Since the Bush era economic collapse, I've seen several reasons cited for the above. Home buyers were swindled by loan officers, they were irresponsible and stupid...and no doubt there are examples of both out there. However, until I read the article below, I had totally forgotten about the "Get Rich by Following my System" cottage industry that sprang up during the bubble, where people were told that just by buying and selling houses in volume, they were guaranteed to become millionaires.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012/10/ ... ubble.html
So Wall St. firms were publishing books telling people that they were absolutely guaranteed to become millionaires by buying and selling homes, no matter if they could afford them or not. And of course, those same Wall St. firms then bundled those mortgages up into mortgage backed securities, rated them as "AAA+" and sold them to investors.A lot of people still wonder how and why so many millions of people bought such ridiculously overpriced homes and took out mortgages and loans they clearly could not afford?...
...Well, this book provides a part of the answer: people were explicitly instructed to do so.
The Automatic Millionaire Homeowner hit the front bookcase displays at Barnes and Noble in March 2006, at the very top of the real estate market and just a few months before the whole thing crashed and burned. Its main message was simple: If you take out a mortgage to buy a home, you will always make money. There is no way you can lose—no matter when you buy, how much you pay or what type of loan you get. And the kicker is: both the book and finance expert who wrote it were bankrolled by Wells Fargo and Bank of America.
And what is this same Wall St.-backed shyster doing now? He's selling "How to Get out of Debt" books, which encourages people to cut their living expenses to the bone so they can pay off their mortgages. IOW, now Wall St. is sending this same guy out there to make sure those people whom they swindled before, keep making their mortgage payments to those same firms!!But the whole thing was a fraud, shamelessly boosted by some of the biggest names in news media—none of whom have been held accountable for their role in defrauding millions of Americans.
So let’s take a look…Crack open the book and turn to the introduction, it begins like this:
Interested? Intrigued? Want to know more? Well, turn a couple of pages and you get this:What if I told you the smartest investment you would ever make during your lifetime would be a home!
What if I told you that in just an hour or two I could share with you a simple system that would help you become rich through homeownership?
What if I told you that this system was called the Automatic Millionaire Homeowner—and that if you spent an hour or two with me, you could learn how to become one? [emphasis mine]
Would you be interested? Would you be willing to spend a few hours with me? Would you like to become an Automatic Millionaire Homeowner?
As I sit here in August 2005, I have no idea when you will be reading what I’m writing. Maybe it’s March 2006 (when this book is scheduled to be published)—by which time the real estate market could be slowing or cooling down to modest single-digit annual gains (or not). Perhaps this book was bought by a friend of yours who passed it along to you—and it’s now 2007 and those once “certain” boom markets are going bust due to speculation. Or maybe the opposite has happened—interest rates have remained at historic lows, and home prices have continued their march upward.
In fact, it doesn’t really matter when you happen to be reading this or what’s going on right now in the markets. This book is not about the boom . . . or the busts. . . . What this book is about is the truth. And the truth is this:
Nothing you will ever do in your lifetime
is likely to make you as much money as
buying a home and living in it. [emphasis in the original]
What’s this sure-fire system? Well, it’s so simple it fits on the inside flap! Here’s how you do it:
What Makes The Automatic Millionaire Homeowner Essential:
■ You don’t need a big down payment to buy a home.
■ You don’t need great credit.
■ You should buy even if you have credit-card debt.
■ You can buy a second home even if you’re still paying off the first.
■ You can get started in any market-boom or bust.
■ It’s easier to be a landlord than you think.
Someone needs to go to jail for this.