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The Monster: How a Gang of Predatory Lenders and Bankers Fleeced 
America, and Launched a Global Crisis

The following is an excerpt from Michael Hudson's THE MONSTER: 
How a Gang of Predatory Lenders and Wall Street Bankers Fleeced 
America – And Spawned a Global Crisis (2010, Times Books)

A few weeks after he started working at Ameriquest Mortgage, Mark 
Glover looked up from his cubicle and saw a coworker do something 
odd. The guy stood at his desk on the twenty-third floor of 
downtown Los Angeles's Union Bank Building. He placed two sheets 
of paper against the window. Then he used the light streaming 
through the window to trace something from one piece of paper to 
another. Somebody's signature.

Glover was new to the mortgage business. He was twenty-nine and 
hadn't held a steady job in years. But he wasn't stupid. He knew 
about financial sleight of hand -- at that time, he had a 
check-fraud charge hanging over his head in the L.A. courthouse a 
few blocks away. Watching his coworker, Glover's first thought 
was: How can I get away with that? As a loan officer at 
Ameriquest, Glover worked on commission. He knew the only way to 
earn the six-figure income Ameriquest had promised him was to come 
up with tricks for pushing deals through the mortgage-financing 
pipeline that began with Ameriquest and extended through Wall 
Street's most respected investment houses.

Glover and the other twentysomethings who filled the sales force 
at the downtown L.A. branch worked the phones hour after hour, 
calling strangers and trying to talk them into refinancing their 
homes with high-priced "subprime" mortgages. It was 2003, subprime 
was on the rise, and Ameriquest was leading the way. The company's 
owner, Roland Arnall, had in many ways been the founding father of 
subprime, the business of lending money to home owners with modest 
incomes or blemished credit histories. He had pioneered this risky 
segment of the mortgage market amid the wreckage of the savings 
and loan disaster and helped transform his company's headquarters, 
Orange County, California, into the capital of the subprime 
industry. Now, with the housing market booming and Wall Street 
clamoring to invest in subprime, Ameriquest was growing with 
startling velocity.

Up and down the line, from loan officers to regional managers and 
vice presidents, Ameriquest's employees scrambled at the end of 
each month to push through as many loans as possible, to pad their 
monthly production numbers, boost their commissions, and meet 
Roland Arnall's expectations. Arnall was a man "obsessed with loan 
volume," former aides recalled, a mortgage entrepreneur who 
believed "volume solved all problems." Whenever an underling 
suggested a goal for loan production over a particular time span, 
Arnall's favorite reply was: "We can do twice that." Close to 
midnight Pacific time on the last business day of each month, the 
phone would ring at Arnall's home in Los Angeles's exclusive 
Holmby Hills neighborhood, a $30 million estate that once had been 
home to Sonny and Cher.On the other end of the telephone line, a 
vice president in Orange County would report the month's 
production numbers for his lending empire. Even as the totals grew 
to $3 billion or $6 billion or $7 billion a month -- figures never 
before imagined in the subprime business -- Arnall wasn't 
satisfied. He wanted more. "He would just try to make you stretch 
beyond what you thought possible," one former Ameriquest executive 
recalled. "Whatever you did, no matter how good you did, it wasn't 
good enough."

full: 
http://www.alternet.org/books/148577/the_monster%3A_how_a_gang_of_predatory_lenders_and_bankers_fleeced_america%2C_and_launched_a_global_crisis/

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