CBS 12 News | Palm Beach County Residents Expose Foreclosure Fraud (VIDEO)
The (un)Fair Foreclosure Act | CBS 12 – State Lawmakers Push to Cut Courts from the Foreclosure Process (VIDEO)
Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto Expected to File Criminal Charges Against Bank and Title Company Employees, as well as Notary Publics, Over Robosigning
Banksters | Floridians Facing Foreclosure Should Lose their Homes Faster Under Plan Making Rounds in Tallahassee
Mandelman’s Monthly Museletter – Version 15.0
1. Obama Leaps Into Action on Foreclosures – Happy days now right around corner.
NBC is reporting that, four years into the foreclosure crisis, and having failed at every single turn in the road, the government will now be hosting a hotline to provide financial advice to homeowners facing foreclosure. And I think we can all agree that this is the news for which we’ve all been waiting.
It’s being called… ready for this… “The Hope Line,” and had I not learned of that moniker, I might have just let this story go. It’s tiring to just keep beating up on stupidity, as I’m sure my readers understand.
But I did learn they were calling it “The Hope Line,” and it’s the brainless child of HUD Secretary, Shaun Donovan… he’s the member of the Obama Administration that looks like an aging Howdy Doody… to me, anyway. According to Donovan…
“Everybody in a neighborhood loses value on their home when a home is foreclosed.”
No kidding, is that right? Well, then someone should do something about the four million foreclosures that happen each year in this country.
Have you had enough yet? Is this bothering anyone else but me… no, bothering isn’t the right word… is this making you want to kick the crap out of a squirrel? Are you choking back a scream of such proportion that were you to let it out, you think it might be heard throughout eternity?
Well, I simply can’t take it another second… Shaun Donovan you are an unbelievably insensitive, ignorant and incompetent jackass. And I’d forgive you all of that, if you’d just shut up and stop treating me like I’m a four year old.
A “hotline” called the “Hope Line” to provide financial advice to homeowners facing foreclosure? It’s almost 2012, Shaun… you’ve done NOTHING right since you took over HUD. Are you f#@king kidding me? I really don’t know what to say except that I can’t remember the last time I wanted to break someone’s fingers so badly.
What are you thinking your “hotline” might do for homeowners, Shaun? Save the day? Direct callers to their servicer? Offer to connect the homeowner with a HUD counselor? And check this out… for homeowners who prefer a face-to-face waste of time, Donovan suggests homeowners call “the local law school where students need the experience to get a degree.”
What kind of degree does one hope to get by talking to a homeowner at risk of foreclosure, Shaun? Is that how you think one gets a law degree? What the hell are you even talking about? What happened to “YOU DON’T NEED A LAWYER… JUST CALL YOUR BANK DIRECTLY, OR CALL A HUD COUNSELOR?”
Now, you’re saying homeowners could use a lawyer, but your recommendation is that they seek out an aspiring or inexperienced one? Shaun, I really have no idea what your problem is, but I’ll bet it’s difficult to pronounce.
NBC’s story also mentioned that this “hotline” is being rolled out “as Americans see foreclosures take another upswing.”
Another upswing? That’s how you thought to phrase the concept of foreclosures skyrocketing last month? Could you be any more offensive? Stop by sometime… I’d like to give you an upswing.
You can reach the new homeowner hotline at 1-888-995-HOPE. Go ahead and call… it’ll be fun, I’m sure. Here’s a link to the article I wrote two years ago, the last time I called the government’s “Hope Line.” It’s titled: “The Weather in India.”
Do you think I’m being too harsh, Shaun? Okay, tell you what… I’ll start being nicer as soon as you start being smarter.
2. Nation’s poverty rate climbs to 15.1%, highest in 18 years.
According to the latest census data, more Americans fell below the poverty line last year. The nation’s poverty rate rose to 15.1 percent in 2010, which is the highest level since 1993. About 46.2 million people are considered to be in this group.
The government’s definition of poverty is income of $22,314 a year for a family of four and $11,139 for an individual. And that’s not all the good news… in 2010 middle-class American families saw their income fall year over year, but the best part of that story is that median income has changed very little compared to consumer price increases over the last 30 years.
The middle-income family earns only 11% more than they did in 1980, while consumer prices have risen roughly 155 percent since then. And that’s adjusted for inflation. The figures were hardly surprising when you consider that the number of Americans unemployed over six months actually hit an all-time high during the year.
Yep, we’re having a recovery all right. What… me worry?
3. Obama Says Government to Help Some Refinance… Again.
Again with the refinancing, Barack? You really have no idea what you’re doing, do you? Not a clue. And you’re getting advice from some billionaire’s club of psychopathic capitalists who made money so you think they’re smart. It’s really quite sad to watch.
Let me refresh your obviously failing memory. It was February of 2009 when you first announced the whole refinancing thing. Hardly anyone qualified for it, and the people who did were not those at risk of foreclosure, but it was a lovely sentiment, nonetheless, and we just ignored you and went about our lives battling the banksters.
It was supposed to help millions… and didn’t even get close… very much like HAMP, as a matter of fact. The only thing the refinancing did was keep some mortgage brokers employed for a bit, and allow those senior citizens who did qualify to trim a few hundred from their monthly payment.
They used their monthly savings to pay off debt or they stuck it in the bank, but it certainly didn’t help the economy at all.
Then, you announced the same program again a year later… and the result was that you refi’d the same people you had refi’d the year before. You didn’t stop a single foreclosure as a result of the refinancing, not even one.
And now… with your failure to mitigate the damage caused by Wall Street’s bankers and mortgage servicers widely understood, you thought it a good idea to trot out the old refi responsible homeowners pitch again. After all, it didn’t work last time, so why the heck not try it again… this time hoping for a different outcome.
Look, I’d explain this to you in more clear terms, but I don’t have any crayons with me, so let’s just say that you might want to consider hiring someone who can produce a new idea… even a bad one, as long as it’s new.
