- Foxes Guarding the Hen House | Analysis: Bank-Picked Experts Take On U.S. Fraudclosure Reviews
- Foreclosure Fraud – BAC / Countrywide Must Pay $108 Million for Illegally Overcharging Struggling Homeowners; Loan Servicer Inflated Fees, Mishandled Loans of Borrowers
- USA, DOT, OCC Fraudclosure Settlement Consent Orders for the Banksters
FEDSPEAK Report | The Impact of Vacant, Tax-Delinquent and Foreclosed Property on Sales Prices of Neighboring Homes
Email Warned That Bank Up For Bailout Was ‘Disastrous’
- Class Action – Bank of America Sued by Homeowners for Withholding Federal Bailout Funds
- Matt Taibbi | Attorneys General Settlement: The Next Big Bank Bailout?
- Correspondence Between A.I.G., the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the Securities and Exchange Commission Over How to Keep Elements of the Bailout from being Publicly Disclosed!!!
GAO Finds Serious Conflicts at the Fed | The Sanders Report on the GAO Audit on Major Conflicts of Interest at the Federal Reserve
- Report | Government Accountability Office (GAO) Audit of the Federal Reserve’s Emergency Actions
- Shadow Banking – Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report no. 458 July 2010
- FRB Press Release | Kevin Warsh announces his intent to resign as a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Simultaneous Protests in West Palm Beach FL and Seattle WA Target Ocwen Financial Today
A Potential Reason Why 4closureFraud.org is More Stable than BankofAmerica.com
Call for Papers: Financial Institutions and Consumer Financial Services Section
There is still time to submit for this Call for Papers -- the extended window is closing on September 20. In addition to the Call for Papers, the section program at the Annual Meetings of the Association of American Law Schools features a talk by Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin, and a scholarly panel on reviving financial institutions, their study and regulation -- banks and beyond.
Fedspeak Report | The Post Foreclosure Experience of U.S. Households have the Same or Even Better Living Standards than Before they Defaulted
Fed ponders another intervention
Twistin' time is here.
The good news: the Federal Reserve doesn’t appear to be considering another inflation-producing round of quantitative easing. The bad news: what they are considering, called a “twist” strategy, won’t help much, either. According to the Washington Post, the Fed might start buying long-term Treasury bonds but will fund the purchases through sales of its holdings [...]
Federal Reserve Board announces a formal enforcement action against the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. and Goldman Sachs Bank USA
One More Time, With Feeling
A Credit Slips reader pointed me to an article in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution pondering why the bankruptcy rate is falling. The piece is filled with quotes about the relevance of the economy and the cost of filing bankruptcy. Most of it is wrong. For example, it is right that the cost of filing has increased since the 2005 changes to the bankruptcy law, but there is no evidence the cost has risen in the last year. Thus, the rising cost of filing bankruptcy helps to explain why bankruptcy rates have declined relative to pre-2005 levels but not why they have declined since last year.
Regular readers will know a piece like this just pushes my buttons. Outstanding consumer credit has the strongest statistical link to the short-term ups and downs of the bankruptcy filing rate. The relationship is counter-intuitive and paradoxical. As consumer credit rises, banrkuptcy rates tend to fall in the short term. As people borrow to stave off the day of reckoning, they postpone bankruptcy. When consumer credit tightens, people are less able to borrow to satisify their current needs and, as they run out of options, are more likely to end up in a bankruptcy lawyer's office. When it comes to the economy, the bankruptcy filing rate tells us very little about the overall health of the economy. The strongest reason why bankruptcy filing rates have eased slightly is that consumer credit has become slightly more available, according to the Federal Reserve's latest release.
A previous blog post discussed at length the link between consumer credit and bankruptcy filing rates. That post featured a monthly trend line for the past few years. The relationship is long-standing, however. The graph to the right shows how bankruptcy rates tend to move with consumer credit since 1960. (Cllicking on the graph will open a larger image, and more detail about the calculations appear at the bottom of the post.) The consumer credit axis is inverted (such that negative numbers are at the top) to make the relationship easier to see. In addtion to the "ocular regression" of just eyeballing the charts in this post and the previous post, more rigorous stastical testing verifies the relationship. (Lawless, Robert M. (2007). "The Paradox of Consumer Credit," University of Illinois Law Review, 2007:347-74.) In making a forecast of this year's bankruptcy filing rate, I relied heavily on the trend in the available of consumer credit, and the forecast has been pretty close to spot on. And, in a self-congratulatory reference (humor me by pretending the rest of this paragraph is otherwise), it is not as if these points have not been made in the New York Times instead of just this small corner of the blogosphere.
This story on bankruptcy filing rates came out just as I was preparing for our Empirical Methods course. In the first week, my co-teacher, Jen Robbennolt, and I discuss how we all like to find patterns that don't really exist. Bankruptcy attorneys might see people come into their office who are unemployed and come to the conclusion that unemployment drives the bankruptcy rate. During economic downturns, the topic of bankruptcy becomes more salient, and we are more likely to remember stories about bankruptcy. Thus, we tend to associate higher bankruptcy rates with the economic downturn.
There is at least one way, however, that all of my data analysis is wrong. The data suggests there is a tendency for consumer credit to affect bankruptcy rates. Technically, all the data suggests is that there is a relationship--causality could be moving in the other direction although I think that is unlikely. The data describes the tendency--the average effect--and by so doing fails to capture any individual case, which is both the strength and weakness of the analysis. Also, the analysis does not explain all of the variation in bankruptcy filing rates. Unemployment, economiic downturns, and other factors such as foreclosures undoubtedly play a role, but it is just that their role pales in comparison to the role of the outstanding amount of consumer credit.
Notes on the graph: The graph shows the percentage change from year-to-year for total consumer credit outstanding and total bankruptcy filings. The right axis for consumer credit is inverted to allow a clearer understanding of the inverse relationship between the two data series. Total consumer credit, which includes both revolving and nonrevolving credit, is taken from the Federal Reserve Statistical Release G.19 on consumer credit. The bankruptcy filing data are from the Administrative Office for U.S. Courts. Because of limits on the availability of old bankruptcy filing data, all data are for the twelth months ending June 30 for the year shown or as of June 30 for the consumer credit changes.
One More Time, With Feeling
A Credit Slips reader pointed me to an article in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution pondering why the bankruptcy rate is falling. The piece is filled with quotes about the relevance of the economy and the cost of filing bankruptcy. Most of it is wrong. For example, it is right that the cost of filing has increased since the 2005 changes to the bankruptcy law, but there is no evidence the cost has risen in the last year. Thus, the rising cost of filing bankruptcy helps to explain why bankruptcy rates have declined relative to pre-2005 levels but not why they have declined since last year.
Regular readers will know a piece like this just pushes my buttons. Outstanding consumer credit has the strongest statistical link to the short-term ups and downs of the bankruptcy filing rate. The relationship is counter-intuitive and paradoxical. As consumer credit rises, banrkuptcy rates tend to fall in the short term. As people borrow to stave off the day of reckoning, they postpone bankruptcy. When consumer credit tightens, people are less able to borrow to satisify their current needs and, as they run out of options, are more likely to end up in a bankruptcy lawyer's office. When it comes to the economy, the bankruptcy filing rate tells us very little about the overall health of the economy. The strongest reason why bankruptcy filing rates have eased slightly is that consumer credit has become slightly more available, according to the Federal Reserve's latest release.
