I am starting this thread so I have on place to dump all my rantings on this mess. To start with, the central problem in the whole mess was the Fed abdicating their role in oversight and regulation of the lenders, and the unscrupulous lenders realizing that the once the cats away, the mice can play. Say what you will (and give me time and I'll throw mud at every other player) without the easy money of reduced documentation loans going to people that had no business taking out mortgages for such high dollar amounts, none of the other bad actors could have the chance to do what they did.

When a lender gets a loan application, there are 3 main points considered for approval;
1 - character / credit history.
2 - the value of the asset / house, real estate, farm, car, truck, business.
3-  the ability to repay the loan - the borrowers income, and their other cash assets.

In a reduced documentation loan, the borrower either states their income, and assets, or does a no doc loan where they provide no info on their income, job or assets. In effect, the borrower gives the lender a credit report, an appraisal and nothing else. No income, no tax returns, no paycheck stubs. Nothing for the lender to examine to determine if Joe Borrower can make his payments.

The other aspect which is getting a lot of the blame is the Adjustable Rate Mortgage - ARM. Where the bank offers a low "teaser" rate, for 2 or 3 years, and then it adjusts for the rest of the loan's term, usually 30 years in total. Which, by itself, ARMs aren't bad loans. But when lenders are offering them when the rates are at all time lows, and can go nowhere but up, to borrowers basing the approval on the low rate, and not the fully indexed rate, then it was a recipe for disaster. Everyone sees "Bob" at work got a new home. It is bigger than yours, bigger than everyone else's, so what does everyone else need to do? Keep up with the Joneses.

So the greed and peer pressure forces everyone to get bigger homes. Bigger loans. But, at the same time, US median income is falling by 5% after inflation, medical cost inflation is up double digits, gas is doubled, food is up, electricity is up, and what happens?

When those ARMs begin to reset, and people's incomes are down by 5%, then something has to give. At first the credit cards get maxed out, and the savings are all spent. Then people try taking overtime, or 2nd jobs. But the job market sucks, and moonlightning won't cover it anyhow. So then people get a little behind...

I'll hit on the rest of the bad actors in future posts. Just please understand that, so far in the story, without a Federal Reserve Banking system that wants laissez faire markets with no regulation, and lenders in a race to the bottom to see who can loan the most money to people with crappy credit, and shaky jobs (all the good borrowers are already covered by CITI and Wells Fargo, and BofA) the money isn't there to fuel the run up in prices.