Subprime Loans: The under-the-radar loans

1842 Words4 Pages

The problem to be investigated is the ethics and effects of subprime loans on the financial institutions, borrowers and stakeholders. The subprime market was created to provide borrowers with a FICO score below 570 access to home loans. Inopportunely these loans were a major financial risk as most of the borrowers did not have the long-term income to pay for the high interest rate loans. (Jennings, 2012)

Subprime loans started out as a generous, philanthropic idea. Giving people who had bad credit the opportunity to own a home regardless of their income or past credit issues showed compassion and caring for the poor, middle class and elderly who couldn’t possibly qualify for a home loan under the previous strict lending standards. However, predatory lenders used this vulnerable groups desire to live the American dream, to own a home, against them. Billions of dollars were made by loan companies and similar financial institutions by writing relaxed standards loans for borrowers as fast as they could. (Jennings, 2012) To make matters worse, lenders knowingly wrote loans to speculators who had no intention of ever living in the home; or at least no longer than it would take to flip the property. In a marketplace with quickly rising property values, the adverse impact of this activity was completely shadowed, and yet lurking in the background is the one market constant, what goes up must come down.

Mortgage Brokers ethics

The unethical aspect of this business practice is straightforward; that the individual brokers and loan companies knew beforehand that the borrowers would not be able to maintain the payments for these loans, and that the speculators would dangerously inflate the market. However they were more concerned with t...

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...pperdine.edu/jbel/vol2/iss1/6

Jennings, M. M. (2012). Business Ethics, Case Studies and Selected Readings (Seventh edition.).

Lynn, S. R. (2008, January). Reflections on the Market Correction. Mortgage Banking, 68.4, 82-84, 86-87. Retrieved from: http://search.proquest.com.proxy1.ncu.edu

Morial, M. (2011, March 23). Stop the lies about the financial meltdown. Michigan Chronicle. Retrieved from: http://search.proquest.com.proxy1.ncu.edu

Sale, H. A. (2011, March). The new “Public” Corporation. University in St. Louis Legal Studies Research Paper No. 11-04-01, 74, 137. Retrieved from: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1832619

Walker, T. (2007, March 14). Lending woes spook market: Default problems in subprime sector trigger broad sell-off similar to downturn two weeks ago. The Atlanta Journal- Constitution, C (1). Retrieved from: http://search.proquest.com.proxy1.ncu.edu

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