A previous blog post discussed at length the link between consumer credit and bankruptcy filing rates. That post featured a monthly trend line for the past few years. The relationship is long-standing, however. The graph to the right shows how bankruptcy rates tend to move with consumer credit since 1960. (Cllicking on the graph will open a larger image, and more detail about the calculations appear at the bottom of the post.) The consumer credit axis is inverted (such that negative numbers are at the top) to make the relationship easier to see. In addtion to the "ocular regression" of just eyeballing the charts in this post and the previous post, more rigorous stastical testing verifies the relationship. (Lawless, Robert M. (2007). "The Paradox of Consumer Credit," University of Illinois Law Review, 2007:347-74.) In making a forecast of this year's bankruptcy filing rate, I relied heavily on the trend in the available of consumer credit, and the forecast has been pretty close to spot on. And, in a self-congratulatory reference (humor me by pretending the rest of this paragraph is otherwise), it is not as if these points have not been made in the New York Times instead of just this small corner of the blogosphere.
This story on bankruptcy filing rates came out just as I was preparing for our Empirical Methods course. In the first week, my co-teacher, Jen Robbennolt, and I discuss how we all like to find patterns that don't really exist. Bankruptcy attorneys might see people come into their office who are unemployed and come to the conclusion that unemployment drives the bankruptcy rate. During economic downturns, the topic of bankruptcy becomes more salient, and we are more likely to remember stories about bankruptcy. Thus, we tend to associate higher bankruptcy rates with the economic downturn.
There is at least one way, however, that all of my data analysis is wrong. The data suggests there is a tendency for consumer credit to affect bankruptcy rates. Technically, all the data suggests is that there is a relationship--causality could be moving in the other direction although I think that is unlikely. The data describes the tendency--the average effect--and by so doing fails to capture any individual case, which is both the strength and weakness of the analysis. Also, the analysis does not explain all of the variation in bankruptcy filing rates. Unemployment, economiic downturns, and other factors such as foreclosures undoubtedly play a role, but it is just that their role pales in comparison to the role of the outstanding amount of consumer credit.
Notes on the graph: The graph shows the percentage change from year-to-year for total consumer credit outstanding and total bankruptcy filings. The right axis for consumer credit is inverted to allow a clearer understanding of the inverse relationship between the two data series. Total consumer credit, which includes both revolving and nonrevolving credit, is taken from the Federal Reserve Statistical Release G.19 on consumer credit. The bankruptcy filing data are from the Administrative Office for U.S. Courts. Because of limits on the availability of old bankruptcy filing data, all data are for the twelth months ending June 30 for the year shown or as of June 30 for the consumer credit changes.
Fed gave Wall Street $1.2 trillion in 2008 loans
Ugly.
As it turns out, the $700 billion TARP bailout in late 2008 was just an appetizer for Wall Street. Behind the scenes, the Federal Reserve gave out $1.2 trillion in loans to banks around the world, desperately attempting to maintain liquidity in a system that looked headed for collapse, according to Bloomberg News: Citigroup Inc. [...]
Are Corporations People Too?
The "corporations are people, my friend" line was quite the momement. But as bad as it sounded, Mitt had a theoretical point. People (as well as other corporations) own corporations and people work for corporations. The problem isn't that there aren't people at the end of the line behind corporations. The problem is that it's a minority of (primarily wealthier)people.
According to the Federal Reserve's 2007 Survey of Consumer Finances, only 17.9% of families held stocks, 11.4% hold mutual funds, and 52.6% hold retirement accounts that likely hold a lot of stocks and mutual fund assets.
I haven't been able to find data on the percentage of people employed by corporations, but it's assuredly large. That said, it's hard to imagine that corporate tax breaks would generally result in higher salaries for most employees rather than higher dividends for shareholders. The competition to attract capital is likely fiercer than the competition to attract labor (and certainly for semi-skilled or unskilled labor), which would mean that corporate tax breaks would benefit shareholders (a minority of people) and highly skilled labor (again a minority that probably doesn't need a lot of help). So maybe a more accurate phrase for Mitt is "corporations are wealthy people, my friend".
Is it “almost treasonous” for Fed to launch stimulus before election?
No more than tough negotiations are "terrorism".
Rick Perry had the commentariat hyperventilating yesterday, and not without reason, after an appearance in Iowa. Perry told a Cedar Rapids crowd that any attempt by the Federal Reserve to implement an extraordinary stimulus — ie, a QE3 or “printing money” — before the election would be “almost treasonous.” Perry warned that Texas would treat [...]
Quotes of the day
Tests.
“Texas Gov. Rick Perry capped off his first full day of campaigning in Iowa on Monday by suggesting that if the Federal Reserve prints more money between now and November 2012 it would be akin to an act of treason. “‘If this guy prints more money between now and the election,’ Perry said, ‘I don’t [...]
Fed statement a vote of no confidence in economy through 2013?
Unprecedented two-year pledge.
The current historically-loose monetary policy will continue, according to a Federal Reserve statement last night — for two more years. The Fed normally doesn’t offer projections with such unambiguously lengthy timelines, preferring to keep its options open. These, however, are not normal times — nor do we have normal leadership: The Federal Reserve announced on [...]
Mortgage Bankers Association Letter to the Federal Reserve RE “Skin in the Game” and the Ability of Borrowers to Repay
Hey Everybody… It’s “Pretend You’re Surprised About the Economy Day!”
You know, some people like Christmas, others Thanksgiving… still others are partial to The 4th of July, I suppose. But my favorite special days of the year are fast becoming the “Pretend Your Surprised About the Economy Days!” which I suppose are sponsored by the Obama Administration in conjunction with the United States Treasury Department, underwritten by the Federal Reserve.
Here’s how it works… I give you the headline straight out of the news of the day, and when you’re done reading it, you say out loud… “Oh my God, I can’t believe that!” Or something to that effect. Got it? Ready to play? Here we go…
1. U.S. Home Prices Falling Through Floor – Dip-dip-doo-wap-dip-dip-doo-wap-dip-dip!
March’s S&P/Case Shiller Home Price Indices show we’re having a “double dip” in U.S. home prices. In the first quarter of this year, the U.S. National Home Price Index dropped by 4.2% and that’s after it fell 3.6% in the fourth quarter of last year, while the declining National Index fell by 5.1% in this year’s first quarter as compared with the first quarter of 2010.
They’re saying that we’re back to 2002 housing price levels. Here’s what David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Indices had to say:
“This month’s report is marked by the confirmation of a double-dip in home prices across much of the nation. The National Index, the 20-City Composite and 12 MSAs all hit new lows with data reported through March 2011.”
“Since December 2010, we have found an increasing number of markets posting new lows. In March 2011, 12 cities – Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Las Vegas, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Phoenix, Portland, and Tampa – fell to their lowest levels as measured by the current housing cycle.”
“The rebound in prices seen in 2009 and 2010 was largely due to the first-time home buyers tax credit. Excluding the results of that policy, there has been no recovery or even stabilization in home prices during or after the recent recession. Further, while last year saw signs of an economic recovery, the most recent data do not point to renewed gains.”
NOW YOU SAY: “Oh my God, I can’t believe that!”
See… isn’t this fun? Try another one…
2. Buckle Your Seatbelts, ‘Cause We’re Going Around Again…
The executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management’s emerging markets group, Mark Mobius, who oversees more than $50 billion, has said publicly that yet another financial crisis is INEVITABLE because we haven’t addressed the real causes of the last financial crisis.
Mobius was in Tokyo attending the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan when he told the group:
“There is definitely going to be another financial crisis around the corner because we haven’t solved any of the things that caused the previous crisis. Are the derivatives regulated? No. Are you still getting growth in derivatives? Yes.”
