
Originally Posted by
tyward
Actually, I see the problem as industry specific deregulation. Although there were many regulations set up in the early 1930's to help prevent the systemic breakdown of the American (and worldwide) financial markets, many of those regulations were gutted during the past eight years. The most problematic change, which I wrote about in 2004, was the raising of the leverage percentages, allowing banks and other financial institutions to increase the spread on the money that they actually held in different types of escrow. Profits were great while house prices, as well as other asset valuations where high. The problems began when things began to fall and the multiples began to build. The truth is that subprime borrowers are a fractionally small part of the problem; wait until commercial paper and credit card debt hit the fan...