Post from Michael Ditto:
Why does Marilyn Musgrave love predatory lenders?
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Today the House voted 291-127 to pass the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007, which will require mortgage brokers to be licensed and crack down on predatory lending practices.

Marilyn Musgrave voted against it. Apparently she thinks that people in her district and across the country deserve to be screwed by predatory lenders.

Reader Comments
  
Marilyn loves predators
By Amolison Nov 16th 2007 at 11:35 am MST
But she is so good at helping her constitents pump gas into their oversized SUVs.
  
Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007 (H.R. 3915)
By User from Sudbury, MA Nov 16th 2007 at 1:32 pm MST
RE COMMENT from By Michael Ditto - Nov 15th, 2007 at 8:12 pm MST
Also listed in: Larimer County
: Marilyn Musgrave voted against it. Apparently she thinks that people in her district and across the country deserve to be screwed by predatory lenders.



Mr. M Ditto

You apparently are not in tune with all the points
of this ACT.

There are 115682 Total Signatures that also are in agreement with Marilyn Musgrave voted against it. As seen on Link

We endorse the NO on H.R. 3915 Petition to U.S. Senator Jon Kyl, U. S. John McCain, President George W. Bush, U. S. Rep Harry E Mitchell.


Please do your homework Mr. Ditto?? Before you place comments on members of congress.
Re: Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007 (H.R. 3915)
By amolison Nov 17th 2007 at 8:29 am MST
Just because thousands of people endorse something - that doesn't make predatory lending right!

Why do you endorse this kind of lending? Please explain.
Re: Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007 (H.R. 3915)
By Mathew Graham Nov 19th 2007 at 5:55 pm MST
RE: For numerous other reasons this bill as originally drawn up is terrible please see

Link . This petition has over 115,977 opposed to this act along with responses as you requested.




Representative Peter King (R-NY 3rd)

8th-term Republican from New York.














· More Letters to
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Letters To Leaders


All messages are published with permission of the sender. The general topic of this message is Housing:


Subject:
HR3915 Bad legislation

To:
Rep. Peter King

November 12, 2007

I am a 21 year veteran in the mortgage industry. I have been the Vice President of a lender and most recently for the past 7 years I have been a small mortgage broker. I do not have complaints against my company, and I have been reviewed by the banking department audit(s). I have lower deliquencies on my originations than most conforming lenders. Why does YSP prevent predatory loans? It does not. It eliminates small originators only. It does not prevent bad loans. It prevents brokers for being able to provide low cost loans only. YSP, Servicing Release and gain on sale premiums should be treated the same way. Most lenders just like brokers, have their loans locked or sold, or hedged for sale prior to closing. These premiums should be disclosed by all or by none. What's good for the goose should be good for the gander. Predatory loans have everything to do with underwiting standard, eithic, and oversight. Our sub-prime problems have roots in Federal Pre-emption, believe it or not. If the state chartered lender(s) where prohibited from pre-payment penalites, and Federal Chartered institutions had no restriction, then market forces drove volume to the best price... the lender which had the pre-payment penalty, thus the lender with no consumer protection issues, could grab market share. Portfolio appreciation with: Negative Ammortization, "payment option" arms and also "Subprime ARMS" had horrible resets which benefit only the holder / securitizer/ portfolio holder. Gross 6.99% margins and inadequate interim caps were trademark, and went hand in hand with poor judgement. The teaser rates that the unfair pricing policy had benefitted and subsequently spurred Ferderal Chartered Institutions into a frenzie.

Brokers which were the only group to disclose total fees, and income, still needed to sell their originations to the best execution. Where did gain on sale accounting, and mark to model, fit into the YSP and predatory lending?

Borrowers want seasoned veterans of the industry to provide advice, and safe products, but they also want the lowest possible cost as well. In a level playing field, poorly concieved products, which lack consumer protections are cast by the wayside. Pre-emption gave rise to unfair advantage, and an unlevel playing field. The lack of protections made sub-prime and option arms even more popular because the teaser rates had so much appeal. State licensed and chartered institutions had to follow the best price. In New York the state prohibits pre-payment penalties so to price any loan competitively, you had to do business with someone who had a federal charter. It was a license to print money.

Gain on sale / servicing premiums (servicing release premiums) /Yield Spread Premiums (which is more valuable with pre-payment penalties)
is just a pricing mechanism, not a quality mechanism. These pricing mechanisms must be equal for a healty market. Either we all disclose or we do not. It is not a quality mechanism.

HR3915 fails to provide a level playing field. It worsens it. HR3915 is not good legislation.

Please make sure not to pass HR3915.

Merrick , NY


Related Issue Alerts: • House Passes Bill Curbing Predatory Lending But Falls Short on Some Protections - CFED
• Ask for a strong bill to counter predatory mortgages - Consumer Action
• HUD Snubs Public! - Association for Homeowners Across America AHAA
• Your Support Needed for Housing to Survive Veto - Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio
more action alerts...





