February 11, 2009
Ken is an amazing man. I've watched him get kicked in the teeth by life and come back and face the challenge and win against overwhelming forces. I'm honored to be called his friend.
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The shadow curprits of the economic collapse
(blog entry)
His name is William Dallas. You probably have never heard of him, but soon I am hoping everyone does. I will add on to this as time goes by, but in short he was the founder and owner of a company called 'Ownit Mortgage Solutions', a sub-prime loan...
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blog entry posted Sat, January 31, 2009 - 11:52 PM
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eco-friendly doghouses
( for sale » other ) as written up on 'This Old House' www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos...
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listing posted Tue, July 1, 2008 - 6:19 PM
ECONOMICS 101
(blog entry)
In Plato’s ‘Decline of the Ideal Society’, he describes plutocracy with these words: ‘as the rich rise is social esteem, the virtuous sink.’ A rather broad statement of ideals, one that counters the principles by which the United States was formed...
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eco-friendly doghouses
( for sale » other ) as written up on 'This Old House' www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos...
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listing posted Tue, July 1, 2008 - 6:19 PM
seeking those in need of design services...residential or remodels
( Seeking Employment » Seeking Employment ) I am an architectural designer, with 23 years of experience, seeking new...
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listing posted Thu, February 21, 2008 - 11:01 AM
the top dogs doghouse
( for sale » other ) SINGLE WALLED UNINSULATED
Size (LxWXH): 22x 24” x 24” ... read more listing posted Mon, December 17, 2007 - 6:25 PM
His name is William Dallas. You probably have never heard of him, but soon I am hoping everyone does. I will add on to this as time goes by, but in short he was the founder and owner of a company called 'Ownit Mortgage Solutions', a sub-prime loan originator. This guy is describe as being so slick, that he could sell you your own car, walk away with the money you paid him, and feel good about it.
Sat, January 31, 2009 - 11:52 PM
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His company had a direct pipeline of cash available; know as warehouse loans, directly from Wall Street: Merrill Lynch, Lehman and the likes. Merrill Lynch, for example would make available a couple of billion dollars to Ownit, which funded mortgages that were brought to Ownit by independent mortgage loan brokers. Ownit nor Merrill ever underwrote anything. Per say, rather they were outsourced to holding companies. These holding companies more or less flew under the wire of regulatory agencies such as the SEC. There are all sorts of allegations of fraud and passing through anything and everything, or finding a way so that when it did hit the rating agencies all passed through. There is even a great deal of evidence to suggest that the rating agencies were in had conflicts of interest at stake. Once a certain number were compiled together they were put together into an MBS, mortgage backed security, and ushered through the back door of the Wall Street investment firms trading desks. They were than sliced and diced many times over, made part of investment packages that were floated all over the world. The brokers could charge whatever they wanted in these yield spread premiums, which was the predatory aspect. Once an originator, such as Ownit purchase the note, the broker was paid and was completely free and clear of ever coming back to them. The lack of any accountability is a huge problem. Ownit would sell each loan to Merrill, or whoever, at the highest price at par that he could get, in most cases 5 points over par. This man William Dallas, literally did nothing, yet he earned millions, upon millions of dollars per mbs sold....Take for example 'Merrill Lynch, Mortgage Backed certificate Loan Trust Series 2005-4 which contained a total of $825,299,100.........You figure it out a 5 percent and thats what the man made, for doing nothing. Of course he was not immune to having none come back to him. He was obligated to buyback any individual notes that default within the first 60-90 days or a few months. After that he was in the clear, just like the brokers, nothing could come back to him. Well that is where the greed took completely over, as if there were not enough as it was. You see, Stan O'Neil at Merrill Lynch was not happy with the fact that Merrill was not ranked as number one in investments, so what he did, amongst other things was to push his originators, like Ownit to make it go faster, bring more in......Even after the signs were becoming quite clear that the sub-prime days were beginning to crash in around them, he did not care and kept wanting more. When asked of Mr. Dallas why he would oblige such a request knowing that was being passed through were not properly vetted mortgages his comment was simply this. 'If I can sell it for a profit, why would I not do it"? Inevitably what happened in late 2006, were hundreds of defaults because the brokers had deceived and lied to the homebuyer, passed the buck onto the originator, who passed the buck onto the investment house, who laundered all these bad mortgages into packages that contained good ones, who sold them all over the world, and than began failing. Merrill did a margin call on OwnIt for over 100 million of which Ownit did not have, of course makes you wonder where all the money went to. Mr. Dallas, I am sure is quite familiar with oversees numbered accounts. Ownit closed it doors and claimed chapter 11 and walked on, I have to verify the number, but somewhere of upwards and over 8 Billion dollars in debt, most of which are as a result of buyback requests on the failing MBS's ........... Take a good look at his house...he is still in it...Hear of safe harbor....well there you go...Yet the hundreds of thousand of lives that this son of bitch has affected, as they have lost their homes, their credit, and their dignity. They do not have the luxury of claiming bankruptcy, not since the reform that was enacted a couple of years ago....... It is time that some people are held accountable for their actions and the time is now...... Oh by the way, Mr. Dallas is back in the mortgage business again, new name and new game.......IT JUST AIN'T RIGHT
In Plato’s ‘Decline of the Ideal Society’, he describes plutocracy with these words: ‘as the rich rise is social esteem, the virtuous sink.’ A rather broad statement of ideals, one that counters the principles by which the United States was formed, yet a statement that I would contend accurately describes the state of our nation. The modern colloquialism being, “the rich get richer and the poor get poorer”, which can be seen as reference to the vanishing middle class. Philosophical discussions are all well and good, but does little to address the reality of those individuals and their families that are affected. Perhaps, however, it is the place to start, a place to focus government away from the corporate view to those of the everyday ordinary citizen. The role of the United States government is to protect it citizens from the abuses that otherwise stand in the way of ones God-given right in the Pursuit of Happiness. Sadly to say, government does run government, corporations and their lobby’s run government. This view is neither left nor right, conservative nor extreme, rather it is the true reality.