The last time mortgage rates for 30-year loans were lower was in 1951, Mr. President. Yes, I said 1951. And the 15-year rate of 3.33 percent was actually an all-time low. But listen… shhhh… do you hear that? No? Why that’s the sound of all the “responsible homeowners” rushing out to take advantage of the low rates.
You see, there aren’t any “responsible homeowners,” Mr. President. Half of homeowners today are underwater, if you take out states like North Dakota from the national averages, so they can’t refinance for that reason. The other 50% just don’t have the 800 FICO scores you need to get a loan these days.
And whatever number is left is finding it impossible to save up the required 20% down payment, or if they have managed to save up the required down payment, they certainly aren’t interested in throwing it away on a house whose value is certain to continue falling like a stone.
No matter though… at least the 1500 people who can qualify will save another couple of Franklins each month. Who knows… maybe they’ll use it to re-start our nation’s economy… in about 400 years.
4. Mortgage Defaults Skyrocket 33% Nationwide in a Single Month… 55% in California… 42% in New Jersey… Tsunami of foreclosures on its way…
Well, things are certainly looking up, wouldn’t you say? I mean, when Obama says we’re having a recovery, he means… well, I don’t actually know what he means.
And I found it quite interesting that Bank of America alone, increased the number of default notices sent out by a reported 200% in August over the prior month. That’s stunning, I think, and I’ll tell you why.
Bank of America has been whining since the foreclosure crisis began that it simply couldn’t keep up with the demand for loan modifications. Fro==or three years BofA has been singing the same tune… we’re overwhelmed… feel sorry for us… we’re trying…
So, I have a question for Bank of America… why is it that the foreclosure side of your business is capable of a 200% increase in a single month, but after three years you still can’t show even a modicum of improvement as far as getting a mortgage modified for a homeowner at risk of foreclosure?
Don’t worry, that was rhetorical. I know the answer. It’s because you lie constantly about everything. You could increase the number of loan modifications by 200% in a month too… you simply don’t want to. You don’t care what foreclosures are doing to our nation’s economy… to our communities… to millions of families… to the lives of our children. You don’t care about complying with laws or government programs.
You are the worst sort of corporate citizen, and it is my great hope that the people of this nation come to understand what you have done and never forgive you for it.
5. Gallup’s Economic Numbers Show No Recovery Since 2009.
The latest Gallup reports show that consumer spending in this country has remained essentially flat since falling through the floor in January of 2009. Spending in retail stores including gas stations and restaurants has averaged $66 per day in 2011… in 2008 it averaged $96 per day.
Gallup also reported that 18.5% of American workers are underemployed… with 9.1% unemployed as of August 2011. And those numbers, which are unchanged year over year, don’t include those unemployed over six months and presumed to no longer be looking for work.
And consumer confidence is right where it was at the depths of the depression, which the government pegs as being February of 2009. Gallup says that 77% of Americans said our nation’s economy is getting worse in August of 2011… the highest percentage by far since then.
Yeppers… there’s no question about it… that’s change I can believe in, all right.
Mandelman out.
And please consider supporting the documentary I’m producing on the foreclosure crisis…
… because we can’t solve what we don’t understand in the first place.
CLICK HERE to watch the trailer.
I Failed… and I’m So Very Sorry
Today, another victim of the foreclosure crisis took her own life. She was a disabled American veteran and her family was counting on me to help. And I let them down.
You see, when I returned from a trip to Hawaii earlier this summer to meet with members of the state’s legislature on how the state might better deal with the foreclosure crisis, I received a call and a letter from a couple who’s home was about to be sold by Ocwen. The husband, afflicted by multiple sclerosis, could not be moved from their handicapped home and I couldn’t stand what watching what was about to happen… so I wrote about it… attacking Ocwen for allowing such an injustice to take place.
And Ocwen responded. Within days the trustee sale was cancelled and Ocwen agreed to modify the loan so the family could remain in their home of so many years. It should go without saying that the couple was joyous and thankful, although I couldn’t help but wonder about all the families about whom I would never be able to write about… and perhaps save from the pain of foreclosure.
Soon after that I received another letter and call from a couple’s daughter who lived in Hawaii… her parents were facing foreclosure in California and their lawyer who had been hired to help them had dropped the ball… they were on their way to being evicted. They’re older… in their 70s, and they were caring for a disabled American veteran… a member of the family.
I tried to help… called an attorney friend of mine who stepped in and filed what could be filed, but acknowledged openly that it was a long shot. Maybe some media attention would help, as it had previously, and I said that I would write about their situation.
But, the truth is that I never got around to it. I had other pressing concerns. And I’m only one person fighting a much larger fight. I spent several weeks in Arizona, meeting with lawyers and homeowners… and filming a documentary that I’d come to believe is the most important contribution I can make to the war against the bankers and the foreclosure crisis that is quietly tearing about our country and destroying our middle class and our economy.
I found out today that a few days ago she took her own life. Wells Fargo Bank had allowed the eviction to proceed; they refused to do anything else. Maybe they wouldn’t have changed their mind had I found the time to publicize the couple’s plight… maybe not. But, we’ll never know… I’ll never know.
The couple called me, their daughter called me… many times during the month of August, but I was away in Arizona, I needed the rest… my own health was in question and I felt I needed to rest and recuperate before I‘d be able to continue the fight effectively. I spoke with the husband… and the wife… they sent me their story written out on many pages. It all started when Wells Fargo said they had made a trial payment a couple of days late. The couple said they had made it on time. How petty a thing that could lead to such a tragic end…
I tried to calm them down… told them I would try to help them. But, I never got back to them… never wrote their story. And now it’s too late.
The last phone message I received was from their daughter. I played it today when I got the news. She was literally begging for my help. But I didn’t hear it in time. And now a disabled American veteran is gone.
I don’t know what to say except that I am so very sorry that I let them down. So deeply sorry… and I’ll never forget them… I’ll try never to let something like that happen again.