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Re: Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007 (H.R. 3915)
By Matthew Graham Nov 20th 2007 at 3:48 pm MST
This bill has passed the house, though many changes were made from initial drafting to the final version.

Brokers will still have the ability to earn YSP
Borrowers can still finance origination costs
The national registry will apply to all originators
There will be increased educational and licensing requirements for non FDIC originators
High costs loan trigger is dropping from 8% to 5%
Prepayment penalties are getting stricter
All of that preceding has been analyzed and discussed elsewhere--form your own opinions as you will. My question is: are you a Socialist or a Capitalist? Wait, I'll make it even simpler. Do you want the government to decide what is best for you? Not simple enough? How about this? Can you read? Barney Frank doesn't think you can.

I have to pause for just a moment to address my favorite quote from the 16th, by Barney Frank:

"it will be very clear to anybody by the time this bill becomes law, there is no possibility of anyone getting higher compensation in return for putting someone in a higher-cost loan."

I love this because it reinforces my yet-to-be-made assertion that certain members of Congress are on a witch-hunt and still don't understand how the market forces behind that statement could actually benefit someone. Representative Feeney's thoughts will serve as a better synopsis for what I'm about to say:

"I happen not to like prepayment penalties, [but borrowers should have a choice to choose a loan whose terms are best suited to them]"

But I digress. The reason 3915 makes me so incensed is that it will still harm those who it professes to protect. I could care less about what you think CAUSED the CRISIS. If you are focused on blame, like Ralph Roberts and Barney Frank, you are missing the big picture. Blame is something people do when they don't understand the intricacies of a situation or are attempting to look proactive. It is also something smart people do to get "shock-jock" press (see guys? I left the door open for you to be smart!)

Incontrovertibly, the entire mortgage value chain was corrupted, right from the consumer all the way to the Wall Street investor. This interconnectedness cannot be overlooked, and to single out several aspects of this very large and complex value chain is irrational at best. So until you understand the value chain, please refrain from enlightening us with your opinion.

But Wait! In the case of 3915, you don't have a choice! Congress will enlighten you with their opinion in the form of legislation whether you like it or not.

Hopefully I'm perceiving the bill's intention correctly. I had assumed it was to PROTECT consumers from bad loans (gross oversimplification). Great news! That's already done! The value chain that created the bad loans has been cut off at the roots! The money to fund those types of loans is no longer available. The devastation felt by the consumer is the same devastation that numerous money sources for alternative loans have felt. So they won't be offering that money any more. Banks won't be funding it. Conduits won't be distributing it. Brokers won't be selling it. Originators won't be telling you about it. So you, the consumer, cannot have it. That's all! Thanks for attending "Market Forces 101," and have a good day.

But Wait Again! That would be the capitalistic end of the story, but Congress seems to be leaning towards Statism (the principle or policy of concentrating extensive economic, political, and related controls in the state at the cost of individual liberty). Congress doesn't think you know how to read. They think that you are lemmings and will continue to be led blindly over the cliff of mortgage ignorance, yet I'd bet a majority of the "Yea" votes for this bill were born of that same lemming mentality: "Oh, if it's to protect consumers, that has to be good, right?"

Wrong.

The NAMB figures the provisions in Title 3 will hurt far more people than they help and I agree. But that's not the point. The point is we're taking away CHOICE. I'm all for stricter standards for originators. I especially like the fact that FDIC loan officers are not held to the same standards as brokers. That will just let my clients know that it is safer to do business with me as I am held to a higher regulatory standard. So the increased regulation is fine. What is not fine is Congress deciding what types of financing are available in a free market.

Now we get to the hardball... This may shock and amaze you. This may be the most radical thing that anyone has ever suggested, but I just have to say it. I may be shunned for all eternity for suggesting something so radical, but it has to be done. No more stalling, here goes nothing:

YOU SHOULD READ SOMETHING BEFORE YOU SIGN IT!!!!!!!

Wow, I actually feel better. Unless consumers trust their mortgage brokers with their lives, they should make sure they understand the terms of what they are getting into. Are there other factors here? Sure. Some brokers didn't even know the harm they were causing, but the fact is the whole value chain got caught up in making bad loans, and the whole value chain has responded. The end all, be all of the value chain is the consumer. No consumer, no loans.

So punish bad people all you want. ANYONE that purposely causes financial harm to another person should be subject to repercussions. In my mind, the whole "going out of business thing" has been a pretty effective repercussion for most of these lenders. Does Congress really need to hyper-regulate the market now? If you want to go back to paying $1200 to fly from NY to LA, be my guest, but I'd rather have the choice to sit on the runway for an hour and pay $243.

My final thought... Perhaps you agree that the consumer really is as ignorant as Congress thinks. There's still a better solution for that. I think we can all agree that the consumer being armed with information is a good thing. If we can't trust consumers to read all their paperwork, maybe we can institute a new policy and one new sheet of paper. Just make one sheet of paper. The title would have to be very catchy "READ THIS OR DIE," or something like that. And it would be required to be presented by the escrow company or real estate attorney in every transaction. It would just collate all of the information that the client is already signing, but dumb it down so they can understand it. For example: "In 3 years, your payment will go up by $400. If you pay it off before then, you will be charged $7500. If you don't make your payments, we will take your house away." And so on...

