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View Full Version : Bank of America Secretly Asking Congress for a Banking Industry Bailout



Ares
18th October 2010, 10:00 AM
$739 Billion Worth of Toxic Waste Subprime Loans Threaten Entire System.

Via: New York Times: (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/23/business/23housing.html?_r=2&ref=business&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin)

Over the last two decades, few industries have lobbied more ferociously or effectively than banks to get the government out of its business and to obtain freer rein for “financial innovation.”

But as losses from bad mortgages and mortgage-backed securities climb past $200 billion, talk among banking executives for an epic government rescue plan is suddenly coming into fashion.

A confidential proposal that Bank of America circulated to members of Congress this month provides a stunning glimpse of how quickly the industry has reversed its laissez-faire disdain for second-guessing by the government — now that it is in trouble.

The proposal warns that up to $739 billion in mortgages are at “moderate to high risk” of defaulting over the next five years and that millions of families could lose their homes.

To prevent that, Bank of America suggested creating a Federal Homeowner Preservation Corporation that would buy up billions of dollars in troubled mortgages at a deep discount, forgive debt above the current market value of the homes and use federal loan guarantees to refinance the borrowers at lower rates.

“We believe that any intervention by the federal government will be acceptable only if it is not perceived as a bailout of the bond market,” the financial institution noted.

In practice, taxpayers would almost certainly view such a move as a bailout. If lawmakers and the Bush administration agreed to this step, it could be on a scale similar to the government’s $200 billion bailout of the savings and loan industry in the 1990s. The arguments against a bailout are powerful. It would mostly benefit banks and Wall Street firms that earned huge fees by packaging trillions of dollars in risky mortgages, often without documenting the incomes of borrowers and often turning a blind eye to clear fraud by borrowers or mortgage brokers.

A rescue would also create a “moral hazard,” many experts contend, by encouraging banks and home buyers to take outsize risks in the future, in the expectation of another government bailout if things go wrong again.

If the government pays too much for the mortgages or the market declines even more than it has already, Washington — read, taxpayers — could be stuck with hundreds of billions of dollars in defaulted loans.

But a growing number of policy makers and community advocacy activists argue that a government rescue may nonetheless be the most sensible way to avoid a broader disruption of the entire economy.

http://cryptogon.com/?p=2084

Cebu_4_2
18th October 2010, 10:24 AM
BoA owns NOTHING, simply a servicing agent with NOTHING in assets. Go foreclose through them and do your homework, they are ZERO and cant even supply evidence of anyone owing them. They are the most ZERO "bank" i ever worked through.

Mouse
18th October 2010, 10:55 AM
February 24th, 2008

Back into your time machine, set the dial for 10/18/2010.

Cebu_4_2
18th October 2010, 11:10 AM
my time machine broke and I'm dealing with them current rodents.

Ares
18th October 2010, 11:21 AM
February 24th, 2008

Back into your time machine, set the dial for 10/18/2010.


Ahh sorry about that, just noticed the date. Figured since they halted mortgages and investers were fleeing, that they needed revenue to run their operations. ;D