Sunday, August 26, 2007

IT'S ALL ABOUT THE MONEY

We've seen how the credit rating agencies made more money on sub-prime loans and now we learn that Countrywide and its employees also made more money. Gretchen Morgenson of the NY Times lets us see some of the details.

First, Countrywide itself made more money:
Regulatory filings show how much more profitable subprime loans are for Countrywide than higher-quality prime loans. Last year, for example, the profit margins Countrywide generated on subprime loans that it sold to investors were 1.84 percent, versus 1.07 percent on prime loans. A year earlier, when the subprime machine was really cranking, sales of these mortgages produced profits of 2 percent, versus 0.82 percent from prime mortgages. And in 2004, subprime loans produced gains of 3.64 percent, versus 0.93 percent for prime loans.

Second, Countrywide encouraged its employees to sell sub-primes:
The company’s incentive system also encouraged brokers and sales representatives to move borrowers into the subprime category, even if their financial position meant that they belonged higher up the loan spectrum. Brokers who peddled subprime loans received commissions of 0.50 percent of the loan’s value, versus 0.20 percent on loans one step up the quality ladder, known as Alternate-A, former brokers said.

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