(via Hedge funds buy swathes of foreclosed subprimes, force up rents, float rent-bonds - Boing Boing)
When a giant hedge fund is bidding on all the foreclosed houses in a
poor neighborhood, living humans don’t stand a chance – but that’s OK,
because rapacious investors make great landlords.
Wall Street investors have bought more than 200,000 foreclosed houses in
the past two years, bundling together the rents they generate into
bonds that are just like subprime mortgage bonds, only without the
pretense that the poor people who generate their payments have a hope of
ever getting out from under their obligation to enrich the richest
people in the world.
Blackstone – owner of Seaworld, Hilton Hotels, and the Weather Channel –
is the biggest player here, and when they come into town to buy up all
the single-family properties, they price actual families out of the
market. Their securitized rent payment bonds are backed by some of the
biggest subprime criminals, including Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, and
JPMorgan.
Hedge funds really epitomize compassionate landlording, too. When
Blackstone buys in, it jacks up tenants’ rents by as much as a third and
immediately begins eviction proceedings against renters who can’t pay.
If there are any troubles with your payments, they assess fines against
you and make you miss work to pay the rent and penalties in person.
CaDonna Porter moved into an Invitation Homes property outside
Atlanta with her children in September. When part of her monthly payment
was rejected because she tried to use a debit card, the company
demanded that she deliver the remaining amount in person, via certified
funds, by 5 p.m. the following day or incur a $200 fee and face
eviction. Porter took time off from work to deliver a money order in
person, only to be informed that the payment had been rejected because
it didn’t include the late fee and an additional $75 insufficient funds
fee.
In a maddening string of emails, Invitation Homes repeatedly
reminded Porter that it could file to evict her unless she paid the
penalties. When she finally said that she would seek legal counsel,
Invitation Homes agreed to accept her payment as “a one-time courtesy.”
Andrew Gallina, Invitation Homes’ vice president for marketing, says it
treats all of its renters equally: “Under the law, we’re not allowed to
make changes or exceptions. That’s just basic fair housing.”
Invitation Homes has described its strategy as “a bet on America.”
Wall Street’s Hot New Financial Product: Your Rent Check [Laura
Gottesdiener/Mother Jones]
This is real evil, manifesting itself thru the psychopathy of those
in power. Why are we just sitting around taking their bullshit!!

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