Loans have failed for as long as people have been loaning money. Traditionally, home mortgages have been about the least risky loan banks have made thanks to careful underwriting, shifting some of the risk back to the buyer with downpayments and PMI, and the fact that banks traditionally made loans to hold onto them, not repackage them as quick moving commercial paper.Flybrick wrote:"Loans failed." A contributing factor. Thank you for the confirmation.Jeemie wrote: If you thought this up on your own, you can explain to me how their loans failed at a much lower rate than non-CRA-regulated loans, but yet they "contributed to the mess".
The failure rate of the CRA loans would have been manageable. It would have been somewhat higher than traditional mortgages, but the interest premium would have covered that. Many of them were traditional mortgages, issued with somewhat but not completely relaxed underwriting standards at a slightly, but not exorbitantly higher, interest rate. The non-CRA loans had no underwriting guidelines and were invitations to default.
Blaming the crisis on these relatively few failed loans is like blaming an insurance company's failure on people dying.