Mortgage Meltdown

JOEBIALEK

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Jun 28, 2006
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Until recently I was an underwriter for a sub-prime mortgage company that is about to close. It seems that most media outlets and government officials fain ignorance about the real underlying cause of the problem. There is either a tendency to blame the borrower or act as though no one in the industry {or outside of it} saw this coming. They fail to mention that those who gained the most financially got off scot free while leaving the mess behind for everyone else to clean up. In my former company, the sales managers and loan officers "held the keys to the safe" while deciding which guidelines to ignore sometimes going so far as to bribe fellow underwriters to "look the other way". Sales managers often overrode an underwriter's decision they did not agree with. Other times fellow underwriters would be threatened with their job for "impeding company growth and progress" just because they refused to go along with the flagrant disregard of guidelines . I complained to the sales managers about the bribing but all I got was a formal write-up for making "inappropriate comments".


There was absolutely no support from the owner of the company all the way to the human resource representative. This company is as corrupt as they come. I can't tell you the number of sexual affairs that occurred between married and unmarried people; primarily among the management staff {at the workplace itself}. Promotions were strictly political thus moving people "up the ladder" who never proved themselves worthy or were on a final written warning to be terminated {for poor performance}. As a result of the corrupt management of this company, I and several hundred others were laid off. I believe the federal government needs to investigate this company and bring to trial those corrupt individuals who broke the law. This would set an example for the rest of the mortgage industry that absolute corruption corrupts absolutely.
 

Spytheweb

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Sep 27, 2005
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This is a government that prints money, sells a $100.00 bill to the federal reserve bank for about 4 cents, borrows that same $100.00 back at face value with interest and insures the loan with a bond. This government will do nothing, the big players own the government, everybody's making money. Wealth is never destroyed, it's only transfered and it's not being transfered downward.
 

Chadman

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Apr 2, 2000
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Thanks for taking the time to post this. These personal experience posts that describe situations we look at from strictly media reports really give some insight to things.

A lot of blame to go around on this one, but I really think the biggest responsibility lies with the people you are describing. They seemed to go farther than just giving dubious prospects a mortgage opportunity. Sounds like many were given plenty of hope and convincing that they would be able to assume these mortgages. The borrowers are ultimately responsible, of course, but these guys/gals sure seemed to prey on those most vulnerable with the ultimate dream of hope - when they knew there probably wasn't any and didn't care.
 

JCDunkDogs

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Sep 5, 2002
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Excellent post, Joe. I'll bet there are many similar stories all over the country. Sounds like you had a good whistle-blower suit developing there before everyone got canned for economic reasons.
 
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