Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
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September 27, 2008

What's Behind the US Financial Meltdown?
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=1E66B1C:A6F02AD83191E160EE234865C61A3FF42A201403E89ED254&
 
As officials and business leaders struggle to rescue economy from
serious problems, news has been filled with strange terms like
'mortgage-backed securities' and 'leverage' 
As officials and business leaders struggle to rescue the economy from
serious problems, the news has been filled with strange terms like
"mortgage-backed securities" and "leverage." We asked VOA's Jim Randle
to translate some of this Wall Street-speak into more understandable
language. Trader Stephen Guilfoyle uses a phone post as he works on the
floor of the New York Stock Exchange, 18 Sep 2008The financial crisis
grows out of problems with mortgages, which are loans from a bank that
helps a borrower to buy a home. The borrower must repay the loan, as
well as additional charges called "interest." Interest is rent paid to
the lender for the privilege of using the money for a specific period of
time. Traditionally, U.S. lenders required prospective borrowers to
prove that they earn enough money to repay the loan. The borrower either
pays back the money with interest or the lender "forecloses" - taking
back the house. University of Maryland finance Professor Elinda Kiss
says that meant borrowers were unlikely to "default" or stop making
payments."That is that people would keep up and make every kind of
sacrifice to stay in their homes," he said. But the risk of default grew
when low interest rates cut bank revenue and prompted lenders to
scramble for new customers. Lenders boosted revenue by offering
"subprime" loans that charged higher interest rates and required less
verification of creditworthiness, things like whether the borrower has a
job, how much money they make and whether they pay their bills on time.
But lower lending standards meant some subprime borrowers got mortgages
they could not afford. As long as home prices were rising, this caused
few problems because borrowers who had difficulty repaying their loans
could sell their homes at a profit and pay off the loan. A sale sign
sits in front of a home in the Shaker Heights section of Cleveland, Ohio
(File)But when home prices fell, homeowners with financial problems were
stuck and the number of foreclosures soared in the subprime market. This
hurt 
borrowers who lost their homes and meant banks lost revenue they were
expecting from loan repayments. The impact of foreclosures was magnified
by "mortgage-backed securities." These are created by investment firms
that buy up a group of mortgages from lenders. The firm "bundles" these
debts and revenues together in a package and sells them to investors.
Investors, including investment banks, usually get their money back with
interest from mortgage-backed securities. But when subprime mortgages
collapsed, they got huge losses instead. George Mason University
Professor Gerald Hanweck says mortgage lenders and investment banks who
bought the securities that depended on mortgages badly misjudged the
risk. "The problem occurred because investors as well as the originators
of the mortgage pool, did not price the mortgages correctly to take
account of higher risk," he said. Morning commuters walk past Lehman
Brothers headquarters in New York, 16 Sept 2008 The collapse of some
mortgage-backed securities hit investment firms very hard because the
firms were using "leverage" - huge amounts of borrowed money - to make
investments. When some investments went sour, some "highly leveraged"
investment companies did not have enough money in reserve to cover their
expenses and obligations, so some went bankrupt. These losses shocked
banks and other lenders and made them stop lending because they had no
confidence that they would be repaid. The head of the Economic Outlook
Group, Bernard Baumohl, says without lending, the economy was
paralyzed."Credit is the lifeblood, the oxygen this economy needs," he
said. Without loans, owners cannot build new factories, farmers cannot
get seed and equipment needed to plant next year's crop, and the economy
could stall. The advocates of the massive bailout of troubled financial
firms say their plan to buy up bad mortgage-backed securities and other
problem investments is intended to restore confidence, spur lending,
and!
  get the economy growing again.