Dan Seitz

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Someone had to be interested in buying the hundreds of billions of dollars in securities that were being produced. If there had been no demand to meet the supply, the price of MBS would have fallen, yields would have surged leading borrowing rates to rise, choking off the mortgage boom. Not only did this not happen, but long-term interest rates remained flat and the spread—the premium that nonconforming borrowers had to pay—declined.
Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World
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