But the other truth is that I’m angry. I’m angry that I even have such responsibility… such power that my writing about someone’s situation has the potential to save their home from foreclosure. It shouldn’t be the case. The banks should not be allowed to lie to people, the process should be transparent… none of it should be done in secret.
God damn the bankers that continue to treat American homeowners struggling financially as a result of the global financial crisis and our country’s deepening recession that they caused as if they are meaningless souls… as if they are to be disposed of like diseased cattle.
And God damn those who have no compassion for the millions of Americans who continue to receive foreclosure notices every day… their lack of compassion comes from their ignorance of the facts involved, and at this point there is no excuse for that ignorance.
And God damn the Obama Administration for ignoring and abandoning the American middle class in favor of the banking billionaires to whom he has given a blank check as reward for their crimes. None of this should be happening in my country.
But, again… I’m just so sorry that I let them down. Please join in this prayer for a fallen soldier… its author is unknown…
I saw a soldier kneeling down,
for this was the first quiet place he had found.
He had traveled through jungles, rivers and mud.
His hands were scared and toil-warned.
He folded his hands and looked to the sky…
I saw his tears, as they welled in his eyes.
He spoke to God, and this is what he said.
God Bless my men, who now lie dead;
I know not what You have in mind,
but when You judge, please be kind….
when they come before You, they will be poorly dressed
but will walk proudly, for they have done their best.
Their boots will be muddy and their clothes all torn…
but these clothes they have so proudly worn.
Their hearts will be still and cold inside,
for they have fought their best and did so with pride.
So please take care of them as they pass Your way…
the price of freedom they’ve already paid.
AMEN.
Mandelman out.
Paula Pennypacker – An Arizona Republican Conservative Finds Mandelman Matters
Paula Pennypacker is the founder Just for Redheads Beauty Products. She has also been a political activist for two decades. She hosted a political talk show on WSPD Radio in Toledo before moving to Arizona, and she’s run for office on several occasions, in Ohio and once she moved to Arizona with her husband in 1998.
Today, she writes a Republican conservative blog, of all things, on azcentral.com. Well, she’s found Mandelman Matters and joined the group of Americans who know the foreclosure crisis must be stopped.
Over the past so many weeks, she has written numerous posts about what’s been happening in the Arizona legislature… you remember… the disappearing Senate Bill 1259… and who could ever forget Rep. Carl Seel and his $100k principal reduction? Not me, certainly.
Well, Paula may be a self-proclaimed conservative Republican, but she also has a brain… and a heart. And I’d encourage others… especially those that live in Arizona… to visit her blog and see what she has to say. Because, I think it was the last time she ran for public office that she lost to Michelle Reagan, the senator who allowed SB 1259 to disappear and the foreclosure crisis to go on for another year.
You never know… maybe we can get Paula to run again in the next election so Arizona will have someone in the legislature who’s committed to doing what’s best for the state, and not for the banking lobby. I readily admit that I do not know everything about Paula Pennypacker’s politics… but I don’t need to know everything… I know enough.
Her post “The Seel Deal,” can be found here: PPENNYPACKER BLOG
And what follows is my reply to her blog post, after she sent me this email:
I decided to follow your advice as a resident who is NOT facing foreclosure to advocate for principal reductions for those in desperate need of a loan mod like Rep Seel got. Paula
Hey, Hey Paula… (Sorry, I couldn’t help that.)
Well, I just have to say that you make me both proud and hopeful, as did the people of Hawaii a few weeks ago. After 2 1/2 years, you’re here… someone who has come to realize that WE have to stop the foreclosure crisis, because if WE don’t, WE are headed over the falls too. All of us… and I do mean every last one of us. Consider the following:
- According to the latest Zillow Report, U.S. homeowners have lost $9 trillion in home equity since 2006, and $1.7 trillion of that amount was in 2010 alone. And we know 2011 will be even worse still… analysts might argue about whether it will exceed $2.0 trillion or not, but that’s about it.
- That same report showed that residential property values dropped 63% MORE in 2010 than in 2009. And worse still the pace is accelerating. Between January to June 2010, the housing market lost $680 billion, but in the second half of 2010, losses topped $1 trillion.
- In January of this year, CNN/Money published forecasts made by Moody’s Analytics and Phoenix housing prices aren’t forecasts to return to pre-crash levels until… 2034, and that’s without adjusting for inflation. If we adjusted her forecast for inflation, it’d likely be 2064.
- Both Zillow and Core Logic show that U.S. housing prices have fallen 57 MONTHS in a ROW, and the end is nowhere in sight. We have already blown through the record for housing price decline set between 1929-1933, when the national average was 25.9% . We just hit 26% as of a national average.
- Standard & Poors forecasts that U.S. home prices will fall 7-10% in 2011. But the cold hard truth is that we don’t have any idea of how far prices have already fallen or how far they will fall, because we don’t have a real estate “market”. There are an estimated 7 million homes in the “shadow inventory,” meaning that the banks have taken them back but not put them on the market. A few months ago I checked Maricopa County’s “shadow” numbers… there were about 6,500 homes on the market, but there were 68,000 REO properties.
- Financing is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain. Freddie and Fannie are about to bring down their limits from $729,000 to $625,000 in so-called high-priced markets, and to $417,000 in lower cost metro markets. And the AVERAGE credit score for a Fannie Mae loan for the last two years is 769… yes, that’s AVERAGE.
- Almost 30% of homeowners NATIONWIDE are now “underwater,” and one third of the respondents in the latest Trulia/Realty Trac survey now report knowing someone affected negatively impacted by the foreclosure crisis. And today, there are 45 TIMES more mortgages over 60 days delinquent than there are homes in foreclosure.
Unfortunately, I could go on and on… and on my blog where I’ve written hundreds of articles, I already have. Next, let’s understand the LIE we were all told when they said it was “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers” that caused the crisis.