Wed, April 9, 2008 - 7:57 PM
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This letter is intended as an emotional plea to any government elected official to recognize that the solutions to the current economic situation do not even come close to the core of the problem. We place our trust in high educated individuals to find solutions, yet as they pump billions of dollars into the very financial institutions that caused this mess, they fail to see, for whatever reason, what is painfully obvious to the ordinary citizen. I have noticed recently that the business, banking and financial media outlets are revving up the spin away from their sector and laying blame on those who ‘got in over their heads”, or those “that were not credit worthy”. Increasingly it is being said that these people should “suck it up and take responsibility, take the foreclosure and learn from it.” They are creating a stereotypical view which if allowed to continue will become discriminatory, and in the long run making life harder than it already has become for these people who have lost all. I find this extremely offensive as I am one of those “uncreditworthy” individuals. My family was forced into the sub-prime market, not because of the allure of a teaser rate, rather because an incident that we had with a US Bank refinance that they made a shambles of in turn draining all that we had in stocks and savings and in the process destroying our credit because of their negligence. We reached out to the OCC for assistance and rather than review our claim and send notice, as they are supposed to do, they admonished us for sending them so much documentation, bundled it all up and sent US Bank everything we given to the OCC. In essence they gave US Bank a free ride. I am quite sure that our situation is not exclusive and many others found their way into sub-prime by experiences similar to ours, and are equally as bitter. The fact of the matter, all spin aside, is that the sub-prime market opened the doors to the Amercian dream to those previously shut out and with that we, as a country, experienced historical economic growth. Unemployment was at record lows in areas and the country prospered. Now, for a minute, let us suppose that their was no sub-prime market and a persons interest rate was not based on e few bad marks on a credit report that linger for years and years, or a person who is self-employed and charged higher rates as a result of a stated income. Would the economy still be at the doorstep to collapse, as it is now. I contend that this economy would still be going strong. The sub-prime allowed for a level playing field for people whose punishment for having credit problems in the past or for being self employed was deferred by a couple of years. I suppose the intention of all, as was ours, was to take that period to repair the credit and than refinance before the fixed rate period expired. Speculative, perhaps, but you give someone a chance to buy into the dream, they are going take it with the thought of repairing their credit or whatever needed done during that fixed low interest period. The goal being to refinance and fixed that rate or get a lower one. Unfortunately, the system collapsed upon itself, and as we see now that did not happen. Again, to reiterate, these people had no problems affording their American Dream during the fixed period, and economy prospered. The downfall boils down to greed and perhaps a handful of MBA’s that derived this sub-prime scheme. They were not foolish, they bundled and sold on speculation that higher returns would follow over the next few years. In essence they, took the money and ran, and are long gone by now, millions if not billions in hand. The Fed shores up the banking, brokerage and lending institutions and their response is to tighten the credit market, so no one with the exception of those with 720 credit to get any sort of loan. President Bush outlines a plan to assist those threatened with foreclosure to be able to obtain FHA loans at lower interest rates, the stipulation being one must have good credit. Have officials become that disassociated with reality to think that is going to be cure. A person facing foreclosure already has bad credit or else they would not be facing foreclosure. The notion that these tax rebate checks are going to kick start the economy is total fantasy. Gas and food prices are going through the ceiling and it is catching up to peoples budgets and cutting into them resulting in some payments being missed. The tax rebates are going to be used by people to pay on late credit card, mortgage, or car payments, and that does nothing to stimulate the economy. The solution is quite simple, give everyone the same low rate, and throw out the credit reporting. The economy grew greatly when it was overlooked for those getting sub-primes. Can no one recognize that simple fact. Credit reporting only serves as a wealth generating machine for the corporations that run this country. Ironically the same system that has allowed them to rape the public with high interest rates are finding themselves against the wall unable, or unwilling to loan to those without perfect credit. The credit reporting agencies at one time served a great purpose, but nowadays they are exploited and not to the benefit of the consumer. Afterall where is there fairness in charging two families who earn the same income level yet one pays a low interest rate the other a much higher rate, and for what, because one family may have had issues related to medical bills, or perhaps a layoff, or any other number of reasons. There are very few bad apples out there and majority of people are hard and honest working people who for one reason or another had problems in their lives, yet they pay for it with higher interest rates, generating wealth for those charging it. It has gotten so out of hand that in some states insurance rates are based on a credit rating. Yet we wonder where is the middle class going……poor that’s where we are going
if you are interested in more information and pricing, please drop me line
Tue, March 13, 2007 - 1:41 AM
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These are a little side venture of mine that i am hoping catch on and sell.
Tue, March 13, 2007 - 1:30 AM
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