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Go Home The Irresponsiblity Of Countrywide

THE SPINE DECEMBER 6, 2007

The Irresponsiblity Of Countrywide

   The Wall Street Journal is of two minds about how to deal with the ravages of the sub-prime crisis.One of its minds was represented on the op-ed page on Tuesday by Andy Laperriere, managing director of the International Strategy and Investment Group (ISG).  This position is crystallized in a pull-quote: "Taxpayers shouldn't suffer because some people failed to live within their means." Look for a bailout of debt forgiveness that will reach into the hundreds of billions of dollars just when we're avoiding confronting underfunded Social Security and Medicare.obligations  Moreover, people who live on the financial margins of middle class life -- prudent and always worried -- are going to get stuck again.  They will pay for the relief given others and for the recklessness of the mortgage sellers.  But there's also the opposite trope in the WSJ mind.  And this is the pain at seeing banks, insurance companies, mortgage peddlers loosing billions in real cash and more billions in value.  This is never pleasant for the Journal, and so it published an article by Angelo R. Mozilo, CEO of Countrywide Financial, whose stock has fallen from about $45 in March to around $10 now.  Countrywide, which ordinarily is hostile to any federal intervention in its business, now wants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to underwrite the shortfalls his company and others like it in the lending business have experienced in the last months: "The government can help with the credit crisis."  Alas, Fannie and Freddie are in deep doodoo already.As it happens, Countrywide is probably the greatest offender in snaring borrowers into mortgages they cannot afford.  In fact, just this morning, Herb Greenberg, the extremely responsible market journalist, wrote in Market Watch/Dow Jones that Mazilo was "an obvious choice" for the "worst CEO of the year."  Greenberg chose some one else.  But he noted that Mazilo had become "the poster child for a mortgage market gone wild."Maybe the editors of the WSJ hadn't heard the news.  And maybe Mazilo is not the ideal person to cry "rescue."I don't know why.  But I am on the receiving end for a string of e-mails from Countrywide.  Yesterday, I got two, both to the same address.  I am not looking for a mortgage.  I was hoping to send you all the hype that came from Countrywide, come-ons, really, appealing to those who don't have the income to buy or to pay.

Mr. Mazilo's company is courting new recklessness just as it's trying to get out of the old.  This is enticement which is unethical, and it should be illegal.

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C'mon, Mr P, why be such a Grinch? Don't you realize that our brave new global capitalism depends on the bread-and-circus of (artificially) cheap consumer credit enabling simple folks to take on crap mortgages and buy asian-made crap they don't need and can't afford?

A chicken in ever pot, a flat-screen in every room...

[alternative non-cynical vision: less consumption, more savings, better services, better education/healthcare/provision for ordinary working families....]

- teplukhin2you

December 7, 2007 at 12:47am

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I don't really see the scandal in this ad. Sorry but it seems pretty boilerplate...

- thejauntyboulevardier

December 8, 2007 at 9:55am

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MP Please fess up now. How much of a bath have you taken, personally, investing in mortgage-backed securities? Why all this sniping for months now about the brokers, the bankers, the rating agencies and the bond insurers? I cannot figure out why you have suddenly become so interested in this subject. Surely you are an interested party? C'mon, admit it. There's nothing to be ashamed about and all the more reason to be as outraged as you write. But certainly it is not the first time Wall Street geniuses have led investors down a primrose path. Aintchoo never heard of Cornelius Vanderbilt and Jay Gould, to name but a few?

- dworkinm

December 10, 2007 at 3:40am

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