Stan Leibowitz is a professor of economics who is the director of the Center for the Analysis of Property Rights and Innovation at the management school at the University of Texas, Dallas. He conducted the authoritative study on the housing crisis analyzing a database of 34 million mortgages. Here’s are his own words from his published study:
“… the focus on sub-primes ignores the widely available industry facts (reported by the Mortgage Bankers Association) that 51% of all foreclosed homes had prime loans, not sub-prime, and that the foreclosure rate for prime loans grew by 488% compared to a growth rate of 200% for sub-prime foreclosures. (These percentages are based on the period since the steep ascent in foreclosures began — the third quarter of 2006 — during which more than 4.3 million homes went into foreclosure.)
“Sharing the blame in the popular imagination are other loans where lenders were largely at fault — such as “liar loans,” where lenders never attempted to validate a borrower’s income or assets.”
The simple fact is that irresponsible borrowers had nothing to do with causing this crisis, for one thing there just could never be enough of them. Wall Street’s bankers caused this crisis… they were the “irresponsible borrowers” who gorged themselves on CDOs and CDSs, and then leveraged themselves… meaning they borrowed against their assets just like taking out a second mortgage… by 40:1 and HIGHER.
Did some people take loans they shouldn’t have… it’s a silly question… because it depends on what happened next. If someone took out an adjustable rate loan assuming they could refinance in the future if rates started going up, that was not an unreasonable assumption because it has always been true in tis country. No one saw The Great Depression Part 2 around the corner.
And besides, the worst of the loans have long since gone the way of foreclosure… the people losing homes today are losing them not because they borrowed too much, but because of the free fall that’s taken place ever since. The banking P.R. machine, however, wants us blaming each other… looking in each other’s garages to see if a neighbor has a jet ski… instead of looking at what we’re all about to see courtesy of the federal government’s investigations, the AGs, and numerous lawsuits… or, in other words… AT THEM.
AND EVEN IF YOU OVERLOOK THAT AND MORE… We can’t afford this anymore.
I am NOT at risk of losing my home anytime soon… But I never say never… who knows what would happen to me… or you… or anyone, for that matter… in 2-3 years if things are allowed to continue to fall. Our home once appraised for $925,000… we’ve owned it for 20 years, bought it for $340,000. A few months ago, a home eight doors down on the same side of the street sold for $360,000… it was the first home to sell on our block in two years, and it was an REO, the only one on our block.
So, what happens in two more years of this… with no equity… if I get sick or injured? What if things get worse economically? I don’t know, but I certainly won’t be able to sell it, so foreclosure could conceivably be my only option. That applies to almost anyone… don’t kid yourself… and if it doesn’t apply to you… big deal… you’ll be all alone on your block.
So, we need to stop blaming each other for decisions made during a bubble created by Wall Street, during a credit crisis and economic meltdown created by Wall Street… and we need to start placing the blame where it’s deserved… on Wall Street. We need to demand that our government DO SOMETHING to stop the free fall in housing prices and that means stopping the flood of foreclosures that’s been allowed to continue unabated for 4.5 YEARS. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!
The ship is sinking right in front of our eyes and some of you seem more interested in blaming your neighbors than getting to the lifeboats and fast. And you, me and everyone else is going to go down fast and far, years after year… while we fight over whether someone should have bought their home in 2005. Democrat… Republican… Conservative… Liberal… WHO CARES.
I’ve personally lost more than a million in equity, and at 50 years old next week… I can’t afford to lose any more. It the people can’t come together soon, there will be people like me that just start walking away. And then there’ll be no stopping anything.
Stop buying the banker’s BULL… you see what the bankers are really like, don’t you people of Arizona? They’ve corrupted your legislature… I’m the guy that broke the story about SB 1259 and Rep. Seel… ME… I’m the guy. The banking lobby has so destroyed your democracy that a bill that passed the senate 28-2 was made to disappear once weekend without a word to anyone.
Then a second attempt to get an amendment passed ended up with Rep. Seel accepting a bribe… or, rather a principal reduction, and your state’s Mortgage Lenders Association bragged that they accomplished both of these feats… they bragged that they were responsible for the blatant corruption of your own legislature.
What will you do about that? If you would do nothing, allow me to remind you of a famous poem:
First they came for the communists ,
And I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a communist.
~~~
Then they came for the trade unionists,
And I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a trade unionist.
~~~
Then they came for the Jews,
And I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a Jew.
~~~
Then they came for me.
And there was no one left to speak out for me.
~~~
LAST POINT: For those that believe that you are helpless against the awesome power of the banking lobby and corrupt politicians… this is from my article just a few weeks ago:
it was only last November when a group of homeowners in Hawaii, with the support of Faith Action for Community Assets (“FACE”), whose members are predominately churches of various denomination and non-profit community groups, embarked on a grass roots effort to bring meaningful change to the process homeowners were being forced to endure when faced with the prospect of losing their homes to foreclosure.
Their dialog about the foreclosure crisis began when several ministers began talking openly about there being no dignity for the families trying to save their homes from foreclosure by banks.
With the next legislative session scheduled to begin in January of 2011, key members of the team, wasted no time finding out as much as possible about the foreclosure process, in order to begin drafting a proposed bill that would be strong enough to be effective.
I’m quite proud to be able to say that members of the group in Hawaii read my articles throughout the process, and used them with others… and the bill passed. They beat the banking lobby… 49-2 and 28-2 in the House and Senate respectively.
Want to know what helped push it over the edge… and I didn’t know this until after it had happened… YOUR CORRUPTION HELPED HAWAII PASS THE BILL because I wrote about what was going on in Arizona and they saw it and, horrified… met with others in the legislature and said they must not let that type of corruption visit their islands.
And when the banking lobbyists showed up two weeks before the vote thinking that they would kill the bill like they did here, people didn’t want to see them… because of what they had just done in Arizona!
PEOPLE OF ARIZONA… THIS CRISIS COULDN’T BE MORE IN YOUR FACE.
