Tell me where you think the blame belongs:
Government adopts a cheap money policy, believing it will encourage economic growth.
Citizen borrows the full value of a house he wants to buy - or more - reasoning that the appreciation of the real estate will exceed the cost of borrowing. He sees a chance to beat the wealth game.
Mortgage brokers lend him the money on behalf of banks, often not even requiring proof of income and almost never worrying about his debt/equity ratio.
Banks take the broker's mortgage and turn a blind eye to the way it was written. The government allows them to put the mortgage on their balance sheet at, say, 70 cents on the dollar. Still, nobody questions the underlying value.
Then, the banks sell those mortgages to investment banks, which roll up a bunch of them together and turn it into an investment product to be resold.
Credit rating agencies give these 'mortgage backed securities' great ratings, almost as good as what bonds get.
Institutional investors buy up the mortgage backed securities, seeing a way to beat the sideways performance of equity markets and taking the ratings agencies assessments at face value.
But houses stop appreciating, and the folly of easy money rears its head. Some are foreclosed, but many other buyers walk away just because they now have negative equity on paper, rather than honor their obligations to repay those loans.
The underlying value in the mortgage backed securities implodes. Big institutional investors are suddenly on the edge of solvency. The government writes down the value of the assets, maybe more than they needed to, putting financial institutions now under water at the stroke of a pen.
To solve this new problem, the government lets them use some taxpayer money to shore up their balance sheets for a while (the TARP money).
Now, up to their eyeballs in debt, the government has no choice but to keep borrowing costs low and keep printing cash.
So, whose fault is it? Everybody's, as far as I can see. The belief in easy money is the most dangerous drug there is. But if I was going to send the FBI in, I'd start with the ratings agencies and go from there. Most of the culprits are guilty of wilful ignorance and blind optimism, but the ratings agencies were somewhere between negligent and fraudulent.
Government adopts a cheap money policy, believing it will encourage economic growth.
Citizen borrows the full value of a house he wants to buy - or more - reasoning that the appreciation of the real estate will exceed the cost of borrowing. He sees a chance to beat the wealth game.
Mortgage brokers lend him the money on behalf of banks, often not even requiring proof of income and almost never worrying about his debt/equity ratio.
Banks take the broker's mortgage and turn a blind eye to the way it was written. The government allows them to put the mortgage on their balance sheet at, say, 70 cents on the dollar. Still, nobody questions the underlying value.
Then, the banks sell those mortgages to investment banks, which roll up a bunch of them together and turn it into an investment product to be resold.
Credit rating agencies give these 'mortgage backed securities' great ratings, almost as good as what bonds get.
Institutional investors buy up the mortgage backed securities, seeing a way to beat the sideways performance of equity markets and taking the ratings agencies assessments at face value.
But houses stop appreciating, and the folly of easy money rears its head. Some are foreclosed, but many other buyers walk away just because they now have negative equity on paper, rather than honor their obligations to repay those loans.
The underlying value in the mortgage backed securities implodes. Big institutional investors are suddenly on the edge of solvency. The government writes down the value of the assets, maybe more than they needed to, putting financial institutions now under water at the stroke of a pen.
To solve this new problem, the government lets them use some taxpayer money to shore up their balance sheets for a while (the TARP money).
Now, up to their eyeballs in debt, the government has no choice but to keep borrowing costs low and keep printing cash.
So, whose fault is it? Everybody's, as far as I can see. The belief in easy money is the most dangerous drug there is. But if I was going to send the FBI in, I'd start with the ratings agencies and go from there. Most of the culprits are guilty of wilful ignorance and blind optimism, but the ratings agencies were somewhere between negligent and fraudulent.