The FBI saw the mortgage meltdown coming
By emitchell
Monday, August 25th, 2008 at 8:43 am in Uncategorized.
The fabled crime-fighting agency saw trouble in the mortgage industry as far back as 2004, back when housing prices were soaring to record levels, says a story in the Los Angeles Times. What about you, did you smell trouble way back then? Hindsight is everything, they say.
Long before the mortgage crisis began rocking Main Street and Wall Street, a top FBI official made a chilling, if little-noticed, prediction: The booming mortgage business, fueled by low interest rates and soaring home values, was starting to attract shady operators and billions in losses were possible.”It has the potential to be an epidemic,” Chris Swecker, the FBI official in charge of criminal investigations, told reporters in September 2004. But, he added reassuringly, the FBI was on the case. “We think we can prevent a problem that could have as much impact as the S&L crisis,” he said.
Today, the damage from the global mortgage meltdown has more than matched that of the savings-and-loan bailouts of the 1980s and early 1990s. By some estimates, it has made that costly debacle look like chump change. But it’s also clear that the FBI failed to avert a problem it had accurately forecast.
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