"Clark and Mingyuan start with an insightful and comprehensive
description of how market participants contributed to the current
crisis in the residential mortgage markets and the root causes of
the crisis. They then proceed to develop a new residential mortgage
lending system that can fix our broken markets because it addresses
the root causes. The most impressive attributes of their new system
is its commonsense return to the basics of traditional
underwriting, combined with factors based on expert judgment and
statistics and forward-looking attributes, all of which can be
updated as markets change. The whole process is transparent to the
borrower, lender, and investor." --Dean Schultz, President and CEO,
Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco
"The credit market crisis of 2008 has deeply affected the
economic lives of every American. Yet, its underlying causes and
its surface features are so complex that many observers and even
policymakers barely understand them. This timely book will help
guide nonspecialists through the workings of financial markets,
particularly how they value, price, and distribute risk."
--Professor William Greene, Stern School of Business, New York
University
"This book is a well-timed departure from much of what is being
written today regarding the current foreclosure and credit crisis.
Rather than attempting to blame lenders, borrowers, and/or federal
regulators for the mortgage meltdown and the subsequent impacts on
the financial markets, Clark and Mingyuan have proposed a
groundbreaking new framework to revolutionize our current lending
system. The book is built on the authors' deep understanding of
risk and the models used for credit analysis, and reflects their
commitment to solve the problem. What I find most profound is their
passion to develop a system that will facilitate new and better
investment, especially in underserved urban markets that have been
disproportionately impacted in the current crisis. I applaud the
authors for this important work, and urge practitioners and
theorists alike to investigate this new approach." --John Talmage,
President and CEO, Social Compact
"In the wake of the credit crisis, it is clear that transparency
is the key to not repeating history. In Credit Risk Assessment: The
New Lending System for Borrowers, Lenders and Investors, Clark
Abrahams and Mingyuan Zhang describe a new lending framework that
seeks to connect all the players in the lending chain and provide a
more holistic view of customers' risk potential. As the financial
services industry recovers from the mortgage meltdown, the
Abrahams/Zhang lending model certainly offers some new food for
thought to laymen and professionals alike." --Maria Bruno-Britz,
Senior Editor, Bank Systems & Technology magazine
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