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Welcome to 2007

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    Welcome to 2007

    The return of sub-prime.

    #2
    Originally posted by Clippy View Post
    From the ******** article:

    "Figures today from the Bank of England revealed that net new mortgage lending (not including redemptions and repayments) in September was £112m, down from £1.62bn in August. "

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      #3
      We say 'overlooked by the high street'
      which, coincidentally, also describes the type of compact, grotto-style, Luxcrete-aspect dwellings that these mortgages will now make available.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Clippy View Post
        AIUI the original sub-prime problem wasn't so much the dodgy lending per se, but that this was hidden and disguised within portfolios of supposedly sounder loans, the financial equivalent of mixing radioactive waste with household refuse.
        Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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          #5
          Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
          AIUI the original sub-prime problem wasn't so much the dodgy lending per se, but that this was hidden and disguised within portfolios of supposedly sounder loans, the financial equivalent of mixing radioactive waste with household refuse.
          That was exactly what the problem was, except it was radioactive waste with the household shopping. However, the article seems to be about sub-prime mortgages themselves, not their wrappers.

          If banks want to take the risk, I hope its only small institutions like Kensington and Precise, we don't bail them out if it goes tits up.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
            AIUI the original sub-prime problem wasn't so much the dodgy lending per se, but that this was hidden and disguised within portfolios of supposedly sounder loans, the financial equivalent of mixing radioactive waste with household refuse.
            Indeed.

            The John Bird and John Fortune piece on it is still the best explanation that I have seen going. linky (It is SFW but not if work does not like YouTube)

            Originally posted by Doggy Styles View Post
            If banks want to take the risk, I hope its only small institutions like Kensington and Precise, we don't bail them out if it goes tits up.
            Absolutely.

            There is nothing wrong with lending money to higher risk customers provided that everyone involved is aware of the risk they are taking. If it all goes tits up then the taxpayer should not be bailing them out.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
              AIUI the original sub-prime problem wasn't so much the dodgy lending per se, but that this was hidden and disguised within portfolios of supposedly sounder loans, the financial equivalent of mixing radioactive waste with household refuse.
              I seem to remember linking to something that explained it quite well... and indeed I did

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