by Zentric » Thu 10 Nov 2005, 14:57:16
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Euric', 'T')o me wealth is a measurement of your surpluses, not your deficits. If you own on something you bought with credit and haven't paid the bill yet, how can you claim it to be yours? If you buy a home, it isn't really yours until the last cent is paid. Between the two times it is only partially yours. The other silent owner is the bank, or in the case of the US, Fannie Mae or Freddy Mac.
Americans are just lucky the creditors haven't yet come knocking on the door claiming what you think is yours is really theirs.
Very good points, Euric. I only wonder who the ultimate creditors will be for the middle-class home owners with big mortgages, who are about to lose their jobs in the coming economic downturn. Or, otherwise, hold variable interest rate mortgages. Same difference.
If wide classes of home mortgages and home equity loans become generally poor-performing, who, generally-speaking, will be the ones most interested in displacing the poor families that live in those former McMansions of glory so that these same properties can be quickly sold and/or re-occupied to make the ultimate creditors at least partially whole again?
Banks? Well, if a bank's customers have money on deposit, and this money has in turn been diverted into a mortgage loan, then maybe this makes the bank and its customers the ultimate creditors?
The Federal Government? I believe FDIC substantially insures the banks and their customers. However, what if the federal government reneges on this commitment - or simply fires up the printing presses to meet its obligations?
Freddie and Fannie? My impression is that these corporations do not hold much wealth themselves, and will merely pass any debt obligations on to third parties.
The Asian mortgage backed security holders? Countries like China, Japan and Korea apparently hold a trillion dollars of American mortgage debt, or otherwise, they own a trillion dollars of federal debt, which is in some way linked to possibly millions of Americans' home mortgages.
I think that learning who is bound to be the ultimate creditor might dictate how the financial collapse (or, ahem, readjustment) is likely to go down.
Cousins: I think you're boring.