with a FICO less than whatever.” It’d say

    “There will be no exceptions. Pleas do not call the pricing desk.” And you

    just start flipping out. Can't just say you're not going to buy this with no

    notice. Well, we're saying it and there's no notice. Then you start to scramble

    trying to get this stuff out of the door as soon as you can.

    Alex Blumberg: Because you’ve already been assembling a bunch of those

    loans with those characteristics in place somewhere.

    Mike Garner: You've got 20 million sitting there, and you say oh crap, I better

    get those out the door. Within a week, you can expect to see the same email

    from all them. A lot of time you’ll get two of those the same day. You're

    scrambling to sell them, going off sheer relationships. Like okay, I’ve still got

    10 million of these. I know you’re not buying them anymore. But come on ...

    you can't just leave me like this. There comes a point where all of them said,

    we’re not buying anything.

    15

    Alex Blumberg: For Mike and his company, that meant that they’d borrowed tens of

    millions of dollars to buy loans, that now, they couldn’t sell. And since they had very

    little of their own money, (just like the homebuyers whose mortgages they’d

    purchased) they had no choice but to default on their loan. Silver State Mortgage's

    nearly 600 employees were out of work. Quite suddenly.

    Mike Garner: It was February 14th the email went out and said “Silver State

    Mortgage might be going out of business, but we think we can work

    something out so we’d encourage you to come in and work tomorrow and

    give us one more day.” The next day, people came in and the e-mail went

    out. “Unfortunately we were not able to work anything out. We’re closing our

    doors today.” That's how most of these lenders go under. Everybody’s

    working thinking everything’s great. Chugging along. All of the sudden, the

    bank says you're done. People started grabbing their computers, copy

    machines, started rolling them out the door. It was a mess. My thoughts were

    “Holy crap. Everyone’s just stealing their stuff.”

    Alex Blumberg: That happened on Feb. 14th?

    Mike Garner: Yup. My boss calls it the valentine’s day massacre.”

    Music

    Alex Blumberg: For Glen Pizzolorusso, the mortgage sales manager who - not to

    dwell on this detail - was living the live of a B-list celebrity, the end came more

    slowly.

    Alex Blumberg: So you’re at WMC, what was the turning point?

    Glen Pizzolorusso: This sounds obscene, but it was first month I got a

    $25,000 paycheck. That didn’t even cover my expenses.” So you’re sitting

    here and you’re like I made 25,000 this month, which is more than most

    people make in six months and that doesn’t cover my expenses. Now what do

    I do? The next couple months I made 30 or 40 grand, then it went down to

    10. You could just feel it winding down. The good old days were over. It was

    scary.

    Alex Blumberg: So give me your situation now. Can you pay all your bills

    now?

    Glen Pizzolorusso: Not really. I borrowed some money from friends...from

    dad. Living in my house right now, we’re working with the bank to try to

    avoid foreclosure. At this point I’m dealing with an attorney. Trying to figure

    out if it just makes sense for me to walk away from the house.

    Alex Blumberg: And have you made mortgage payments?

    Glen Pizzolorusso: No. No.

    Alex Blumberg: When was last time you paid your mortgage?

    16

    Glen Pizzolorusso: January? I’ve been making em spotty, as I can. Just

    enough to keep them off my back. I have to watch every penny.

    Richard Campbell: As you can see this is my living room, I have no furniture.

    And it's either buy furniture or pay my mortgage.

    Adam Davidson: This brings us back to Richard, the Marine we met at the very top

    of the show. He, like more than 4 million Americans, at this point, is fighting to keep

    his home. He's giving me a tour.

    And I wanted to talk to him about what now? What happens next? Now that the

    housing bubble has turned into a nationwide crisis.

    If he defaults on his mortgage, nobody wins. He doesn't want to leave his house,

    and the investors who own his mortgage, the last thing they want is to own a house

    in East Flatbush, in a declining market with no buyers.

    So you think it'd be easy for both sides to modify Richard’s mortgage, do something

    he can afford. You’d be wrong.

    Kerry Campbell: Hi I’m Kerry Campbell nice to meet you...

    Adam Davidson: The offices of NACA, the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of

    America, in Newark, New Jersey, are short on frills. Kerry Campbell, who’s helping

    Richard today, is a counselor here.

    The goal today is to figure out how big a mortgage payment Richard can actually

    afford to pay. So, Kerry needs to know everything Richard spends money on. They

    go through his medical bills, his clothing budget. Kerry gently nudges Richard to be

    realistic. Like when he asks Richard how much he spends on gifts for his family.

    Kerry Campbell: Gifts to family? How much would you say on average?

