Re: Mortgage Crisis Spreads on Wall Street



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Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "Nomen Nescio"
Date: 28 Jun 2007 11:30:21 PM
Object: Re: Mortgage Crisis Spreads on Wall Street
On 28 Jun 2007,
wrote:

Workers World - July 5, 2007 issue
http://www.workers.org/2007/us/mortgages-0705
As millions lose homes
Mortgage crisis spreads on Wall Street
Banks bail out hedge funds but foreclose on workers houses
By Jaimeson Champion

The subprime mortgage crisis, which has already forced a record number
of working class families to lose their homes to foreclosure, has
metastasized. It has spread into other sectors of the U.S. economy and
sent shockwaves down Wall Street. The 21st-century robber barons of
finance capital are scrambling to avoid a further meltdown as the
predatory loans they underwrote go into default en masse.

Subprime lenders lure people with poor credit into taking out mortgages
but then squeeze higher interest out of them and foreclose more often
when they cant pay.

The panic over the worsening crisis was on full display in the week
culminating on June 22, when Bear Stearns"one of the largest and most
influential investment banks on Wall Street"announced it would spend
$3.2 billion of its own money in an effort to rescue one of its hedge
funds, the ironically named High Grade Structured Credit Fund, from
complete liquidation. The hedge fund was under siege by individual
investors who had begun demanding their money back after it posted
large losses resulting from the subprime crisis.

The $3.2 billion bailout proposal capped a frenzied week in which a
number of different rescue plans were suggested. The capitalist rulers
and their executives debated ways in which to best limit the damage to
their holdings.

High Grade Structured Credit Fund is the less leveraged of two Bear
Stearns hedge funds which were intricately involved in underwriting the
predatory mortgage loans made to working families. During the housing
bubble of 2000-2006, Bear Stearns, in addition to other Wall Street
giants like Goldman Sachs and Bank of America, bankrolled the subprime
mortgage lenders with hundreds of billions of dollars worth of credit.

The subprime lenders then used this money to ensnare working class
families, a disproportionate number of them Black and Latin@, in
adjustable rate mortgages that had exploding interest rates. These
loans would start out at low teaser interest rates, some as low as 1
percent and 2 percent for the first few years, but would then reset or
explode as interest rates skyrocketed into the double digits.

Subprime mortgage lenders and their investment bank sponsors on Wall
Street raked in astronomical profits during the housing bubble. At
their peak, subprime mortgages were a $1.3 trillion industry. But now
that the housing bubble has burst, sending the price of homes into a
freefall, borrowers who were caught in these predatory loan schemes are
defaulting in unexpectedly large numbers.

The Wall Street institutions are now starting to feel acute losses.
High Grade Structured Credit Fund had posted losses of nearly 23
percent over the first four months of 2007. Losses at the second Bear
Stearns hedge fund, High Grade Structure Credit Enhanced Leverage Fund,
are much worse, but so far Bear Stearns has not announced a bailout
plan for that fund. Waves of foreclosures

As is the case with all economic crises under capitalism, the working
class has borne the brunt of the fallout from the subprime mortgage
crisis. Entire communities have been uprooted as foreclosures force
families from homes in which they had invested their entire life
savings. For Sale signs have become ubiquitous, dotting the front
yards of homes in working class neighborhoods across the country, as
banks try to unload the foreclosed properties in an already glutted
market.

The Center for Responsible Lending projects that an additional 20
percent of the some $265 billion worth of outstanding subprime
mortgages around the country will enter into foreclosure over the
coming months. Each new foreclosure further depresses the value of
other homes in that neighborhood, creating a downward spiral.

Working class communities in states like Michigan, California,
Colorado, Ohio, Arizona and New York have been particularly hard hit.
In many areas in the Midwest, the wave of foreclosures coupled with
large-scale layoffs in heavy industries has turned once vibrant
communities into ghost towns.

While the surging wave of foreclosures appears to be an almost
unstoppable force, it is important to highlight the many ways in which
working families and other community groups are organizing to help stem
the tide.

Activists in and around Cleveland, an area that has been absolutely
devastated by the subprime mortgage crisis, have begun an innovative
campaign to force the remaining subprime lending institutions out of
the area. Under the direction of the East Side Organizing Project,
activists have been placing thousands of toy sharks on the front lawns
of the homes of subprime lending executives to convey the message that
the lenders are loan sharks who are preying on the community. Economic
stagnation

The subprime crisis has led to a marked stagnation in the U.S. economy.
New home construction had been a primary engine of economic growth in
the U.S. since the late 1990s. Following the dot-com bust of 2000, Wall
Street began intentionally funneling billions of dollars worth of
investment capital into the housing market in an attempt to boost the
U.S. economy.

During the housing bubble of 2000-2006, which was marked by historic
levels of new home construction, the capitalists plan seemed to be
working. The housing bubble had meant an increased demand for labor in
numerous industries related to home construction. Carpenters, masons,
electricians, plumbers"all saw demand for their skills increase. While
the rest of the U.S. economic landscape consisted primarily of
low-paying service industry jobs, the housing trades gave some workers
a more financially rewarding option.

But the subprime meltdown has led to a near moratorium on new home
construction, which in turn has meant more layoffs and a further
reduction in wages for workers in the construction industries. Hundreds
of thousands of workers have been laid off or have had their work hours
and wages reduced in the wake of the subprime crisis. Workers in large
conglomerates like Home Depot and Lowes have also become victims of
subprime-induced layoffs as those stores trim their workforce in
response to lower demand for construction products.

U.S. gross domestic product growth has slowed to a crawl. The latest
figures show that the U.S. economy grew by a measly 0.6 percent over
the first quarter of 2007. Wages continue to lag behind inflation even
though aggregated measures of productivity and corporate profits
continue to rise. Workers across the country are struggling to cope
with food and gas prices that keep going up.

While it remains to be seen just how deep into the heart of the U.S.
capitalist economy the subprime crisis will strike, it has already laid
bare some critical chinks in the armor of the empire. While it is by no
means certain that the subprime crisis will push the economy into a
recession, it appears more likely with each new record high in
foreclosure rates.

A full-blown economic recession, coupled with rising food and gas
prices, an imperial army bogged down in the sands of Iraq, and an angry
working class at home: its a scenario for a surge of organizing that
could give even the smuggest capitalists nightmares.

Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.

Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
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Not to worry. It's only a tiny blip on the radar compared
to Armageddon, the Judgment of the *******, and the worst
worldwide tribulation in all of human history--even worse
than the global inundation of Noah's day (circa 28,000 BC)!
Ex-Republican,
Daniel Joseph Min
http://www.2hot2cool.com/11/danieljosephmin/
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