Thursday, January 31, 2013

Federal Reserve System, the Fed: WHAT IS THE FED BUYING?

“There are two kinds of people in the world, my friend. Those who have a rope around their neck and those who have the job of doing the cutting.” – Tuco – The Good, the Bad and the Ugly



“You see in this world there’s two kinds of people, my friend. Those with loaded guns, and those who dig. You dig.” -  Blondie – The Good, the Bad and the Ugly



EDITOR’S NOTE:
http://livinglies.wordpress.com/2013/01/31/what-is-the-fed-buying/
WHAT IS THE FED BUYING?
IF THE LOANS WERE ORIGINATED CONTRARY TO INDUSTRY PRACTICE, IF THE MONEY USED TO FUND THE LOANS CAME FROM INVESTORS, WHAT COULD THE FED BE BUYING FROM THE BANKS WHO ARE ONLY INTERMEDIARIES.
AND IF THE FED IS BUYING THESE SECURITIES THEN WHY ARE THEY NOT THE PRINCIPAL NAMED IN FORECLOSURES?
ANSWER:
THE FEDS BOUGHT NOTHING AND THEY KNOW IT. IT IS MERELY A RUSE TO GIVE THE BANKS MORE MONEY.
AND let’s assume that the Fed is really buying bona fide mortgage backed securities (MBS) issued from a well-funded pool into which investor money was contributed and used to purchase loans. Which loans? Where is the transparency here? Are these actual purchase with schedules of loans attached? Why can’t we see all the loans that are “owned” by investment pools that issued mortgage backed securities.
One more question:
If the mortgage bonds were issued to investors in exchange for money, then how the investment bank become the seller? Are the investors joining in on the sale? If so, what happens to the SPV, REMIC, Trust or whatever you want to call the investment pool?
Does the transfer of an invalid note issued without consideration and a mortgage securing the note give anything more to the Fed than the banks which is nothing on top of nothing?
The obvious scenario here is a shell game designed to confuse investors, borrowers, regulators, lawyers and judges. And it is working — except in those cases where we employ the Deny and Discover strategy.


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