THE PEOPLE OF HAWAII DID IT… CAN’T YOU EVEN TRY? NOT ONLY CAN YOU TRY, YOU CAN WIN. JUST SAY THE WORD AND I’M ON MY WAY TO PHOENIX.
Mandelman out.
Arizona Residents… Please Visit Paula Pennypacker here: PPENNYPACKER BLOG
Agflation, Plant a Garden, Raise A Clam, Save a Farmer, Save Your Own World
I spent a little time in my tiny, but productive garden this morning, which got me obsessing over one of my growing concerns….the inflation of food prices around the world and the traumatic impact further problems with food pricing and delivery will have on each of us.
I’m not getting out of the fraudclosure fight, but I’m conceding that the problems in our courts and economy are so bad that they cannot be resolved in any orderly fashion. I am losing faith that our courts, and by extension our government, have the will or the ability to solve the systemic and catastrophic problems that are on full display in foreclosure and bankruptcy courtrooms all across this country. And while there are principled attorneys and advocates that are fighting an epic fight to preserve your rights and defend our court and our country from the economic and Constitutional massacre that is occurring, we are losing this war. We’re losing the war every time we are defeated on motions in courtrooms. We’re losing every time a homeowner does not hire an attorney to properly defend their case. We’re losing every time we appear before judges that are granting foreclosure judgments that are contrary to long established rules of law and of court. We’re losing the war when the attorneys and advocates who are fighting this fight are targeted with lawsuits, with intimidation, with Bar complaints.
Speech isn’t Free and Dissent Must Be Punished. Those who run this formerly free country have too much to lose to allow dissent to fester too successfully.
The corporations and interests that own our government will get their settlement. They will indeed moonwalk away from the crimes and the collusion and the corruption. It will not cost them $20 million dollars….it will cost them far less. But make no mistake the settlements, the cover up, the diversions will cost every single one of us and our children and our grandchildren far more than we can comprehend. But enough about all that, let me get to the real heart of this post. You think Wisconsin means something? The numbers they’re arguing over are minuscule compared to what we’re all really facing. Just wait until there is a systemic or economic disruption in our tenuous food supply system. Yesterday, a friend mentioned a conversation with a federal official who confirmed that one of our government’s biggest fears is even a brief disruption in the security and distribution of one particular foodstuff, dairy. Dairy is the biggest concern because it is the most vulnerable to storage and delivery disruptions. But that’s just one area, let’s look at the whole picture:
“Higher food prices set off the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt and the mass protests in countries like Algeria, Jordan, Yemen, Bahrain and Iran. People in these countries buy more unprocessed foods and spend a much higher percentage of their income on food, so they have been severely impoverished by Bernanke’s QE2.”
Of course, being an American, all I really care about is how it affects me, an American, and American prices, and how in the hell I am going to afford higher prices on my American income which has, as he said earlier, gone down when inflation-adjusted. In that regard, Joel Bowman, Managing Editor here at The Daily Reckoning notes, “Wholesale prices jumped 0.8% in January. The producer price index (PPI) has now jumped 3% over the last four months. And no, that’s not an annualized figure.” I was hurriedly shutting the bunker’s door when I heard Mr. Bowman go on, “Note that the PPI headline number is for ‘finished goods’ – stuff that’s ready to be sold direct to consumers. In the category of ‘crude goods,’ the figures are far worse – up 3.3% in January, and up a staggering 15.8% over the last four months.”
and
Egypt’s problems have been simmering for years, but food inflation has brought it to a boil. Remember: food inflation is behind much of the unrest, not just in Egypt but all over the world. Commodity prices have been rising for months, and many countries have already seen unrest over higher food prices.In November, overall inflation in Egypt topped 8.58 percent for the year, its highest level in 19 months. But food inflation has been much more pronounced.

But enough about all of that. Let’s talk about what we can do to help distract us from the problems that we’re facing. I continue to reach out into our rural communities and particularly those parts of these communities that are producing for themselves and supporting the critical basics that we’ve all disastrously been diverted away from. As I have in so many other posts, I again reach out to the farmers and producers in Florida. If you’re a small farmer producing food and supporting our local economy, I will consider representing you if you’re facing foreclosure or other creditor problems that compromise your ability to fulfill your vital function in this economy. Now take a look at three business that are producing and which are supporting our communities. Let your imagination and dreams fly with thoughts about what how we could start to make things right by getting back to the principles embodied herein:
Myakka Nurseries: Crowley Nursery
We have 20 acres at the end of a dirt road. I had a vision of beautiful gardens. Even though we were far away from the city and experiencing the ups and downs of life, the vision of a nursery became reality. I drove an hour from our home every day to my dream, getting home again in the dark. We finally sold our home, and moved to the property.
We started out by joining the Rare Fruit Society to learn about the edible plants one could grow in Florida. Today, we belong to many Rare Fruit Tree Societies. If you can eat it and grow it here, we have it, or usually, can get it for you. And, if it does not grow here successfully, we will let you know.
Bay Shellfish
Hemmel, 44, is Florida’s clam king. The owner of the Bay Shellfish Co., he collects clams from murky water, studies clams in his lab, and manipulates light and water temperature so his clams will reproduce according to his own busy schedule. At his hatchery, the largest in the South, he annually produces about 300 million baby clams for restoration, research and food. Clam farmers from coast to coast buy from him. His goal: at least a dozen clams in every Florida pot.
Florida Native Plants
We come to know a place by the subtle cues we take from nature. Here it’s pine flatwoods, oak and palm hammocks, sand dunes and sea oats. The Real Florida! Beautiful places are being lost to development. That doesn’t have to be. We can bring back natural Florida by using native plants in our landscapes.In Florida you can be outdoors year-round. It’s a glorious place to garden. Plants don’t take years to mature — you can watch them grow. In three years you can make a difference. What you do matters.
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HOLY MOSES- I FOUND THE HYDROPONIC HOLY LAND!