Mobius also explained that the total value of derivatives in the world today exceeds total global gross domestic product by a factor of 10. “With that volume of bets in different directions, volatility and equity market crises will occur,” he said.
The global financial crisis three years ago was caused in part by the proliferation of derivative products tied to U.S. home loans that ceased performing, triggering hundreds of billions of dollars in write-downs and leading to the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September 2008.
Mobius also explained that the freezing of global credit markets caused governments to pump TRILLIONS into the financial system to shore up the global economy.
OKAY, AND HIT IT: “Oh my God, I can’t believe that!”
See… it’s more fun than fireworks, don’t you think?
3. Turns Out… Homeowners Who Default on Mortgages Aren’t Deadbeats? Go figure.
TransUnion’s latest study revealed that those who only default on their mortgage are much better credit risks than those who are delinquent on multiple credit accounts. And this held true across all credit scores.
Not only that, but the study failed to find evidence in support of the widely accepted “excess liquidity theory,” which says that those that stopped paying a mortgage during the recession had increased cash flow, and could repay other debts. And guess what else… homeowners in foreclosure performed similarly, IF NOT BETTER, on accounts opened further in the process.
Steve Chaouki, group vice president in TransUnion’s financial services business unit said:
“There appears to be a pocket of opportunity among mortgage-only defaulters that is NOT the result of excess liquidity, but rather the unique circumstances of the recent recession. This new market segment that the recession created is an important one for lenders to understand. They have the potential, today, to be stronger and more reliable customers.”
And, Ezra Becker, vice president of research and consulting in TransUnion’s financial services business unit said it best of all, when he said:
“This recession was unique in that certain consumers who defaulted on mortgages would otherwise be good credit risks. It appears their actions were driven by difficult economic circumstances than by any inherent inability to manage debt.”
NICE AND LOUD THIS TIME: “Oh my goodness, I cannot believe that!”
Okay… I’ll drive from here if that’s okay with you…
4. It Depends on Your Definition of a Double-Dip… and these two guys fit mine perfectly.
GWEN IFILL: A new report out today shows the state of the housing market has grown even more bleak. But what is driving this stubborn downward pressure?
(I couldn’t even guess.)
For that, Gwen turns to Rick Sharga, senior vice president of RealtyTrac, a website that publishes data on real estate and foreclosure trends, and Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. If they can’t tell us, no one can.
GWEN: Rick Sharga, are these numbers proof of a double-dip recession, that term we have all feared?
(Very scary term.)
RICK SHARGA: Well, certainly not a double-dip recession in the overall economy. But you can make an argument about the double-dip in the housing market. It just depends on your definition of a double-dip.
(Oh, well thank the good Lord for that. It’s not in the overall economy, just the one I live in.)
RICK SHARGA: Is a 5 percent drop compared to a 20 percent drop a couple of years ago really a double-dip, or is it just a continuation of a downward trend that the market is trying to correct?
(Hey, who’s asking the questions around here? And, which is worse: a double dip, or a continuation of a downward trend? I’m freaking out over here. Which one, Rick, which one?)
GWEN: Mark Zandi, in your opinion, what are the driving factors, to say the two or three big driving factors here?
(The suspense is KILLING me.)
MARK ZANDI: Well, obviously, a 9 percent unemployment rate is a problem. A tough job market makes it hard for people to go out and buy homes.
(Don’t you hate it when economists get all technical like that? What’s he trying to say?)
MARK ZANDI: I think the foreclosure crisis is a very serious weight on the housing market. We have millions of loans in the foreclosure process that are going to go through and are going through to a distressed sale. And those homes get sold at a big discount, a big price cut. And that’s driving prices down as well.
(He thinks the foreclosure crisis is a very serious weight on the housing market. I suppose it could be… never really thought about it.)
MARK ZANDI: And confidence — if you look at the consumer confidence numbers, people are still very nervous and scared. And, of course, nothing takes a higher level of confidence than signing on the dotted line to buy a home. So, if people aren’t feeling really good about their financial situation, that’s going to be hard on the housing market.
(Damn it, people… we’ve talked about this before. You’re screwing up our economy with your lack of confidence again. Come on… buck up… get confident.)
GWEN: Rick Sharga, what — would you agree with that, and what would you identify as the major driving factors in this?
(Here’s your moment, Rick. Hit one out of the park, show Zandi what you’re made of…)
RICK SHARGA: I think Mark is dead on. I think he’s probably hit the major identifying factors.
(Oh, well… there you have it then. A swing and a miss… Thanks fellas.)
RICK SHARGA: I think one of the exacerbating factors is that it continues to be stubbornly difficult for the average homebuyer to qualify for a loan. We have historically low interest rates, and relatively few people who qualify to get these loans.
(Really? Now why would that be?)
RICK SHARGA: And I don’t think the foreclosure problem can be overestimated.
(Oh, sure it can, Rick… I’m quite sure you can overestimate anything.)
GWEN: Mark Zandi, you talked about confidence. I wonder if that’s not affected when we talk about these foreclosure numbers. People look at how badly this all went after the bubble, and they think to themselves, you know, I don’t really need to own a home anymore. How much of that is playing a part in this?
(Yeah… Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble… I got burned and I won’t down double. With apologies to Billy Shakespeare.)
MARK ZANDI: Well, I think that is certainly playing a role. I mean, I think nobody wants to catch the proverbial falling knife. So when prices are weak and falling, you don’t want to take the plunge, buy a home, and then, of course, lose value six, 12 months down the road. So, it’s a bit of a chicken-and-egg kind of problem.
(Oooohhhh nooooo, a chicken and egg type problem? That’s not good. I think that means it’s unsolvable, right?)
MARK ZANDI: People are very nervous that if they buy today, that the value of their home will be worth less in the future. And it’s probably a deeper longer-term issue as well. Many people are viewing housing very differently than they did in the past.
(Yeah, like in the past, people viewed a home as a place they would live for a long time. Now they view it as a place they’ll get evicted from over the summer.)
GWEN: Mark — Mark — Rick Sharga, is there another vicious cycle here, which is, if you worry that you cannot get a home, if you worry that you can’t get a loan, if you’re worried that you cannot keep a job, that all of that drives lessened demand as well for all these homes clogging up the market?
(I’m not sure. What’s the answer, what’s the answer, damn it…)
RICK SHARGA: You know we recently surveyed potential homebuyers across the country. And the number that jumped off the page at me was that 40 percent of the renters we surveyed said they have decided never to buy a house.
(Must be surveying renters that went to college.)
RICK SHARGA: That number just — just hit me right in the face, because we’re coming only a few years off historically high levels of homeownership, I think almost 69 percent. And the next generation of homeowners, to Mark’s point, 40 percent of them have already opted not to participate in the housing market. So, it’s a frightening number. The only reassurance I can give is that we do know that consumer sentiment has a way of swinging wildly back and forth.
(It does? I swing wildly back and forth? I didn’t know that about me. Live and learn, I suppose.)
RICK SHARGA: So, if we do begin to see job creation, if we do begin to see a return of consumer confidence, if the housing market begins to stabilize, hopefully, that consumer sentiment can swing back toward where we have a more active buying market.
(Is that all we need? Jobs, confident consumers, and a stabilized housing market? Oh, thank heaven. For a minute there, I thought we might be in real trouble.)
GWEN: Mark Zandi… Is this a regional problem that we’re talking about now, or are we talking about a true national overhang, a hangover from the boom years here?
(It could be regional I guess… it’s pretty much contained to the planet Earth region.)
MARK ZANDI: Well, it’s a national problem.
(If you’re in the EU, don’t be insulted by that… it’s not his fault. A lot of Americans don’t really know there are other countries.)