    Richard Campbell: 300, Christmas time?

    Kerry Campbell: January through December. Mother's day. Father's day.

    Sisters brothers. Nephews, nieces? Significant other. If you celebrate

    Christmas. Whole enchilada.

    Richard Campbell: Around $1000.

    Kerry Campbell: That sounds about right.

    Adam Davidson: The process now, how does it compare to when you bought

    the house?

    Richard Campbell: This is totally different. Brand new to me. When I bought

    the house, it was just your credit score and can I pull a credit report?

    17

    Adam Davidson: So in this whole process, when’s the first time someone

    looked at your finances?

    Richard Campbell: Today. Today.

    Music

    Adam Davidson: Not to say the original broker didn't have a process. It just had

    nothing to do with reality. Kerry shows Richard the original loan documents, filled out

    by his broker.

    Kerry Campbell: Here it's saying your base employment income is 16,250 a

    month.

    Richard Campbell: Laughs. Wha?!

    Kerry Campbell: That means your salary, on a yearly basis, would be

    $195,000 to be exact.

    Richard Campbell: I wish. In 2005, right, and they used my 2005 taxes, I

    was making $37,000 that year.

    Adam Davidson: Did you know that number until now?

    Richard Campbell: no

    Adam Davidson: To me, that is shocking. It's not shocking to you?

    Kerry Campbell: That’s outrageous. But it's a common thing. It's worlds

    apart, reality and what's on these documents.

    Adam Davidson: Another thing the papers reveal: How much that creative broker

    made. $18,500 dollars. As Kerry says, that's 18,000 reasons to falsify Richard's

    mortgage documents and to put him in a house he can't afford. Richard actually

    qualified for a Veterans Administration loan at a really good rate, and he had money

    to put down, but the broker convinced him to take a mortgage that turned out to be

    much worse, with a much higher commission.

    Mortgage brokers were walking around East Flatbush, knocking on doors, telling just

    about anybody: Hey, we can get you a house. If you have a house, we can get you a

    big home equity line of credit. This happened in poor neighborhoods all over the

    country. And, while the FBI and other law enforcement folks, say they don't have the

    exact numbers, it's clear that fraud--like the fraud on Richard's application--was

    ubiquitous.

    At the end of Richard's budget process, the math they come up with is fairly stark.

    Richard makes more money now--he got a new and better job, so he makes an

    average, before taxes, of 8,000 dollars a month. Which means, after taxes, he brings

    home exactly enough to pay his mortgage and nothing else. All of his living

    expenses, he says, are paid with money he gets from his mom who is on public

    18

    assistance, his girlfriend, and his brother.

    Kerry runs his software which says that if Richard is going to stay in his house, he

    needs a much cheaper mortgage. The interest, currently at around 10%, would have

    to be lowered a lot. To 3%. Kerry wants to propose this to whoever own loans the

    loan. But this brings him to this peculiar problem mortgage owners now face: they

    have no idea who that is. Richard's loan has been bought and sold, and re-sold and

    put into one of those pools, owned by investors. Maybe an investor like Jim Finkel.

    Jim Finkel: You know, 150 times, what did we say? 3000.

    Alex Blumberg: So now we’re back in Jim Finkel's office. He's surrounded by

    expensive computers, but he's typing on a cheap calculator. And he's trying to figure

    out for us how many individual mortgages--how many homes like Richard's--does he

    own part of. The calculator method fails him, and he turns to one of his number

    crunchers, a guy named Alex.

    Jim Finkel: I can't even imagine. Alex do you have any idea...

    Alex Blumberg: Alex gets on the phone with Steve--the IT guy.

    Alex: How many loans are you running in that loan performance? All

    together? For all of our deals ... 16 million loans.

    Alex Blumberg: This one CDO factory--this one office, owns a share of 16 million

    homes. And each of those homes has lots of other owners--people in other CDO

    offices around the world--there are lots of them. And other investors. You start to

    see what a crazy web of confusing interconnections this whole process is.

    Now, until this moment we had a theory that these two groups--the homeowners

    and the people at the top of the chain, the investors--had no idea about each other.

    We actually learned they know quite a lot about each other. They just see each other

    through a computer screen.

    TAPE: Hey Steve.

    Adam Davidson: We find that out when we go downstairs to see Steve Pennington,

    the IT guy. Steve’s actual title is the head of financial engineering. He's created his

    own software program that actually looks at every one of the 16 million loans

    Dynamic owns part of. It's a spreadsheet. Each line is one loan. It says how much

    the house sold for, what the interest rate is. He points to one field--the most baffling

    one--that is just twelve letters and numbers in a row. Every letter represents a

    month.