As some of you know some of my paranoid delusions relate to fears about our nation’s food delivery system and what people will do when they’re not able to get food from the grocery store. I think it is an absolute certainty that we will experience some major catastrophic event in the near future that will seriously disrupt our lives for certainly the short and probably long term. One of the scary facts about our world is we’ve only got like 48 hours worth of food supply in the grocery stores and most people don’t have more than a day or two’s worth of food in their home.
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You Wanna Know What Makes Me Real Angry????
It’s the fact that all the big shot, Fat Cat, rich bastards at the top of the pyramid are continuing to get richer while all of us are paying for it. They’re getting richer with OUR MONEY.
MY MONEY, YOUR MONEY, OUR MONEY is being given away to the banks, while the same banks are shoving it in their pockets and shoving the American taxpayer in the face…
The Obama administration will spend less than a quarter of the $50 billion it promised to help homeowners facing foreclosure, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said in a report Monday.
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The REST Report Matters at REST Report Matters
By now, I would think, most of my readers know that when homeowners ask me questions about today’s loan modification process, I tell them that, if it were me… and it certainly could be one day… I’d run a REST Report. In fact, I wouldn’t even consider applying for loan modification, without running my own REST Report, and assuming it was NPV positive, sending it to my mortgage servicer, along with the other documents required, to my mortgage servicer.
I say this without hesitation, because the REST Report has now been used by more than 1,000 homeowners facing foreclosure, and it is the only way, outside of a HAMP servicer, that you can know with certainty whether you qualify for a loan modification under the president’s HAMP program. And should the REST Report show that you do not qualify under HAMP, the report shows whether the NPV of other loan modification scenarios would cause the investor who holds your note to come out ahead financially as compared with foreclosure.
In point of fact, it’s the only tool or practice I’ve ever seen that’s made a consistent, measurable, and highly positive difference for homeowners, attempting to get their loans modified. Last year at this time, if someone asked for my advice on how to increase the odds that a servicer would ultimately modify a loan, I would have said “get a lawyer.” Now I respond to those inquiries, by saying, “get a REST Report.” You can always hire a lawyer later, should you feel the need.
There are law firms and individual attorneys stretching from coast-to-coast that offer the REST Report along side loan modification services, and in fact several have told me that they are no longer accept a new client until he or she has run the report, and that report shows a positive NPV as compared with the costs of foreclosure.’
Enter REST Report Matters…
Founded a few months ago, with offices in San Diego, California, REST Report Matters is the brainchild of partners, Michael Nazarinia and Charlie Rose. But even though it’s their vision and leadership that drives their organization forward each day, the pair has also made a special commitment to supporting the readers of Mandelman Matters.
For example, they invited me to their offices to provide three days of training to their staff, in addition to the extensive training they themselves offer, and that training not only covered the technical aspects of the REST platform, but also created a professional atmosphere designed to be more consultative than sales driven, according to Charlie. He wanted me to tell my readers that they should feel free to call REST Report Matters with questions anytime, without worrying that the person they speak with will be singularly focused on selling them something.
I’ve known Michael for about a year now. In his last position, his firm helped support my efforts to protect the rights of a homeowner to hire an attorney when at risk of foreclosure. He and I got along from the very first time we spoke on the phone, as I recall… you’ll find him to be smart, knowledgeable and caring. Like me, Michael is a lifetime learner, which I believe is a euphemism
for what we used to call a nerd, in my day.
The team at REST Report Matters also stands out in my mind, as many have worked with Charlie and Michael in past positions so there is a sense of shared purpose beyond what one would expect in a young company. Oh, and that’s the company that’s young, the staff… not so much, which I also like a great deal. Call me crazy, but I’m not sure I’d care much for talking about my mortgage with someone whose experience with mortgages consists of hearing about them from Mom & Dad, so no worries about that here. Charlie is actually pretty young… 30 years-old, I believe, and I although I usually don’t find myself in conversations with too many thirty year-olds, entirely by design actually, but Charlie’s certainly the exception. He’s quick to grasp the significance of new things, and I can’t imagine any homeowners not liking him and appreciating his candor right away.
But, I am perhaps most excited about a new password protected section of the firm’s site, that although still under construction as I write this, REST Report Matters is in the process of incorporating several unique features into their “clients only” Website that, soon will be capable of delivering a unique, technology-driven ongoing educational support and community component that I think homeowners will find both valuable and even enjoyable… to the extent that anything having to do with this topic can be considered enjoyable… perhaps stimulating is a better word in this instance.
I wouldn’t want to spoil anything that’s in development and only a few weeks away from the public launch, so suffice it to say that the suite of services the firm is developing are designed to fit together and complete the picture of what optimal support for working with the REST Report to get a loan modified should look like.
REST Report Matters is not a law firm, and as such they do not represent homeowners with their lenders and servicers, nor do they provide advice to homeowners, or in any sense offer comprehensive loan modification services. It’s just the REST Report, packaged with other important support tools and educational programs… delivered by the highly trained, compassionate professionals at REST Report Matters.
You can visit REST Report Matters here.
Or, call them at: 877-737-8440
And, as always, you can reach me for further discussions at mandelman@mac.com.
Mandelman Matters is a California Nonprofit Corpooration and does receive a small percentage of the revenue generated by sales of the REST Report.
However, you may be assured that it a very small percentage and nowhere near enough to get me to recommend something I wouldn’t be recommending regardless. If you want any additional details, including, email me and I’ll be happy to disclose anything and everything.
Because if I can’t disclose it, I don’t do it.
Survey: Pace of foreclosures may be slowing
Loan Servicer Tactics… Foreclose don’t modify; lie, deceive, whatever it takes
As a citizen, please start asking tougher questions and demanding truthful answers of your elected officials. We MUST hold these men and women accountable to representing ‘we the people’ instead of their lobby pals.
Whatever you hear from the Administration or any of the large institutions via the drive-by media you can assume that it’s a lie or many shades of gray with dash or two of spin. Why? Well, of course, the truth is not going to get votes for politicians or more investors and account holders for any of these characters who operate in the shadows of financial institution corporate offices across America.
