- This topic has 5 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 17 years, 10 months ago by .
Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Yes!!! New Century faces probe, Fremont to quit subprime:
Both stocks are tumbling even after hours trading!
NEW CENTURY FINANC## (NYSE:NEW) Delayed quote data
After Hours: 11.15 3.50 (23.89%) as of 7:32pm ET on 03/02/07
FREMONT GENERAL CP (NYSE:FMT) Delayed quote data
After Hours: 7.00 1.71 (19.63%) as of 7:30pm ET on 03/02/07
The house market will tumble like the subprime lenders!!!!
Sweet! the NEW and FMT Puts I bought this week are kicking butt..
Shorting subprime is like taking candy from a baby.
New Century is now rated junk? Well, just like the “junk” mortgage products they were selling.
Yes! All these “junk” mortgage products inflated the house maket.
1. As house market cools down, 30 lenders have now gone kaput:
http://www.mortgageimplode.com/
2. Federal Regulators Call on Lenders to Use Caution in Subprime Mortgages:
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070303/regulators_subprime_lending.html?.v=2
Poeple with bad credit & “zero” down can’t qualify loan anymore. The house demand will even drop more! Meanwhile, tons of foreclosed houses will flood the house market. We will witness the housing market to crash soon.
Too little too late as always.
I did some coding and site design work for a financial PR firm in the late ’90s. (I was young and I needed the money.) Back in those days Arthur Levitt, the SEC, et al. focused all their regulatory attention on micro-cap fraud. Think “Boiler Room.” Sure that problem needed attention, but it diverted the investing public from much greater issues … Enron’s collapse alone cost investors ten times the estimated $6 billion take of micro-cap fraud.
Now the Fed wants to tighten subprime lending standards, months after the sector started to collapse on its own. Really bold action, I say.
I suppose some state AG will make a big stink about the subprime mess in the next few years, just as Spitzer did in the wake of the dot-com crash.