MARK ZANDI: And every corner of the country has been impacted. Prices are down almost everywhere. There are some bright spots, you know, Texas, for example, parts of the Farm Belt. But outside of that, we have seen foreclosures increase, house prices decline.
(I can’t decide… Texas or the Farm Belt… Texas or the Farm Belt… I think I’ll… EAT A GUN.)
MARK ZANDI: So, yes, I think you could — you would consider this a national house price decline. And, in fact, it’s — it’s unprecedented. The — you would have to go back to the Great Depression in the ’30s to find a time when so many markets have suffered such large price declines. So, it is a national phenomena.
(I kind of like that terminology… we could start calling it “The Great Phenomena.”)
GWEN: Well, let me stay with you for a moment because you mentioned the Depression. That was obviously the biggest economic shock that any of us have — had experienced or perhaps our parents experienced. How much of this slowdown in the housing market is going to end up driving the entire economy’s recovery off-track?
(Oooooo… Oooooo… I know this one… Ooooo… Oooooo… she never calls on me when I have my hand up.)
MARK ZANDI: Well, that’s a good question. You know, I think the economy, it is growing. And it can continue to grow without housing, but it certainly cannot flourish. I don’t think this economy really can engage, it can’t create the kind of jobs we need to bring down unemployment in a substantive way, unless housing is headed north.
(I’ll tell you who needs to flourish and head north.)
MARK ZANDI: And in every economic recovery that we have experienced since the Great Depression, housing has led the way. So we need housing. And we need it to come back. I think there are some good things that are coming together. But the longer we have to wait, the more nervous I get about the recovery and the economic expansion.
(Good things are coming together? Which good things are those? Tell us now. And how much more waiting will make him more nervous? I need specifics, I can’t plan my life around his degree of nervousness.)
GWEN IFILL: Rick Sharga, do you see any good things that are coming together? And should they be given by the federal government or by the private sector or the — even state governments?
(Yeah, ’cause the state governments are flush with all that extra cash…)
RICK SHARGA: You know, neither of the government initiatives that we saw last year, either HAMP to suspend foreclosure activity, or the homebuyer tax credit, really had the intended effect.
(How does he know that? What the hell was the intended effect? If I knew the answer to that question, I’d die a happy man.)
RICK SHARGA: In fact, after the second tax credit, sales volume drove — went so far down, that it pulled home prices down perhaps even further than they would have gone otherwise. I think, unfortunately, the remedy to the housing market right now is probably time. We need time to create more jobs. We need time for consumer confidence to come back.
(If I could save time in a bottle… the first thing that I’d like to do… Hey, wait a doggone minute here… the second tax credit pulled down housing prices further than they would have gone without it? The tax credit pulled the prices down… this guy is no economist, I’ll say that for him.)
RICK SHARGA: We need time for lenders to actually feel comfortable enough to start making loans on properties that have values that are stabilizing. And then the market will start to recover on its own. But I don’t see government intervention as being a part of the solution right now.
(No, don’t be ridiculous… absolutely no government intervention… there’s no way that would help. Government intervention only helps banks, and auto manufacturers, and the stock market and big businesses. It doesn’t work anywhere else, everyone knows that. Anywhere else and government intervention just drags prices down… I think I’ve got it now. We just need to give it more time, simple as that. Like in Japan… they’re giving it lots of time… like 21 years… so maybe figure we give it 30-35… would that be enough time Rick?)
GWEN: Is this a way to — is there any way to know whether this is an anomaly for now or it’s a long-term problem?
(For some people, I think yes, but not for Gwen.)
RICK SHARGA: The continuing falling of home prices?
(Do you believe this exchange? He lost his train of thought? No, Rick… she was asking you how long you might remain stupid.)
GWEN: Yes.
(I’m going to chew on glass in a minute.)
RICK SHARGA: I think there’s probably a little bit more to go. I would be interested to hear what Mark said.
(Arrrggghhhhhh… a little bit more? Probably? Rick, you are such a jackass. You don’t really have the foggiest idea how you got here, do you Rick? Did your Mom get you the job?)
RICK SHARGA: But I think we’re very close to the bottom. And, unfortunately, we will probably bump along that bottom for a couple of years while we go through this inventory of distressed properties.
(I think you’re already bumping along the bottom, and you’ve hit your head and now have the IQ of a summer squash.)
GWEN: Do you agree with that, Mr. Zandi?
(Yeah Zandi… does rick have the IQ of a summer squash?)
MARK ZANDI: Yes. You know, I think the key statistic for house prices are the homes for sale that are distressed that are foreclosure and short.
(Was that even a sentence? Oh Lord, he’s going to start babbling… waiter, check please?)
MARK ZANDI: And as that share rises, prices will fall. Almost the arithmetic of it is that prices will fall. And I do expect the share of sales that are distressed to continue to rise through the end of the year. And so prices probably will bottom out at the end of this year.
(LMAO… what did I tell you? He has no clue what he just said… and, of course, neither do we. “Almost the arithmetic of it is that prices will fall.” He’s a babbling brook. And then he wraps it up with we’ll hit bottom at the end of THIS YEAR? Right after he said that, he was thinking, “Why the f#@k did I just say that, oh well… too late to do anything about it now, maybe no one noticed.”)
MARK ZANDI: And then by this time next year, I think we will start to see some true price stability, some price gains. So, I think we have to get through this last mountain of foreclosed property. And on the other side of it, I think we will be in measurably better shape.
(So, I guess, based on what he said earlier, by this time next year good things will be coming together. We’ll have jobs coming out of our ears… oodles of confidence everywhere, and a stabilized housing market, is that about right, Mr. Zandi… you spineless sycophant?)
GWEN: Mark Zandi at Moody’s Analytics, and Rick Sharga at RealtyTrac, thank you both very much.
MARK ZANDI: Thank you.
RICK SHARGA: Thank you.
(Okay, Clown #1 and Clown #2… back to your padded cells, or wherever the attendant lets you play during the daytime. Orange soda and crackers at 11, so listen for the cuckoo clock… cuckoo, cuckoo, cuckoo.)
So, how is it that Gwen Ifill is interviewing these two potted plants on PBS and I’m donating to PBS during the pledge drive?
5. Today’s FHA Bulletin: MERS Has Impacted Foreclosures in Michigan.
According to Clifford J. Treese on BROKERDIRT’S Real Estate Brokers Discussion Group…
“On April 21, 2011, the Michigan Court of Appeals determined that MERS is not eligible to take advantage of the non-judicial statutory foreclosure process in Michigan because MERS does not own or have an interest in the indebtedness secured by the mortgage, nor is MERS the servicer agent of the mortgage, as required by the statute. Most of the major title insurance company underwriters have ceased issuing title insurance for any properties where MERS foreclosed by advertisement.”
But… according to April Charney…
Bill Hultman, representing MERS, just testified this week that there was NO PROBLEM at all with title insurance as a result of MERS’ involvement in foreclosures. And, this ignores the essential underlying problem that MERS cannot produce evidence of corporate authority delegated to Hultman to appoint the first signer, much less the 20,000 signers that Hultman testified about. (Hultman’s testimony is available online at: http://4closurefraud.org/2011/05/26/)
April also says we should take note that once again, Mr. Hultman promised evidence of the signers’ authority. He said he’d produce the “resolution” authorizing a single signer, but failed to offer to produce evidence of authority to issue that resolution or any other resolution “appointing” a MERS’ signer. In a previous deposition in another case, Hultman agreed to produce the documents showing that MERS gave him authority to issue the signer resolutions, but to-date, it would appear that he couldn’t produce he has failed to produce any such documentation.