Let me give you a dose of truth serum in case you’re tempted to believe the drive by media reports on the foreclosures and the Making Home Affordable plan we’ve been told is going to rescue our economy and the housing market and the millions of families jobless and now facing foreclosure. You ready?
Here it is: the loan servicers don’t care about anything but money and the modus operandi is clear… foreclose as fast as possible on everyone in a mortgage hardship. Just modify enough loans to make everyone think we’re really on board with this. Make excuses for everything else. Lie to media about what’s really going on because mostly everyone believes what they hear anyway.
A deeper look into the numbers and statistics will leave you scratching your head though – and asking yourself the question, “but why?”
According to an article by Gretchen Morgenson from the New York Times, “Alan M. White, an assistant professor at the Valparaiso University law school in Indiana, analyzed data on 3.5 million subprime and alt-A mortgages in securitization pools overseen by Wells Fargo. The loans were written in 2005 through 2007; data on their performance is provided to the trusts’ investors. Mortgages handled by five of the nation’s largest loan servicing companies — Bank of America, Chase Home Finance and Litton Loan Servicing among them — are contained in the Wells Fargo data.
Mr. White found that mortgage modifications peaked in February and have declined in all but one month since. While servicers modified 23,749 loans in these trusts in February, they changed only 19,041 in May and 18,179 in June. This is exactly when servicers were supposed to be responding to the government’s loan modification urgings.
Foreclosures, meanwhile, keep rising. In June, 281,560 were in process, slightly above the 277,847 in May. Last January, there were about 242,000 foreclosures in the pipeline among the Wells Fargo trusts.”
Well, isn’t that interesting. You see, the numbers simply don’t lie. They tell the truth and expose the raw data of what is really happening. The report continues, “the most fascinating, and frightening, figures in the data detail how much money is lost when foreclosed homes are sold. In June, the data show almost 32,000 liquidation sales; the average loss on those was 64.7 percent of the original loan balance.”
Did you catch that? The AVERAGE loss on a house that a servicers takes to foreclosure sale is a whopping 64.7% of the original loan balance!!!! The average loan amount was $223,000. But in the liquidation sale, the property sold for $144,000 less, or a $79,000 sales price on average.
So any logical person goes, “why? Why would a servicer foreclose on the home instead of providing a loan modification for a homeowner who wants to pay but just needs a reduction in that payment?” I know I can’t be the only one who’s wondered that…
If you want to find the answer you just gotta follow the money… it’s that simple. And the answer does not shed any more favorable light on these servicers – who, by the way, are just subsidiaries of the main financial institutions. Example: Citimortgage is the servicer. They are owned by Citigroup. America’s Servicing Company is the servicer. They are owned by Wells Fargo.
So back to following the money. First, the pooling and servicing agreements governing these trusts, servicers and trustees usually contain “default servicing provisions” which provide the servicer which much higher fees when the loan goes into default. Then the servicer also gets all sorts of other fees reimbursed to them upon a liquidation sale such as BPO fees, inspection fees, legal fees, etc. These fees may get paid to the servicer right away but may not be reimbursed until the sale goes through. But, here’s the BIG reason…
Very often, if not most of the times, these servicers were paid in full for all these loans when they acted as the sponsor and sold the Notes (assets) to these trusts. The trust investors put up a lump sum amount to the servicer and the servicer agreed to collect the monies, manage the escrow accounts and in turn, made a guarantee of cash flow payments to the trust each month. The trust investors are most worried about one thing… their monthly payment on the cash flow. If they keep getting their monthly cash payment, do you think they’re going to be screaming bloody murder? Probably not. As long as the check keeps coming, I got no qualms. Stop the checks and I’m going to be gettin’ all in your business. Think about it… haven’t you noticed a peculiar lack of lawsuits being filed by MBS trust investors or the trusts themselves? One would think the federal courts would be littered with lawsuits by these trusts against all the institutions in the securitization chain for all sorts of allegations regarding the massive losses you’d think they’re realizing due to the defaults.
So, to keep the investors out of their “business” the servicer has to figure out a way to keep those cash flow payments going. Well, let’s say I’m servicing a pool of 1000 loans and the monthly cash flow on that pool is $1 million (or $1000 per loan average). But my default rate starts rising and now 10% of these loans are not paying. Well, that’s $100,000 per month less that I’m getting as the servicer. Shoot, how do I keep making the payment of $1 million per month if I’m only receiving $900,000?
Oh, I got it! If I can foreclose on a couple homes in default, take a 64.7% loss on it but I still get $79,000 in one lump sum from each home I liquidate, I can keep making that cash payment to the trust. All I need to do is liquidate about 1.2 homes per month on average, and, even though I take a huge loss on these homes, I can keep making that cash flow payment to the trust, keep my investors happy and better yet, keep them out of my business and away from asking all sorts of questions I really don’t want to answer. Note: this game can only carry on for so long. At some point the pied piper is going to pipe…
This my best stab at a simplified answer to “why” these servicers are ignoring the Making Home Affordable program and foreclosing as fast as they possibly can. Nothing else makes sense to me. If you have any other input, I’d love to hear about in the forum on this topic.
The kicker here is that these servicers don’t have legal standing to foreclose. They don’t own the Note in 80%+ of the cases – and that number is probably higher than 90% of the time. So they unlawfully seize a family’s home, sell it even though they don’t own it and in the process they also violate the servicing agreements they are governed by. These agreements mandate that the servicer act in a fiduciary manner with respect to the interests of the investors. I can tell you unequivocally that taking an average 64.7% loss on a trust asset is worse for the trust versus modifying the loan at a higher amount (still with principal reduction for the borrower) and recapturing the interest. There is NO WAY the current servicer model of foreclose and liquidate passes the NPV test for these trust assets – at least as far as I can see.
