djd09
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 20, 2009
- Professional Status
- Licensed Appraiser
- State
- Ohio
Does Affirmative Action in Mortgage Lending Really Help Black Americans?
There’s no clear reason to believe that race-conscious lending benefits those whom it’s meant to.
The potential for taxpayer exposure to loans made for less-than-financially sound reasons was made clear by the $187 billion federal bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis,
We’ve seen this movie before. The 2008 financial crisis and its widespread mortgage foreclosures disproportionately affected black Americans. Some 240,000 black homeowners lost their houses in the crisis, and home equity among their neighbors plummeted. In predominantly black and affluent Prince George’s County, Md., the median home price dropped from $343,000 to just $245,000 between 2008 and 2009.
the corrupt leading the way, it will work
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Welcome to banking’s ‘reaction season’
Over the span of a few hours, three big-bank CEOs offered counters to running narratives on mortgage lending, shareholder proposals and a “hurricane” prediction.
Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf offered a striking example Wednesday, addressing a mortgage-lending morass that has enveloped the bank for more than two months. A Bloomberg analysis in March found Wells Fargo approved just 47% of mortgage refinancing applications filed by Black homeowners in 2020 — a percentage that far lags its competitors.
Scharf on Wednesday indicated that, to some degree, Wells’ hands are tied.
“We basically process the applications according to guidelines that [government-sponsored entities like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac] tell us we should,” he said, according to Business Insider. “When those produce results, the people like them, we get the kudos for it. If they don’t like them, we get the blame for it even though we’re just following other people’s underwriting guidelines.”

Welcome to banking's 'reaction season'
Over the span of a few hours, three big-bank CEOs offered counters to running narratives on mortgage lending, shareholder proposals and a "hurricane" prediction.
you know what i can relate to that statement. the user abusers want this and that, don't like the results, and then proceed to whine and cry



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