RESIDENT EXPERT
Daniel McGinn
Confessions of a Subprime Lender
A former broker on the fraud and greed that plagued his industry.
Over the last six months the public has learned much about the business of subprime lending, the practice that put millions of Americans with low credit scores into homes—which many may soon lose to foreclosure.
Richard Bitner, in contrast, received his subprime education earlier than the rest of us. In 2000 he and some friends founded a Dallas-based subprime mortgage company. For a few years he profited handsomely from this sector's boom, earning a paycheck in the high six figures. In the early days Bitner felt a bit like a modern-day George Bailey, as he helped marginal but deserving buyers achieve homeownership. But as lending standards slipped and mortgage brokers began gaming the system, he began to see more borrowers signing on to mortgages he suspected they couldn't afford.
Disillusioned and realizing the subprime business was becoming less and less profitable, Bitner cashed out of the industry in 2005. And when the subprime market collapsed last year, he decided to tell his story in a new self-published book, "Greed, Fraud & Ignorance: A Subprime Lender's Look at the Mortgage Collapse," which is for sale on his Web site and at Amazon. Today he's promoting the book full-time. "I could afford to take a year off and do this," he says in an interview. "I want some positive change to come from this."
While newspapers and magazines have been chronicling the rampant fraud that filled this industry, Bitner's book conveys the authority of someone who was in the trenches where this dirty work was going on. "Being a subprime lender means living in a world of gray," he writes, as he and his colleagues struggled to guesstimate whether a credit-challenged borrower would really be able to repay the mortgage they were writing.
As Bitner portrays it, a complicated mixture of factors led to the subprime boom and bust. Some of his colleagues credited the Federal Reserve's easy money policy. One friend boasts that Alan Greenspan’s rate cuts during the early 2000s helped him earn more in four years than he had in his entire career. Ratings agencies like Fitch, Moody's and Standard and Poors also played a part by giving investors confidence to buy repackaged securitized mortgages, which gave big mortgage companies seemingly limitless capital to lend out.
His biggest criticisms, though, are reserved for mortgage brokers and appraisers. As Bitner describes it, lenders like his company, which underwrote loans offered up by brokers and resold them to giants like Countrywide, spent much of their workdays trying to spot the stupid tricks brokers routinely used to get unqualified borrowers approved for loans. They'd say a buyer intended to live in a house when it was really an investment property. They'd falsify the buyer's income by having a relative pose as his employer, or use scanners and software to forge W-2 forms. They'd find ways to hide debts (like a car payment) by looking for a credit report that omitted key data. They also routinely gamed the appraisal system, encouraging appraisers to look for "comparables" that were far nicer homes in better neighborhoods—all in an effort to drive up the appraised value of the home they were mortgaging.
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Member Comments
Posted By: Rudedog @ 05/06/2008 6:47:29 PM
Comment: Yep' once upon a time in this country we had Standards of Practice, We enjoyed a Code of Conduct, we had certain Ethical guidelines, and most had a Moral compass. (do unto others) But in the last decade of the last century much of the populace decided all of that was a silly notion, Live and Let Live, if it Feels good do it. To be responsible or accountable was not being very progressive or too judgemental. When those that are in power, or in position of influence, either in the breaucracy or in the private systerm are allowed to hi-jack the system you can expect chaos and disorder. It is not just the real estate industry, mortgage lenders, appraisers, etc. alone that have exclusive rights to the plunder of the populace. Just look at the medical profession, drug manufactures, insurance industry, the education system in this country, etc. etc. And need I mention the MEDIA. So many people are concerned with physical health that no one ever mentions the degradation of our mental health. Americans spend hours and hours every week viewing CRAP on the TV. Most actually believe what they read in newspapers, magazines and what they see on the TV news channels. It is any wonder that so many people make such poor decisions. They seem to bee concerned about themselves or their neighbors eating french fries or oreo cookies but are oblivious to to the garbage that they are putting into their gray-matter. If you have never been screwed-over by someone in the real estate industry, or someone in the medical profession, a lawyer, a contractor, an insurance salesman, car salesman, or any salesman for the matter, I would have to imagine that you must ber under 25 or you have never left your home. Call me old fashioned, but I did like "the good ol days" when things could be get done with a handshake. When a persons word was their bond. When we had standards, a code of conduct, ethics, a compass, moral or otherwise. But now we live our lives like some stupid TV show. No long term thinking, get rich quick, screw the other guy.... Sigh
Posted By: Saccat @ 04/16/2008 7:55:05 AM
Comment: no, you solution is socialist in it's desire to take $$$ from one party and give to another, next you will want to provide the same solution for credit cards, and all forms of poor decisions that people make..
Ya know what?? people are just too uneducated to make their own decisions they have no right to vote either, so lets just make those decisions for them...
Posted By: lolas son @ 04/06/2008 6:30:23 PM
Comment: can somebody turn the foreclosed homes into a rental homes? so we don't have to move out and give our money to a rental appartments. why don't we help each other to lessen the foreclosure. make the foreclosed house into rental house to get something than nothing and loose a lot.. i hope this is not a stupid idea or use this as a guide.
thank you.