vaduz wrote: Вы пишете глупости.
Ага! Все заёмщики честненькие, только все банки почему-то в долгах как в шелках.
Вот, к примеру, одна из таких шаек:
http://www.ocregister.com/articles/soni ... nis-family
In at least three cases, homes flipped from one family member to another – sales later used by appraisers to give credibility to high asking prices for other properties in the area.
One example: Lohia bought the bank-owned house at 827 S. Flower for $249,500 on Jan. 4. She sold it 20 days later for $575,000 to her daughter, Suniti Shah, who financed the purchase with a $488,750 Washington Mutual mortgage.
That was a 121 percent increase in less than three weeks.
...
In July 2007, Vijay and Supriti Soni of Corona del Mar paid $440,000 for a home at 2129 W. Civic Center Drive in Santa Ana.
Five weeks later, they resold the house to Javier Hernandez – the family gardener and handyman – for $660,000. That's a 50 percent gain in 38 days – at a time when real estate prices in Santa Ana were plunging.
But the lender that financed both mortgages – Washington Mutual Bank – took a bath. In March of this year Hernandez's loan went into default and in July the bank foreclosed. On the trustee's deed, the bank listed the home's value at $377,137 – $220,000 less than the outstanding loan.
Кто-то говорил, что украсть у банка $20,000 непосильная задача!