翻訳と辞書
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・ No Hope (song)
・ No Hope, No Fear
・ No Hope, No Future
・ No Humans Involved
・ No Humans Involved (novel)
・ No Hunting
・ No Hurry
・ No Hurt Like a Broken Heart
・ No I'm Not Byron
・ No I.D.
・ No ID production discography
・ No Idea (band)
・ No Idea (disambiguation)
・ No Idea Records
・ No Impact Man
No Income No Asset
・ No independence before majority rule
・ No Innocent Victim
・ No innovation without representation
・ No instruction set computing
・ No Instruments
・ No Interference
・ No Introduction
・ No Jacket Required
・ No Jin-hyuk
・ No Jive
・ No Job for a Lady
・ No Joke
・ No Joke!
・ No Jong-gun


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No Income No Asset : ウィキペディア英語版
No Income No Asset

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."
==No Income No Job no Assets==

A NINJA Loan is a nickname for very low quality subprime loans. It was a play on NINA, which in turn is based on the notation scheme for the level of documentation the mortgage originator required. It was described as a No Income, No Job, (and) no Assets loan because the only thing an applicant had to show was his/her credit rating, which was presumed to reflect willingness and ability to pay. The term was popularised by Charles R. Morris in his 2008 book ''The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown'', though the acronym had been publicly used by some subprime mortgage lenders for some years.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://web.archive.org/web/20010813054529/www.hclfinance.com/product.htm?partner= )〕 They were especially prominent during the United States housing bubble circa 2003-2007 but have gained wider notoriety due to the subprime mortgage crisis in July/August 2007 as a prime example of poor lending practices. The term grew in usage during the 2008 financial crisis as the sub prime mortgage crisis was blamed on such loans. It works on two levels - as an acronym; and allusion to the fact that ninja loans are often defaulted on, with the borrower disappearing like a ninja.
The term was also popularized in the 2010 US film ''Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps'' by the character Gordon Gekko played by Michael Douglas.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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