You get the picture. All the disclosures are ALREADY in place, they just need to be READ. If you want a more simple, all encompassing, "danger danger," disclosure, I'm happy to write it for you and I support it. The point is: let's get those consumers educated! But as long as you have confidence in their ability to read let's allow them to make their own choice! Though 3915's heart is in the right place, and there aspects of it that will actually protect consumers without damaging their individual liberties, there are still parts of the bill that are unnecessary and will only serve to prevent a large demographic from obtaining competitive financing.

**HR3915Letter**
EMAIL THIS TO FRIENDS

Contact Your Congressman

SIGN THE PETITION



------------------------------ ------------------------------ --------------------
  
With our economy...
By Payday Loan Advocate Oct 15th 2008 at 12:48 am MDT (Updated Oct 15th 2008 at 12:48 am MDT)
With our economy falling behind, the war on terror, pork barreling legislation, corruption, and criminal activity on the rise, payday loans should be the last thing on politicians’ minds. Yet, for some reason, high profile politicians like Obama are focusing on this issue. Some states have banned them, such as Georgia and North Carolina, and more are in the process. Instead of fixing the important issues, they are trying to take out the payday loan industry for personal and political gain. Payday loans are simply for short term financial assistance for the all-American family to cover some cost that wasn’t budgeted or an emergency that they couldn’t pay for at that moment. They provide help to citizens during these financially troubling times with loans that the government otherwise couldn’t provide themselves. Stop the potential loss of thousands of jobs and the loss of a viable financial option by voicing your opinion to the legislature, before a nationwide ban becomes in effect.


Post Courtesy of Personal Money Store
Professional Blogging Team
Feed Back: 1-866-641-3406
Home: Link
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US Crisis...
By Payday Loan Advocate Oct 27th 2008 at 1:42 am MDT (Updated Oct 27th 2008 at 1:42 am MDT)
The current economic climate in the United States is a crisis. However, Americans aren’t the only ones feeling the crunch. An article from The International Herald Tribune tells us about a small business owner, Dominique Boudier, owner of a printing company just outside of Paris, and how her business has been affected by the fast drying up of available credit. Her creditors are reducing their offers by as much as 50% or more, and it is by mandate of her supplier’s credit insurance companies. Her business has a 60 day lag in payments from customers, and she needs credit in order to keep the shop open when their payments are that late. Her banks’ hands are tied, and she is left fearing the worst as her bank, like many in Europe, puts all their liquid cash into the European Central Bank’s reserve depository, in lieu of reinvesting it into the economy and generating income. As banks fail and liquidity goes with it, credit is drying up rapidly. The European Central Bank functions much like the American Federal Reserve Bank to create fiat money as required. Fiat currency is effectively credit currency, but as a government’s guarantee of its value decreases, so does its value. The natural result is high inflation rates, which is happening currently. The consensus amongst many is that stronger banking systems is the correct medicine. Until the correct changes are in place, payday advance loans will be easier to come by for consumers who need short term help immediately and can’t afford to wait for the banking system. In 2008, a global economic crisis was suggested by several important indicators of economic downturn worldwide. These included high oil prices, which led to both high food prices (due to a dependence of food production on petroleum, as well as using food as an alternative to petroleum) and global inflation; a substantial credit crisis leading to the bankruptcy of large and well established investment banks as well as commercial banks in various nations around the world; increased unemployment; and the possibility of a global recession.


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Payday Loan Advocate
By Financ ial Issue Nov 5th 2008 at 3:17 am MST (Updated Nov 5th 2008 at 3:17 am MST)
According to some analyst, financial meltdown is a natural occurrence in every nation. Financial Crisis is one of the biggest problems that we are experiencing today. Because of this dilemma, different economic problem also occurs. Problems like lack of food supply are one of these things. That is why some of us suffered from malnutrition, which is a medical condition, caused by insufficient diet. America isn’t exactly the healthiest nation in the world. It’s been obvious for some time now. Every time you turn around, there’s another story on the news about how bad American health has become. A recent article in the New York Times reports that kidney stones are becoming more and more common in children, some as young as 5 or 6. Children with kidney stones used to be incredibly rare, but now pediatric clinics are opening kidney stone units in order to accommodate the demand. The best preventative medicine for parents is to make sure that their children stay hydrated and discourage overconsumption of salt. It’s hard to watch them all the time, and sometimes they just don’t listen, but not only is a kidney stone harmful, and excruciatingly painful, but it can also put a serious dent in your budget. If your child develops a stone, or some other issue, and you can’t afford to keep them healthy and the lights on, you could always look into payday installment loans to stomach the costs.
Post Courtesy of Personal Money Store
Professional Blogging Team
Feed Back: 1-866-641-3406
Home: Link
Blog: Link
  


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