April says she would think that if MERS had the docs, they’d be showing them all over town.
“Look, honey… isn’t the Emperor wearing a fine suit of clothes?”
(Don’t worry though because I think Congress may be making the Emperor an invisibility cloak yea as we speak. Isn’t that right, banker-people? And won’t we be surprised… is that what you’re thinking?)
Mandelman out.
If You Think the Meltdown Was the Fault of Homeowners, Think Again…
If you’re thinking that our economic crisis was in some way the fault of homeowners who couldn’t afford their mortgages, please consider the following:
At the end of 2007, there were roughly $1.4 trillion in sub-prime mortgages in this country.
If “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers,” caused the meltdown, then $1.4 trillion would have solved the problem in its entirety, right? Because that’s all the sub-prime loans there were.
But, between the Federal Reserve, the FDIC and the Treasury over $13 trillion has been pumped into financial institutions to fix the “housing correction,” which is what Hank Paulson was still calling our economic collapse as of November of 2008.
At the end of 2008, there were $11.9 trillion worth of mortgages in this country. So, with $13 trillion, the government could have paid off every single one… and still had a little over a trillion dollars left over.
But there’s a lot more to the economic problem than that, explains Nomi Prins, my new favorite financial uber-genius and author of “It takes a Pillage.” Wall Street had been playing the leverage game… somewhat like they did in the 1920s, I suppose… but on mega-steroids. Leverage means borrowing on assets, and Wall Street banks were leveraged by 30:1, commercial banks by 10:1, not including their “off-the-balance-sheet” holdings, which could make their leverage ratio significantly higher in many cases.
So… in “Pillage,” Nomi Prins explains in terms anyone can understand that factoring in the leverage at 11:1, we’re looking at a $140 TRILLION economic problem… yes, you read that correctly… that’s trillion, with a ‘T’. Our Wall Street bankers, through the abuse of the securitization process and excessive amounts of leverage, created a potential tab of $140 TRILLION for the people of this country to pick up.
Securitization is the process of packaging loans into securities that are then be sold to investors, called Asset Backed Securities (or ABS). Inside a given ABS, you might find 10% real loans and 90% bonds backed by those real loans. Or there could be only 5% real loans. The mortgage payments we all make are used to make payments that flow through the securities and to the investors who then invest by buying pieces of the ABSs.
“It takes a Pillage” is a book that’s absolutely jam packed with “Aha!” and “OMG!” moments, but one shines above the rest… What caused the financial crisis were the securities, or the “bonds”… not the loans.
We’re talking about a system that took on $140 trillion in debt on the backs of just $1.4 trillion in real loans. And it may be much more than $140 trillion, we don’t really know because we’ve allowed the market to remain unregulated. The $1.4 trillion is based on leverage at 11:1. It could very well be some multiple of that amount.
Issuers of ABSs, who were Wall Street’s investment banks earned about $300 billion for packaging and selling these “assets,” packaging the CDOs we’ve all heard about paid the best. Who bought ABSs? European and the global banks, insurance companies, and pension plans bought a whole lot of them. And they bought them with borrowed money.
They bought them because Wall Street told them they were safe… triple A rated… and even better they could be insured with Credit Default Swaps, too! What was not to love?
Hundreds of trillions in “structured assets”, ABSs, MBSs, CDOs, CDOs Squared, and of course synthetic CDOs, which are entirely, made up of credit default swaps, all deriving their value based on $1.4 trillion in mortgages. All of those structured investments, once demand for them abruptly dried up, are what we came to know as “TOXIC ASSETS.”
Prins makes it very clear that toxic assets are not the same as defaulted sub-prime loans. The fact is, Nomi says, that every single sub-prime loan in the country could have defaulted and all of the homes attached to those loans devalued to zero… neither of which happened… and the banks in this country would not have become insolvent… not even close.
The toxic assets lost their value starting in the summer of 2007, not because sub-prime loans defaulted, but because no one wanted to buy them anymore. After Standard & Poors and Moody’s lowered their ratings on just 1% of the MBSs outstanding on July 10, 2007, investors no longer trusted the triple A ratings. If some bonds were improperly rated, the thinking went, what about all the others?
I’ve read just about every book on the meltdown that’s been published in the last two years. From “Too Big to Fail,” to more recently, “Crash of the Titans,” which is about Bank of America’s acquisition of Merrill Lynch, and “It takes a Pillage” filled in so many blanks for me I couldn’t possibly count them all. Nomi is a very down to earth person too, and it makes reading her easy like Sunday morning. She’s snarky at certain moments, but she delivers it straight most of the time so you won’t get distracted.
I read her book and was on the phone the following morning with my friend in New York, Danny Schechter, who produced the movie, “Plunder – The Crime of Our Time,” which is all about the housing meltdown and foreclosure crisis and if you haven’t see it yet, you really should order a copy on Amazon right away. Nomi appeared in Danny’s film a, so I knew he could put me in touch with her, and she responded to my email right away. (She’s even agreed to an interview, so look for a podcast coming soon, I hope.)
Nomi is smart… I mean scary smart. Like, I’ve always been considered smart too… near the top of my various classes, 1380 SAT scores about a hundred years ago, if that means anything, but Nomi is so far off the charts that I can’t even believe it. I don’t remember anyone like her in college or graduate school. Talking to her is like talking to a walking encyclopedia of the financial history of the United States… but one that speaks English like the rest of us.
By the summer of 2006, the housing bubble had popped. Greenspan had raised interest rates 17 times in a row by then. But, starting on that July day during the summer of 2007, before most people had any idea what was happening, the bond/credit markets froze solid as money stopped moving… banks started hoarding cash and soon no one would be able to get a mortgage or refinance one… and housing prices started to fall fast.
After that, anyone that had bought a home during the preceding years found himself or herself increasingly underwater. One couple I know, with an 850 credit score by the way, lost a home to foreclosure and filed for bankruptcy. He was a very successful dentist and she a hospital administrator. Their crime? They got caught buying a home… and selling one at the worst moment in US history.
So, our government pumped $13 trillion into banks, financial institutions and others in this country since the fall of 2008. We allowed just about any business that wanted to become a “Bank Holding Company,” so they could qualify for the federal bailout programs. (As an example, did you know that American Express Travel Services became a BHC in order to receive $4 billion in taxpayer dollars? Why? What do they do? Arrange vacations for rich people? Were “they too big to fail,” too? Nomi covers it in “Pillage.”)
And today, the only mortgage lending in this country comes from the federal government… Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHA. So, we’ve already nationalized mortgage lending in this country. We had no choice but to do that because if we didn’t, there would be no mortgage lending in this country. Citibank and Bank of America have been nationalized too… I know we don’t call them “nationalized,” but they ARE both nationalized.
(Citibank, for example, has been given over $400 billion in government loans and loan guarantees. BofA has been received over $200 billion. We still guarantee Goldman Sachs bonds… meaning we are co-signing for their debt. Want to see the numbers in detail, visit the “Reports” tab on NomiPrins.com… you won’t believe it.)
General Motors had to come to congress for a loan at the end of 2008… why? Well, for one thing, in 2008, they missed their forecasts by 2.4 million cars… we couldn’t finance one so we couldn’t buy one. And the bond market was broken, so they couldn’t issue bonds as they normal would. We lost tens of thousands of jobs when they filed bankruptcy.
Unemployment started rising as we stopped spending. And we entered a deflationary spiral… the same one we’re in today. There’s no double dip, it’s the same “dip. The reason they can say that the recession ended was because of the trillions we were pumping into the system. Among other programs, the fed bought $1.5 trillion in mortgage-backed securities between 2009 and 2010, but that’s over now, and the downturn is back in the game.
