AOL Money & Finance

Muhammad Yunus posts

Feed

More from the sweeter side of subprime lending

Given that subprime lenders are getting a mostly deserved bad rap of late, I've been on the lookout for articles about people who are doing subprime right. Yesterday I wrote about Grameen Bank founder Muhammad Yunus's crusade to provide credit to low-income entrepreneurs.

Now the latest issue of Forbes features a profile of Martin Eakes, called subprime's Mr. Clean, who runs a South Carolina credit union and is also the founder of the Center for Responsible Lending. Forbes describes him as being "to mortgage lenders what Ralph Nader was to the auto industry."

Mr. Eakes has led the legislative charge against payday lending (which I would argue is mostly a non-issue), mortgage prepayment penalties (which I think are evil), and mortgage-broker fees (which, in excess, are also evil). In Congress, he has convinced the House to pass a bill requiring that lenders be more demanding in search of documentation showing that home buyers can actually afford what they're getting themselves into.

Mr. Eakes may be more extreme than most, but the Center for Responsible Lending's website is a great research for anyone interested in researching these issues, including a state-by-state analysis of subprime losses.

The positive side of unsecured debt

Unsecured debt, in particular the subprime loan market as associated currently with the housing mess, is getting a lot of negative press these days. However, borrowers who invest in such debt might be the greatest contributors to the economy over time.

This particularly is the case in emerging markets. Muhammad Yunus, a Bangladeshi professor, founded Grameen, a bank to provide microcredit to entrepreneurs in many of the least developed economies around the world. Grameen, which opened its doors thirty years ago, has made microloans to seven million borrows, with 97% of them being women who were rejected by the local banks, according to Skip Kaltenheuser in Barron's Other Voices column over the weekend. The loan-repayment rate stands at 99% with total disbursements exceeding $6 billion. The average loan is $130. Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize for providing credit to those who formerly had to rely on unsavory loan sharks for capital.

For those who do not recall, the booming U.S. and global economy which began in the early 1980s was aided by the deregulation of U.S. credit markets and creation of new credit markets such as the high-yield debt and unsecured credit card markets. Unsecured debt was the primary vehicle to re-allocate assets into the hands of managers who utilize those assets more efficiently. Unsecured credit cards helped finance many entrepreneurs when few banks would lend to them.

As the subprime mortgage market goes into the dumper, remember there have been substantially more positives from the development of the unsecured credit markets than negatives, whether it is in a mature economy like the U.S. or an emerging market like Bangladesh.

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA-59.9410,391.01
NASDAQ-14.702,161.31
S&P 500-5.321,100.92

Last updated: November 24, 2009: 11:32 AM

BloggingStocks Exclusives

Hot Stocks

DailyFinance Headlines

Latest from BloggingBuyouts

WalletPop Headlines

AOL Business News

BioHealth Investor Headlines

Sponsored Links

My Portfolios

Track your stocks here!

Find out why more people track their portfolios on AOL Money & Finance then anywhere else.

BloggingStocks Partners

More from AOL Money & Finance