Financial Times FT.com

US niggle became global problem

By Richard Beales in New York

Published: August 10 2007 18:48 | Last updated: August 10 2007 18:48

What started as a niggle in an arcane corner of the US mortgage market has morphed into what is increasingly looking like a global liquidity and credit crunch.

The problems began when mortgage loans made to subprime borrowers – those with weak credit histories – started seeing an unprecedented level of payment problems. Lenders, especially last year, had loosened their standards so much that many borrowers quickly found they could not afford their payments.

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