We’re just about at the end of QE2 now, and we don’t have any more stimulus money to artificially stimulate our economic situation… so things are already returning to their downward slide. Home values nationally have fallen 57 months in a row… and they’ve fallen faster and further than during the Great Depression.
The sooner we face the reality of the situation, the sooner we can start to rebuild our economy. All we’ve done so far is pump money into insolvent financial institutions, while we’ve let the American middle class sink into an abyss from which we will not recover in my lifetime… and I’m turning 50 on Friday of this week.
You see… all that government spending, as we like to call it… is really US… we ARE the government… it’s OUR money the government is spending. All those trillions are coming out of OUR pockets, and the pockets of our children and their children. And a few hundred billion has gone into the pockets of our bankers in the form of bonuses… and no one even seems to care.
And still, all that many people want to talk about is how some homeowner must have been living beyond their means and deserves to lose their home. Don’t bail out irresponsible sub-prime homeowners, right?
Ridiculous. We’ve been lied to. This isn’t a question of wanting the government to take care of everything… they are ready taking care of everything, except the people, America’s middle class. And we didn’t even ask for much… just a modified loan in order to remain in our homes. Because millions losing homes benefits no one.
You’re already paying for bonuses at Citibank, Goldman Sachs, and American Express Travel Related Services… and if you can stomach doing that, you can find it in your heart to be in favor of your neighbor getting his loan modified, if for no other reason, so that you don’t lose your own ass in the next few years. Because don’t kid yourself… none of us is getting out of this one unscathed.
The water is going down in the harbor, are we’re all going down with it. And as long as we have housing prices falling and no middle class spending going on in this country, we’ll have no recovery… except maybe the recovery that they talk about on T.V. but no one can feel. And how long do you think people are going to buy into that fairy tale being told by our politicians?
Arizona’s state senate passed a bill 28-2 that would have slowed the foreclosure and given people a chance to remain in their homes by forcing banks to follow the existing laws. Then the banking lobby made it disappear over weekend. Another similar amendment was to be proposed, but the banking lobby got that one too. And last week lobbyist at a meeting of the Arizona Mortgage Lending Association bragged about his success killing the bills I refer to. Bragged.
“It Takes a Pillage” makes it clear that we need to stop blaming our neighbors because he or she is struggling to keep the family home. Borrowers didn’t cause this crisis, bankers caused it… but the borrowers are losing their homes while bankers get bigger and bigger bonuses?
Since when is an outcome like that what this country is all about?
There are a lot of great books I wish everyone in this country would read. But, if you’ve already read other books about the meltdown, or even if you haven’t… whether it’s a starting place or one in a series, I can’t recommend reading “It Takes a Pillage” strongly enough.
What Nomi Prins has to tells us, needs to be heard.
I’ll go ahead and admit something. I’ve read it once all the way through, and dozens of times in sections… then I bought it on iTunes and I listen to it most nights as I fall asleep… I know… I’m weird… but it’s that good.
(There’s a link below to NOMI’S SITE and then you can get to Amazon from there… and it’s now available in paperback, so it’s only $11.53! For $11.53 you’ll be so much smarter about the meltdown, you’ll thank me.)
Mandelman out.
~~~
CLICK HERE TO VISIT: NomiPrins.com
AND THEN CLICK ON THE BOOK COVER TO GO TO AMAZON
AND ORDER YOUR COPY OF “IT TAKES A PILLAGE.”
~~~
IT TAKES A PILLAGE: AN EPIC TALE OF POWER, DECEIT AND UNTOLD TRILLIONS.
“No one takes Wall Street to task like Nomi Prins. But this book is far more than a pointed attack on how greed and bad regulation created a global economic meltdown-it also offers concrete prescriptions for how to prevent the next crisis. Let’s hope Washington is listening.”
James Ledbetter, Editor, The Big Money
“Nomi Prins has applied her unmatched expertise in Wall Street’s arcane methods of turning your money into their bonuses to mapping the recent crisis. In compelling, scathing prose, she shows how the key players escaped being brought to account, and kept their pet officials in power.”
John Dizard, The Financial Times
~~~
Some of Nomi’s Bio…
Before becoming a journalist, Nomi worked on Wall Street as a managing director at Goldman Sachs, and running the international analytics group at Bear Stearns in London.
Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, Fortune, Newsday, Mother Jones, The Daily Beast, Newsweek, Slate.com, The Guardian UK, The Nation, The American Prospect, Alternet, LaVanguardia, and other publications.
Nomi has appeared on numerous TV programs; internationally on BBC World, BBC and Russian TV, and nationally on CNN, CNBC, MSNBC, ABC, CSPAN, Democracy Now, Fox and PBS. She has been featured on hundreds of radio shows globally including for CNNRadio, Marketplace, Air America, NPR, regional Pacifica stations, New Zealand, BBC, and Canadian Programming.
GAO Study Published May 5th Discovers Illegal Foreclosures
On May 5, 2011, the Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) released its study of mortgage servicers and foreclosures… I guess now that everyone and their brother-in-law have conducted such a study into the mortgages servicers’ maladroit, dishonest and criminal best practices, the GAO figured they couldn’t get in any trouble for piling on with more of the same. Personally, I’m holding out for the U.S. Post Office’s study of mortgage servicer performance, which I hear is going to be followed up by a scathing report being issued by the Bureau of Land Management in conjunction with the Department of Transportation.
And I’m sorry if this sounds at all bitter, but do you think it has it occurred to any of the GS-geniuses inside the beltway that I’ve been writing about the… shall we say, inadequacies of mortgage servicers for two and a half years, and they’re just now getting around to issuing a series of studies at a cost I don’t even want to know about, that say the same things I and others could have told them about over coffee in 2008. I don’t know about you, but it scares the heck out of me.
Well, anyway… the GAO’s study showed the same things that all the other studies have shown, causing several legislators including Sen. Al Franken, who presumably were not able to jump onto the last study’s release, to write a letter to several of the banking regulators (and I use that term very loosely) and Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben If-You-Don’t-Have-It-Print-It Bernanke. According to a story by Jim Spencer, writing for the Twin Cities’ Star Tribune, the letter said:
“We have seen countless examples of servicers giving borrowers the run-around and continuing the foreclosure process when a loan modification has already been obtained. Perhaps the most egregious cases of servicer wrongdoing have been violations of the Service Members Civil Relief Act by wrongly foreclosing on active-duty service members. Correcting these problems and ensuring they do not reoccur should be a priority for all of your agencies.”
Before I say anything about their statement above, let me make it clear that I served in the U.S. Air Force following graduation from high school, so I’m perfectly capable of being biased about our troops, and hyper-sensitive about them being inadequately treated by our government, which they are in so many ways. However, that being said… I’m not sure I can distinguish between someone on active duty losing their house as a result of an illegal foreclosure and… oh, I don’t know… anyone else.
I wrote about a family in which the father was diagnosed a few years ago with advanced diabetes. His kidneys have failed, he’s on dialysis, has developed heart disease, was on a respirator the last time he was hospitalized. He worked for the City of Placentia in Southern California for some 27 years. His wife has her own small business. They have an adorable eight year-old daughter who goes to school near by and loves her home.
Medical bills combined with the economy sliding off a cliff caused them to ask JPMorgan Chase to modify their loan, and they made their payments every month on time until the day that they got a notice on their door saying their home would be sold out from under them… in an hour, they learned after calling Chase in a panic. They now have a lawyer, and the sale has been stopped, for the moment anyway… Chase won’t accept any more trial payments, which is another word for “payments”. It must be nice to live in your home after paying what the bank told you to pay every month, knowing that at any hour you could be told you are out on the street.
