B
Black_Rose
Guest
Regarding the commitments by banking institutions on the CRA:
Right from the horses mouth, just like you said! Also, for the $4.5 trillion also includes other things besides mortgage lending such as small business lending.
community-wealth.org/_pdfs/articles-publications/cdfis/report-silver-brown.pdfThe dollar amounts are based on commitments for community development
lending, not the amount of lending that actually occurred. In some cases the
actual lending amount may exceed the dollar targets, in other cases the dollar
target may not have been met. In addition, many commitments are multi-year
commitments that extend beyond 2007. Thus, it is important to remember that
there is a substantial amount of CRA-related lending and investing that falls
outside of the agreements documented in this study.
Right from the horses mouth, just like you said! Also, for the $4.5 trillion also includes other things besides mortgage lending such as small business lending.
Back at you, Edward Pinto’s relies only a few stats such as that only one Cleveland Bank. As Cricket pointed out, there is no information about the loans in its profolio, or how large it is. Googling “Third Federal Savings and Loan” AND “cra” fails to bring up an independent confirmatory source beside anything related to Pinto. But I did find that “Third Federal Savings and Loan” of Ohio did not lend do any CRA related lending in 2003 and despite this, it received a “satisfactory” rating from the OTS in 2004. Furthermore, the entire CRA lending in 2003 was only $42.3 billion, far less than the $711.7 billion in “commitments” reported in 2003.Exactly… they are in question. The manner in which they are broken down and presented doesn’t even come close to giving the whole picture. Wow, seven cherry picked appendices… from a few years of the implementation of the CRA. The inclusion of statistics is great, but he’s using very specific numbers from a few years to generalize the entire implementation of the CRA which has much more history and future unfortunately.