Everyone involved in the mortgage business got rich during the housing boom, including Wall Street. The biggest firms bought all the loans they could get their hands on, repackaged them, and sold them for a fee to hedge funds and other investors. Mortgage-backed securities issuance soared from $184.5 billion in 2000 to nearly $1 trillion in 2005, generating more than $1 billion in fees last year.
But now that the real estate tide is ebbing, trash is starting to wash up on shore. Mortgage delinquencies are zooming — bad news for the banks, Wall Street firms, and investors holding loans.
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Bill Coppedge
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