Of course, no one in the family is in the U.S Armed Forces at the moment… perhaps the 8 year-old could sign up now, but be permitted to defer her enlistment for a decade when she’ll turn eighteen. Would that make this family any more deserving of relief in the eyes of our legislators? I’m not sure I can think of anyone that deserves to be illegally foreclosed upon, can you?
Just two weeks ago, I was introduced to a couple who had just been approved for a loan modification by Bank of America… the only problem was that Fannie Mae was going to sell their home in 24 hours… and BofA wouldn’t be able to “issue” the modification for 48 hours. Should be an easy one right?
Wrong. Fannie refused to postpone the sale date, even though BofA informed them that the loan modification was a day away. Now, is that an illegal foreclosure? If it’s not, then I have nothing to say to the leaders of this country except that you should all be ashamed. The couple filed bankruptcy to stop the sale… they didn’t want to… but Fannie Mae, our bankrupt mortgage mess, forced them to do it. Of course, neither of them is active duty military either.
Want some more… give me a couple of hours and I could provide you with a few hundred… just off the top of my head. Let me check my notes and call around and I’ll come up with a thousand within 24 hours.
Sen. Franken, however, only referred to the revelation of mishandled foreclosures for those in the military a scandal, saying in an interview last Thursday:
“If people broke the law and foreclosed on service members, they should be indicted.”
I don’t want to put words into Al’s mouth here, but what if people broke the law and foreclosed on just regular old U.S. citizens? What should happen to them as a result? Community service? A stern talking to? When did it become relatively more acceptable to steal homes from ordinary U.S. citizens than anyone else? What about stealing homes from veterans? Does that fall somewhere between active duty and never served? What if someone served in the Peace Corps?
The senator’s letter went on to say that the GAO’s report described mortgage servicers hiring employees to sign tens of thousands of affidavits without ever looking at the documents to determine if the loan was in default. And isn’t it nice to see the GAO reporting robo-signing seven months after new of the practice first made headlines.
The study also pointed out the same things the OCC, OTS, and Federal Reserve’s study pointed out about three weeks ago, such as:
“Documents used to force people from their homes were not properly prepared or legally notarized. Foreclosure work contracted by loan servicing companies to third parties received little or no oversight.”
Sen. Franken, perhaps coming out of a coma that lasted two years said…
“Loan servicers make it difficult for delinquent borrowers to even talk about solutions. I’ve talked to so many people who try to go to their servicers and can’t get in touch with anyone. When they can reach the mortgage company, they never speak to the same person twice to try to work on ways to save their homes. A single point of contact is the most important thing in any of this.”
You know what, Sen. Franken… I like you. I think you’re a very smart guy who is also very caring and I even think that you ran for public office for the right reasons. I even read your last book, and enjoyed it very much. But let me assure you of something, Sir… you are in no way qualified to ascertain what “the most important thing in any of this” is or is not.
Like all of your peers in our legislature, you are incomprehensibly late to this tragic party, your contribution to anything having to do with the foreclosure crisis has been woefully inadequate, assuming you’ve done anything at all… and from your statements it is clear that what you know about the what’s gone on or continues to go on as related to foreclosures in this country we could fit in a thimble.
Look, don’t get me wrong, Sen. Franken… I’m glad you’re finally here taking a look, and I’m happy that the little you’ve seen offends you and a few of your legislative pals. And by all means, get out there and make some strong statements in support of our troops, after all being a Democrat you pretty much have to do that or risk Rush Limbaugh calling you a pansy or whatever, right?
But this is a crisis that has been going on at least three full years now, and it’s gotten no better during that time, which you guys have been playing around with the pretend priorities of partisan politics in Washington D.C. We all see that… you’re not fooling anyone.
Why do you think it was that the Dems got “shellacked,” as the president put it, in the midterms? That’s right, it was the foreclosure crisis and your party’s dramatic and unconscionable mishandling of everything related to it.
So, go ahead… help stop our men and women in our Armed Forces from losing their homes as a result of what is plainly criminal behavior on the part of mortgage servicers… behavior that you and yours have essentially condoned for the last TWO YEARS.
It’s you and your peers that have allowed these egregious acts by servicers to strip people of their most valuable and treasured assets illegally. You’ve stood by and done nothing… and now you’re reading what is just another in a continuing series of reports that all say what you have either known or should have know for the last two years.
So, fine. Better late than never, but don’t add insult to political expediency by standing up at the microphone claiming that there is some meaningful distinction between stealing someone’s home through illegal foreclosure when they are active duty military because if that’s true… what about if it happens to a police officer… or a public school teacher… or a firefighter… or an emergency room nurse… or just a hard working American citizen caught up in the same financial crisis as everyone else… a crisis not of their making, but one that was created by the very same bankers now behind the illegal foreclosures.
Do something Sen. Franken. The letter talked about in this article was signed not only by Sen. Franken but also fellow Democrats: Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey, Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, Rep. Luis Gutierrez of Illinois and Rep. Mike Capuano of Massachusetts.
But, you are going to be held to a higher standard because that’s why you came to Washington D.C., right Al? Because as we used to say, if you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem. And not to put to fine a point on it, Sen. Franken, but at this point in time, that would make you what, as far as the foreclosure crisis goes?
Mandelman out.
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Please Stop Bernanke’s Transparency – He’s Frightening the Children
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke did something the media is describing as being unprecedented… he held a televised meeting at which he read some Fed-type talking points and answered some questions. If I had to describe it in a word, I’d have to go with… hmm… I know… how about: Underwhelming.
I guess what lacked precedent is that he took questions from members of the press for about 45 minutes following a meeting of the Fed’s Board of Governors… something the Fed has never done before in its 98-year history, and that he’s threatening to do this sort of thing four times a year, instead of only when called to testify by congress.
First of all, essentially he didn’t say anything we didn’t already know. And he spoke like a Fed Chair… in Fed speak. Put it this way… I could have easily written his speech before he went on the air, and in fact I’m going to try to remember to do just that next time one of these transparency-fests is scheduled to air.
I guess if you’re a real Fed-watcher, it could have been considered somewhat interesting, I mean… until 1994, the Fed didn’t even publicly announce its policy changes, fearing that too much information in the hands of the people would lead to the utter destruction of the world as we know it.
So, he took questions for 45 minutes. You know, questions like… Is QE2 working?
And Bernanke said something to the effect of… Yes, it has worked, but it hasn’t solved everything.
I love it when he gets all technical like that.
Other take-aways that I took away include:
- Inflation, if you disregard the prices of gas and food, the only two items most people are buying these days, is still not a danger.
- The economy is recovering, although no one can feel it because everyone’s either afraid of losing their job or they’ve already lost it, and headline unemployment is still at 8.8% because we’ve added some minimum wage jobs and stopped counting all the people that haven’t looked for a job in years. But it’s recovering, Ben is certain of that.
- The national debt could become a problem, but the Fed has nothing to do with that… it’s on congress… talk to them.
- Housing markets are still struggling… and I expected to hear him follow that thought by saying… even though we’ve tried our best to kill them completely… but he didn’t.
He said a lot of other things too. Here are some of the highlights with a few quotes from the AP:
1. He called for more lending to people and small businesses in lower-income neighborhoods, and said that they’ve been hurt a lot more by the recession than richer neighborhoods. He thinks we should lend to people and small businesses in “troubled communities” that have good credit… because “it will stimulate economic activity that generates local tax revenues.”