    Adam Davidson: What does the 9 mean?

    19

    Steve Pennington: It means they’re 90 days, basically delinquent on their

    loan.

    Adam Davidson: Is this the matrix? Where the guy is looking at the green

    digits, and says there's the redhead and the blonde. Are you, Steve, seeing

    lives here?

    Steve Pennington: I definitely see lives.

    Adam Davidson: For the record, I see cccc36c36. I do not see a human

    drama.

    Steve Pennington: The drama here is you have someone paying their loan,

    then something happened. They’ve gone 3 months, delinquent...They got to

    this point of 6, then fought back to current.

    Adam Davidson: Now that I've learned the code, I see it. Like here, he was on

    time for a bunch of months. This one, he was on time, 30 days, 30 days, then

    he went two months behind, came back. And now he's just behind.

    Steve Pennington: And what’s really hard about this, is you can watch people

    cycle on and off.

    Adam Davidson: You guys are more sympathetic. And maybe it’s just cuz

    we’re reporters and you want to make us think you’re good guys –

    Tonko Gast: We’re human beings

    Adam Davidson: But these guys are hurting you. Their irresponsibility is

    costing you money and work.

    Tonko Gast: That was up to us to think about 3 years ago.

    Adam Davidson: Do you have any anger when you look at this?

    Tonko Gast: Not at all. This is pure sadness.

    Alex Blumberg: This is where the partnership of borrowers like Clarence Nathan

    and investors like Jim Finkel has ended up.

    Tonko Gast estimates that most of AAA rated mortgage-backed CDO's that the

    industry created since 2006, are now worth less than half their value. Some are

    worth close to zero. But remember to all the investment managers in the global pool

    of money who bought them, AAA meant safe as government bonds. AAA was called a

    cash equivalent, money in the bank. It's as if the global pool of money put trillions of

    dollars in a savings account, came back one year later, and found out that half was

    gone. Put another way, it's as if the global pool of money thought it was putting

    trillions of dollars in a savings account, but really, half of it was going into a furnace.

    The money is gone, burned up, never to come back.

    And that's what's led to the new term you've been hearing.

    20

    Adam Davidson: Maybe you've noticed that the press and others don't call it a sub

    prime housing crisis as much anymore. They call it a credit crisis. The global pool of

    money still has no idea how much money they lost. How much went into the furnace.

    And because of that, they’ve totally changed their thinking. They used to be

    obsessed just with getting some profit, trying to make a slightly higher interest rate

    return. Now the global pool of money has the exact opposite obsession. It wants no

    risk whatsoever. It just wants safety. Suddenly, those US government treasury

    bonds--still near historic lows of 1 and 2 percent--are beautifully attractive. Because

    they're safe. They won't blow up like sub-prime CDOs did.

    The global pool of money is avoiding anything with even the slightest hint of risk and

    that affects everybody, no matter who you are. It's harder to borrow money to buy a

    house, or build a factory, or bring your country boldly into the 21st century. Take

    Iceland. A year ago it was easy for them to borrow billions. Now, they're seen as too

    risky. Their central bank has to pay more than 15 percent interest get anyone to loan

    them money. They could do better putting their national debt on a credit

    card. Hungary, Kazakhstan, Turkey, are all in similar situations. You might have

    heard about problems in student lending. Companies that needed credit to survive

    are shutting down. The US expects more than 1.1 million bankruptcies this year:

    twice the 2006 number.

    This freezing of credit all around the world is something new, the world has never

    seen anything on this scale. When the crisis hit, last August, central bankers and

    finance economists couldn't figure out how bad things might get. There was this

    question people would ask: will things get like the 1930s or the 1970s? There was

    real fear that, just like in the '30s, hundreds of banks would collapse, there would be

    massive unemployment, there was talk of a new Great Depression.

    Alex Blumberg: That talk seems to have faded and there's more talk that the next

    few years will feel like the 1970s. There are lots of technical differences between

    this crisis and Jimmy Carter's malaise. But for the average person, it could feel the

    same. It's not an out-and-out depression. Everything's just kind of crappy. And not

    just in housing or banking but for the economy as a whole. It’s barely growing. There

    aren't a lot of new businesses, new jobs. Unemployment keeps creeping up. We're

    just sort of stuck, in neutral, for a while.

    Anyone under, say, 45 probably doesn't remember that 1970's malaise too well.

    Anyone under 30 has barely known a US economy that wasn't growing. Now there's

    a decent chance we'll all get to see what life felt like in the '70s. Which isn't great.

    It's pretty bad, actually. Unless you're comparing it to the 1930’s.

    END