For reference and further context, here is the article written by Gretchen Morgenson at the New York Times.
So Many Foreclosures, So Little Logic
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
LAST week, the stock market tumbled on news that housing foreclosures and delinquencies rose again in the first quarter. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said that among the 34 million loans it tracks, foreclosures in progress rose 22 percent, to 844,389. That figure was 73 percent higher than in the same period last year.
But the comptroller’s office also said that amid the gloom, there was promising data about loan modifications: they rose 55 percent in the quarter. That growth came on a very low base, of course, but the move encouraged John C. Dugan, head of the comptroller’s office.
“As the administration’s ‘Making Home Affordable’ program gains traction and helps offset the impact of this very difficult economic cycle,” he said in a statement, “we should continue to see progress in future reports.”
A glimpse of second-quarter mortgage data, however, indicates that the progress Mr. Dugan and his colleagues in Washington are hoping for may take longer to emerge — raising questions about whether policymakers and banks are moving quickly or intelligently enough on the foreclosure problem.
Foreclosures remain one of the great financial ills for the economy. The Bush administration largely overlooked foreclosures affecting average homeowners, focusing instead on propping up elite, troubled financial institutions with taxpayer funds. The Obama administration has said it wants to wrestle the foreclosure issue to the ground by encouraging mortgage loan modifications, but its efforts have gotten little traction.
Loan modifications occur when a lender agrees to change terms of a troubled borrower’s mortgage; the most common approach is to reduce the loan’s interest rate. Cutting the amount of principal owed — an option that could be of more help to a borrower — is rare because it means homeowners pay less money back to the bank over time.
Lenders and their representatives, however, don’t like to modify loans through interest rate cuts or principal reductions because, of course, it reduces the income they receive from borrowers. No surprise, then, that loan modifications have been a trickle amid the recent foreclosure flood.
Enter the government, with the program it announced in March to encourage modifications. It offers incentives to loan servicers to change mortgage terms, providing $1,000 for each loan they modify. The program focuses on making payments more affordable through lower interest rates, but delinquent amounts and late fees are typically tacked onto the mortgage balance. “Making Home Affordable” does not compel lenders to reduce mortgage balances.
Servicers signed on to the program in April. The program’s early months were not covered by the O.C.C.’s first-quarter report. But other figures on modifications conducted in April, May and June are available. And they show a decline in modifications, not an increase as the government hoped.
Alan M. White, an assistant professor at the Valparaiso University law school in Indiana, analyzed data on 3.5 million subprime and alt-A mortgages in securitization pools overseen by Wells Fargo. The loans were written in 2005 through 2007; data on their performance is provided to the trusts’ investors. Mortgages handled by five of the nation’s largest loan servicing companies — Bank of America, Chase Home Finance and Litton Loan Servicing among them — are contained in the Wells Fargo data.
Mr. White found that mortgage modifications peaked in February and have declined in all but one month since. While servicers modified 23,749 loans in these trusts in February, they changed only 19,041 in May and 18,179 in June. This is exactly when servicers were supposed to be responding to the government’s loan modification urgings.
Foreclosures, meanwhile, keep rising. In June, 281,560 were in process, slightly above the 277,847 in May. Last January, there were about 242,000 foreclosures in the pipeline among the Wells Fargo trusts.
“I was hoping we would see some impact in June of the government’s program,” Mr. White said. “Is ‘Home Affordable’ working? My short answer is no.”
To be sure, the government’s data differs from that which Mr. White analyzed, and its loan modification figures for the second quarter may look better as a result. The O.C.C. includes prime loans as well as subprime, for example, while the Wells Fargo data contains no prime loans.
Nevertheless, Mr. White has collected the figures since November 2008, and he said that in the months since, the performance of the 3.5 million mortgages that he analyzes tracked the O.C.C. data pretty closely.
THE Wells Fargo data is illuminating. It shows that in June, 58 percent of modifications cut the payments that the borrower has to pay, a slightly smaller percentage than in April or May. The average reduction in June was $173 a month.
But the most fascinating, and frightening, figures in the data detail how much money is lost when foreclosed homes are sold. In June, the data show almost 32,000 liquidation sales; the average loss on those was 64.7 percent of the original loan balance.
Here are the numbers: the average loan balance began at almost $223,000. But in the liquidation sale, the property sold for $144,000 less, on average. Perhaps no other single figure shows how wildly the mortgage mania pumped up home prices. It also bodes poorly for the quality of the mortgage-related assets lurking in banks’ books.
Loss severities, like foreclosures, are rising. In November, losses averaged 56.1 percent of the original loan balance; in February, 63.3 percent.
Given losses like these, Mr. White said he was perplexed that lenders and their representatives were resisting reducing principal when they modify loans. His data shows how rare it is for lenders to reduce principal. In June, for example, 3,135 loans — just 17.2 percent of the total modified — involved write-downs of principal, interest or fees. The total loss from these write-downs was just $45 million in June.
And yet, the losses incurred in foreclosure sales involving loans in the securitization trusts were a staggering $4.59 billion in June. “There is 100 times as much money lost in foreclosure sales as there was in writing down balances in modifications,” Mr. White said. “That is not rational economic behavior.”
If banks have written down the value of these loans to the 40 cents on the dollar that they are fetching on foreclosures — the only true value for these homes right now — then why don’t they bite the bullet and reduce the loan amount outstanding for the troubled borrowers? That type of modification would be far more likely to succeed than larding a borrower who is hopelessly underwater with yet more arrears.
“You can reduce payments with a lot of gimmicks similar to those built into subprime loans — temporary rate reductions that defer a lot of principal, balloon payments,” Mr. White said. “To me that leads to a situation where American homeowners are paying 50 to 60 percent of their incomes for mortgages which reset in 2011 and 2012. That is not solving the problem.”
Certainly not for borrowers, that is. And because many of these losses will ultimately be passed on to taxpayers, it’s not solving our problem, either.





















