The Making of the Housing Bubble (Full Version)

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Level -> The Making of the Housing Bubble (6/15/2008 2:30:23 PM)

quote:


The black-tie party at Washington's swank Mayflower Hotel seemed a fitting celebration of the biggest American housing boom since the 1950s: filet mignon and lobster, a champagne room and hundreds of mortgage brokers, real estate agents and their customers gyrating to a Latin band.



On that winter night in 2005, the company hosting the gala honored itself with an ice sculpture of its logo. Pinnacle Financial had grown from a single office to a national behemoth generating $6.5 billion in mortgages that year. The $100,000-plus party celebrated the booming division that made loans largely to Hispanic immigrants with little savings. The company even booked rooms for those who imbibed too much.



Kevin Connelly, a loan officer who attended the affair, now marvels at those gilded times. At his Pinnacle office in Virginia, colleagues were filling the parking lot with BMWs and at least one Lotus sports car. In its hiring frenzy, the mortgage company turned a busboy into a loan officer whose income zoomed to six figures in a matter of months.



"It was the peak. It was the embodiment of business success," Connelly said. "We underestimated the bubble, even though deep down, we knew it couldn't last forever."



Indeed, Pinnacle's party would soon end, along with the nation's housing euphoria. The company has all but disappeared, along with dozens of other mortgage firms, tens of thousands of jobs on Wall Street and the dreams of about 1 million proud new homeowners who lost their houses.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25169510

I'll be the first to admit my ignorance on this subject, but is the bursting of the housing bubble all bad?




Vendaval -> RE: The Making of the Housing Bubble (6/15/2008 2:36:52 PM)

Level, I do not think that the bursting is all bad, but to have a situation where the prices are in free fall is very troubling.


(syntax edit)




Level -> RE: The Making of the Housing Bubble (6/15/2008 2:40:12 PM)

Hi Vendaval [8|]; I know it has hurt a lot of people, but, I'm wondering, is it kind of like lancing a boil? Painful, but needed?




Vendaval -> RE: The Making of the Housing Bubble (6/15/2008 2:46:27 PM)

I think of it more as cause and effect.  Too many people who would not normally been approved for mortgages bought homes and then could not make the payments when the interest shifted higher.  This is a  tough lesson for consumers and bankers/mortgage companies.




ownedgirlie -> RE: The Making of the Housing Bubble (6/15/2008 10:00:20 PM)

It is not at all unusual for booming industries to celebrate their success with elaborate parties.  Apple Computer has done it, sports teams do it, companies I have worked for did it, real estate brokers did it, and so on.  It is rare that I would wish an industry total failure and bubble bursting.  I think the housing market fall has hurt everyone. 




UtopianRanger -> RE: The Making of the Housing Bubble (6/15/2008 11:51:48 PM)

quote:

I'll be the first to admit my ignorance on this subject, but is the bursting of the housing bubble all bad?



If you purchased back in the 90's and then sold when the bubble reached its most inflated point or maybe slightly after that} - I'd say you're smiling and doing just wonderful. [:D]

However.....If you purchased in or around the time the bubble reached its maximum point of inflation - I'd say no matter what kind of personal spin you put on it, the situation just can't be good when the property you are making loan payments on has drastically depreciated below the value of the loan.

Not to criticize the OP.....because admittedly he has noted he doesn’t know much about the topic. But along with his original query, the additional questions that should be asked are :

1}  Why was the bubble manufactured in the first place? {Why are bubble{s} }


2} Who are/were the main benefactors from the bubble's creation? {The old follow the money adage}


3} Why do folks fall prey to ''mania'' and mob psychology, and how can they resist in the future?


4} Why is it okay to selectively manipulate certain sectors of an otherwise ''supply and demand'' free market for real estate, yet its not okay intervene and correct the inadequacies /failings/shortcomings in the energy market?

In essence.....Why are supposed ''free markets'' selectively manipulated? If you’re a true believer in the concept of ''free markets'', and you carry/fancy yourself as a "Free Marketeer", why not leave every single one of them alone and let them run their natural,''free-flowing'' course?








- R








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