Posted:Jul. 20, 2008
07:52 AM
The Texas Ratio everyone is using to speculate on the health of the nation’s banks has a problem. The calculation belies a different conclusion in many cases and does not necessarily mean bank weakness.
Texas Ratio Defined
Gerald Cassiday of the RBC Capital Markets, coined the name for his calculation which grew out of the Texas S & L meltdown of the 1980’s.
Posted:Apr. 11, 2008
06:00 AM
ResMAE, a large stated income lender, announced a year ago the discontinuation of all their stated income loan programs used for self-employed borrowers. Since then virtually all sources of loans for the self-employed are all gone.
Posted:Jan. 14, 2008
01:58 PM
Mortgage stock prices are dropping like a stone creating a huge profit opportunity. I wrote a post 10 months ago on my ActiveRain blog showing folks how to “short” mortgage stocks to bank these profits.
Since then a most mortgage stock prices have literally freefallen. Right after that post, Novastar’s stock (symbol: NFI) dropped 40% in one day down to about $15 a share. Today Novastar has dropped even further down to $2.08 another 60%.
Posted:Jan. 07, 2008
01:07 PM
ELoan Mortgage bailed out on the subprime market about a year ago. Back then ELoan Mortgage was the first of many lenders to turn their backs on the subprime borrower.
As I predicted a few posts back, the bruised credit borrower would be left out in the cold the minute the big boys figured out the subprime loans they pushed so feverishly just 18 months ago are ticking time bombs ready to explode.
Posted:Dec. 16, 2007
09:53 PM
Bad credit mortgage loans are for borrowers who have credit issues and do not fit traditional mortgage credit standards. Bad credit mortgage programs are also known as B paper or subprime loans.
Posted:Sep. 11, 2007
10:38 AM
I‘m constantly getting bombarded with questions about exactly how the meltdown was allowed to happen by readers, reporters, and consumers. So I thought I’d take a minute and explain just how the hedge funds used subprime mortgages and how they got caught with their pants down in the last few months causing the mortgage meltdown and the credit crisis that followed.
Posted:Aug. 05, 2007
01:43 PM
Remember this date: August 3rd, 2007. This is the day Jim Cramer melted down right along with the subprime home mortgage market and Bear Stearns. I wrote an article about a month ago on the Bear Stearns implosion due to subprime home mortgage exposure, forecasting their demise, and here it is.
Posted:Jun. 25, 2007
02:07 PM
The subprime mortgage meltdown is now filtering it’s way through the economy hitting the stock market on Friday June 22, 2007. The Dow dropped drastically (over 185 points) after Bear Stearns announced $3.2 Billion (yes that’s Billion…with a “B”) bailout of one of their hedge funds (High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leveraged Fund) that suffered losses due to subprime mortgage lending.
Posted:May. 25, 2007
01:10 AM
Many folks have tried to lay the blame for the subprime mortgage meltdown which could plunge the nations real estate market into a decade long decline on unrestrained or crooked mortgage brokers. However, the mortgage brokers could only sell what the subprime lenders created. So do you blame the monster or Dr. Frankenstein himself?