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Roland Arnall... For those who know the name....

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The family of Roland Arnall, the Ameriquest Mortgage founder and U.S. ambassador to the Netherland, says he has died at UCLA Medical Center. He was 68.
The billionaire helped create and later emerged as a symbol of the struggling sub-prime mortgage industry.
A family statement Monday said Arnall died that morning at the Los Angeles-based hospital but did not give the cause of death.

Arnall was appointed ambassador to the Netherlands in March 2006 after an approval process that was slowed by unsettled issues regarding Ameriquest, the California-based lending company he founded in 1979.
A major Republican financier, Arnall's fortune was estimated at $1.5 billion (€950 million) by Forbes magazine last year.

By msaucey on Mar 17, 2008, 14:31 in Off Topic. AddThis Social Bookmark Button


msaucey says on Mar 17, 2008, 14:32:

This will be an impact on the business world.... Well, maybe not, but he had his hands in a lot of different things....

The trouble about trying to make yourself stupider than you really are is that you very often succeed. - CS Lewis

goin_south says on Mar 17, 2008, 14:37:

I can't believe CS Lewis said such a thing

and, thank you.

tejasmarcos says on Mar 17, 2008, 20:41:

i met the guy once. he made a fortune and now everybody around the world is paying for it. ameriquest secured more subprime arm product than any other conduit in the country and guess what? they did most of their business in california and florida. can anybody guess who appointed him ambassador to the netherlands?

my glass is getting shorter on whiskey, ice and water...

MaFe says on Mar 21, 2008, 23:23:

Tejasmarcos, it was George W. Bush.

"All human actions have one or more of these seven causes: chance, nature, compulsions, habit, reason, passion, desire. "-Aristotle

tejasmarcos says on Mar 22, 2008, 14:02:

ding, ding, ding. we have a winner! political payola does go a long way - all the way to amsterdam!

my glass is getting shorter on whiskey, ice and water...

tejasmarcos says on Mar 31, 2008, 10:00:

as a followup. ameriquest (argent) is mentioned at the bottom of the article.


New U.S. Panel Aims to Fill Gaps
In Mortgage-Sector Oversight
By JAMES R. HAGERTY
March 31, 2008; Page A14

The proposed overhaul of the nation's financial regulation calls for better coordination of the many federal and state agencies that oversee home-mortgage lending. But mortgage regulation would remain a patchwork affair, with no single agency in charge.

During the housing boom, this patchwork system allowed states, in some cases, to crack down on abuses that federal regulators overlooked or played down. But it also slowed the federal response to lenders' increasingly lax standards for granting loans and the resulting surge in defaults by homeowners, which helped give rise to the current credit crunch.

MORE


• Capital Journal: With Washington in Gridlock, Voters May Determine Oversight
03/31/2008
• Fed's 'Supercop' Role May Give It Headaches
10/31/2008
• Real Time Economics: Q&A With Paulson
• Handicapping the High Points
03/31/2008
• Proposed Rules Bring Cheers, Fears
03/31/2008
• Heard on the Street: A Merger of Regulators Would Hit Exchanges in the Biggest Way
03/31/2008
• Prospects Are Uncertain for Insurers
03/31/2008
• Text of Paulson's Executive Summary
• Treasury Plan Garners Mixed Response From Policy Makers
• Office of Thrift Supervision Internal Memo
• Treasury Stakes Out Position on Federal Insurance Regulation
• Washington Wire: Obama Calls Plan 'Inadequate' In a plan scheduled to be officially released Monday, the Treasury proposes to remedy "gaps" in mortgage oversight by creating a federal Mortgage Origination Commission run by a six-person board composed of representatives of the Federal Reserve and five other agencies involved in banking regulation. The commission would develop minimum standards for state licensing of individuals and companies involved in mortgage lending. It also would rate each state's system of regulating mortgage brokers and lenders.

The Mortgage Bankers Association and the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, both industry trade groups, expressed support for the broad outlines of the proposal and said they were eager for more details.

The idea is to "let the states continue to be responsible for regulation," Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in an interview Saturday, "but [the commission] would evaluate them ... For states with deficient oversight, I would be willing to bet people wouldn't want to put those mortgages" into securities sold to investors. The authority to draft regulations under national mortgage laws would remain with the Fed. But states would be given "clear authority to enforce federal mortgage laws," according to the Treasury plan.

During the housing boom, the Fed was reluctant to use its rule-making powers to the extent some consumer advocates wanted to crack down on lending practices, including the proliferation of subprime loans, or those to people with weak credit records. Fed officials said that cracking down too hard might choke off the supply of credit and that the market could sort out most of its own problems.

Since the Treasury plan would keep the Fed in its central rule-making role, "it's safe to say that if this regulatory framework had been in place years ago, it would not have prevented the current mortgage-market meltdown," said Thomas Lawler, a housing economist in Leesburg, Va., pointing to the central bank's relaxed approach as subprime lending surged from 2002 through 2005.

By late 2005, the Fed and other regulators set to work on stiffening rules on mortgages that start with relatively low payments but leave borrowers vulnerable to much higher ones later. Drafting those rules required negotiations among five agencies: the Fed, the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the National Credit Union Association.

The regulators completed their first set of tighter mortgage-lending standards only in September 2006 and a second set, governing subprime loans, in June 2007 -- after many subprime lenders had collapsed.

Some of the largest subprime lenders, such as Ameriquest Mortgage Co. of Orange, Calif., weren't deposit-taking institutions subject to federal banking regulation. In 2005, a large group of state regulators banded together to investigate allegations of lending abuses by Ameriquest. The states charged that Ameriquest in some cases inadequately disclosed loan terms, urged appraisers to inflate estimates of home values and encouraged borrowers to lie about their incomes to qualify for loans.

Ameriquest settled those charges in January 2006 by agreeing to pay $325 million in fines and change some of its practices.

my glass is getting shorter on whiskey, ice and water...

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