Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2694709> ?p ?o }
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- Q2694709 subject Q10739767.
- Q2694709 subject Q8641870.
- Q2694709 abstract "No Income No Asset (NINA) or simply Nina Loan is a term used in the United States mortgage industry to describe one of many documentation types which lenders may allow when underwriting a mortgage.NINA programs are ostensibly created for those with hard to verify incomes (waiters, etc.) but in actuality have been popularly used in situations where aggressive mortgage lenders and brokers did not want any trouble qualifying otherwise non-qualifying loans, thus becoming a significant factor in the subprime lending crisis. A significant number of NINA loans were never possible for the applicant to repay and have resulted in defaults for this reason, as laid out in detail by investigative reporters, including the reporting of This American Life and Planet Money that culminated in the Peabody- and Polk- award winning episode "The Giant Pool of Money."".
- Q2694709 wikiPageExternalLink 12_07.cfm.
- Q2694709 wikiPageExternalLink AR2007031301733_pf.html.
- Q2694709 wikiPageExternalLink NINJAStack.pdf.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q10739767.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q119798.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q1210094.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q166032.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q17152793.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q1898080.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q2421465.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q2584003.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q2928006.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q326526.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q4303212.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q4683193.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q4851871.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q487152.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q7201129.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q7736371.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q844541.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q8641870.
- Q2694709 wikiPageWikiLink Q9402.
- Q2694709 comment "No Income No Asset (NINA) or simply Nina Loan is a term used in the United States mortgage industry to describe one of many documentation types which lenders may allow when underwriting a mortgage.NINA programs are ostensibly created for those with hard to verify incomes (waiters, etc.) but in actuality have been popularly used in situations where aggressive mortgage lenders and brokers did not want any trouble qualifying otherwise non-qualifying loans, thus becoming a significant factor in the subprime lending crisis. ".
- Q2694709 label "No Income No Asset".