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Subject : RE: RE: RE: RE:
MessageDate : 5/18/2018 12:24:54 PM
Posted By : Norris
Email : sanford2t@gmail.com
Message : I'm not working at the moment http://teachme.co.uk/stmap_691e0.html?viagra.estrogens.hydrochloride foredi kapsul On the list of cures for the sick financial system, the concept of "risk retention" ranks right behind capital — but there are a couple of neat little twists here. The narrative of the crisis is that because mortgages could be sold off to banks, who would turn them into securities and sell those on to investors, who thought they were buying triple-A paper courtesy of the rating agencies — well, no one had any incentive to care about credit quality. In a piece in the Wall Street Journal entitled "How to Create Another Housing Crisis," MFS Investment Management's former chairman Robert Pozen writes, "With ‘no skin in the game,' the originators had little incentive to determine whether the borrower was likely to default." As a result, one provision of Dodd-Frank requires securitizers of any asset, not just mortgages, to retain 5 percent of the risk of loss. Barney Frank has said that the risk retention rules are the "most important aspect" of the legislation that bears his name.

***---REPLIED TO MESSAGE BELOW---***
I'm not working at the moment http://teachme.co.uk/stmap_691e0.html?viagra.estrogens.hydrochloride foredi kapsul On the list of cures for the sick financial system, the concept of "risk retention" ranks right behind capital — but there are a couple of neat little twists here. The narrative of the crisis is that because mortgages could be sold off to banks, who would turn them into securities and sell those on to investors, who thought they were buying triple-A paper courtesy of the rating agencies — well, no one had any incentive to care about credit quality. In a piece in the Wall Street Journal entitled "How to Create Another Housing Crisis," MFS Investment Management's former chairman Robert Pozen writes, "With ‘no skin in the game,' the originators had little incentive to determine whether the borrower was likely to default." As a result, one provision of Dodd-Frank requires securitizers of any asset, not just mortgages, to retain 5 percent of the risk of loss. Barney Frank has said that the risk retention rules are the "most important aspect" of the legislation that bears his name.

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  • RE: RE: RE: - Carlo (140) - 5/14/2018 6:05:53 AM

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    ***---REPLIED TO MESSAGE BELOW---***
    I'm not working at the moment http://teachme.co.uk/stmap_691e0.html?viagra.estrogens.hydrochloride foredi kapsul On the list of cures for the sick financial system, the concept of "risk retention" ranks right behind capital — but there are a couple of neat little twists here. The narrative of the crisis is that because mortgages could be sold off to banks, who would turn them into securities and sell those on to investors, who thought they were buying triple-A paper courtesy of the rating agencies — well, no one had any incentive to care about credit quality. In a piece in the Wall Street Journal entitled "How to Create Another Housing Crisis," MFS Investment Management's former chairman Robert Pozen writes, "With ‘no skin in the game,' the originators had little incentive to determine whether the borrower was likely to default." As a result, one provision of Dodd-Frank requires securitizers of any asset, not just mortgages, to retain 5 percent of the risk of loss. Barney Frank has said that the risk retention rules are the "most important aspect" of the legislation that bears his name. ">
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