“Tax revenues can then be spent in the community redeveloping vacant properties, training people for new jobs, or on other economic development programs. That leads to more hiring and paychecks that can help poor homeowners avoid foreclosure, he said.”
Okay, that’s it… I’m convinced… Ben has never actually been to a “troubled community.” Would someone in Washington D.C please take him on a tour… pretty much anywhere Southeast will do… Minnesota Avenue, Lincoln Heights, I’m sure Anacostia is lovely this time of year. Take him anywhere outside of Northwest D.C. where he’s apparently been holed up ever since leaving Princeton. Introduce him around… see of you can check out a few credit scores of the folks while you’re there.
2. He also said that people who make less money fall behind on payments at a much higher rate than richer people. Not only that, but the Fed Chair has apparently figured out that poorer folk are also more likely to lose their jobs during the recession.
“Lost income from unemployment is causing families to fall behind on their mortgage payments, Bernanke said.”
Oh, look everyone… the Fed Chair has figured it out! I think I’m going to cry. And it’s only 2011. See, I told you it wouldn’t take him until 2015 like many of you said it would. I’m just so proud of him, I could plotz. But wait… he had more to say…
“A wave of foreclosures has led to more vacant homes in neighborhoods. That’s further depressed home values, attracted crime and created financial burdens for local governments, Bernanke said.”
Oh my God. I think he’s trying to say that foreclosures breed foreclosures. That’s a clever phrase… now, where have I heard that before? And isn’t that an absolutely stunning revelation from the Chairman of the Federal Reserve? Where is he getting this stuff? If I hadn’t seen the sentences come out of his mouth, I wouldn’t have believed it. Did someone hire him a tutor and not tell the rest of us? Who would have ever thunk it? Go figure.
He also said that the housing market is holding back the economic recovery. Isn’t that wonderful? I feel just like I did watching my daughter learn to read… admittedly she was four years old at the time and Ben has a salt & pepper beard, but it’s the same idea.
“Until vulnerable families and troubled communities have regained lost progress, the economic recovery will remain incomplete,” Bernanke said.
Why, that’s very good Benjamin, very good indeed. It seems that you may need a little help with the percentages involved, however. You see, when you’re talking about the percentage of the American people for whom the recovery is underway, you’re talking about roughly 1500 – 2,000 people in this country. And when you’re talking about the “vulnerable families and troubled communities,” you’re describing the balance of the U.S population, so figure about 300,000,000.
(I hope that’s helpful, Mr. Chairman… maybe you should write it on your hand so you don’t forget it when you’re in a meeting with the President or Timmy Geithner. I know… you don’t want to make them look bad… and you’re right… no one likes a show off, but think how cool it would be if you were to know something like that… something neither President Obama or the Treasury Secretary has ever considered? You’d be a star!)
Well, I for one am certainly relieved. And I’m truly sorry for criticizing him in the past for being an idiot incapable of learning things… he has proved me wrong and I’m a big enough person to come right out and admit it when I underestimate someone. I was wrong… Ben Bernanke is a genius.
I think I’ll go hit the sack… get some shut-eye… finally I can rest easy knowing that the country’s got crackerjack leaders like Ben Bernanke at the helm. YAWN… Yeppers… we’re going to be just fine, everyone… just fine and dandy.
Nighty night… and pleasant dreams, as my mother used to say…
Mandelman out.
AZ Rep. Seel Drops Amendment Requiring Pre-Foreclosure Chain of Title, 2 Days After Servicer Grants Principal Reduction
Remember Arizona’s Senate Bill 1259 that would have required servicers to produce a declaration that they had the proper chain of title prior to foreclosing on someone’s home? You know… the one that passed the Arizona Senate 28-2 that I wrote about back on February 23rd of this year?
Remember maybe a month ago when I tried to follow up to see how the bill was proceeding in the Arizona House of Representatives… only to find out that on the way to the House… it disappeared… the text replaced by some bill about firefighting with the same number? And no one was saying a word about it? If you missed it, I wrote about it here.
Okay, well… it appears that the story is not over yet.
It seems that one Arizona homeowner set out to revive the essence of the bill, drafting an amendment and recruiting Rep. Carl Seel to propose that it be added to Senate Bill 1474, being sponsored by Senator Ron Gould.
His name is Darrell Blomberg, and he’s a Phoenix area Realtor, and a past president of one of the local boards of Realtors… who is now involved in auditing trustee sales for homeowners. Basically, he looks for some basis upon which a sale might be cancelled, or at the very least postponed. He acknowledges that it only represents a temporary solution, but it’s often important to the homeowner nonetheless. He was actually working on one such audit for Rep. Seel, which is how the two came to know each other.
I’d heard about him from another contact I have in Arizona as being someone very active in the legislation related to foreclosures, so I reached out to him over this past weekend to see what he knew. He returned my call after reading my story about the disappearing SB 1259 bill, and he certainly did have some news for me and he was very disappointed about the whole thing.
According to Mr. Blomberg, it seems that when the day came around for Rep. Carl Seel to propose the amendment, as he had agreed to do, he was running late and ultimately didn’t get there on time. The amendment was never proposed as a result.
When I first heard Darrell the story, I thought… well, maybe it was traffic. Or, a doctor’s appointment that ran late? Perhaps friends came in from out of town?
When Rep. Seel was asked what had happened to prevent him from showing up on time to propose the amendment, he explained that he had decided not to propose it because he was told there was no chance of it being adopted… something about it not being “germane,” whatever that means.
One thing though… from what Darrell explained to me, Carl Seel must have been in a very good mood the day of his unexpected tardiness, because even though he had been previously turned down twice for his own loan modification, two days before he showed up too late to propose the amendment, Ocwen granted him a PRINCIPAL REDUCTION that reduced his mortgage to $88,000 from roughly $190,000… that’s a reduction of approximately 56% give or take a few points one way or the other.
Now that is lucky, was all I could think to say. Really lucky, considering it was Ocwen, a servicer I’ve been told is among the most difficult when it comes to modifying loans. In fact, it’s almost like being the single-ticket-lottery-winner-three-days-in-a-row kind of lucky, wouldn’t you say?
So, how did Darrell know about the fortuitous timing of Mr. Seel’s generous principal reduction?
It’s quite simple really… Seel hired him to help him with his loan.
You see, according to Darrell Blomberg, Rep. Seel had asked him to conduct an audit of Seel’s trustee sale in an effort to postpone his own home’s sale, which had been scheduled after his servicer denied his loan modification application for the second time. And Darrell had forwarded the results of his examination to Ocwen in a letter outlining several discrepancies in an attempt to delay the sale date.
As a result of that close involvement, Darrell says he personally saw the paperwork indicating both the trustee sale was being cancelled and that the significant principal reduction was being granted as part of Seel’s loan modification. He even went over it with Seel, telling him he hadn’t seen many… if any… like this one.
For the record, my two calls to Rep. Seel’s office were not returned. I spoke with his assistant who answered the phone at his office. I explained that I was calling to ask Rep. Seel to comment on a recently obtained loan modification granted by Ocwen… she said she knew nothing about it, but would contact him and convey my message. I explained that I was going to run the story today and that it was urgent that I hear from him should he want to deny the report… and… well… as of 5:03 PM today… nothing… and I’ve been staring at my phone for hours.
Darrell says that his only thought at the time was that Ocwen had granted the principal reduction because of some combination of Seel playing his elected representative card and what he had done pointing out inadequacies in the documentation related to the trustee sale… Seel wasn’t scheduled to propose the amendment he had drafted for another two days, so there was no reason to believe anything else was in play.
When the day came for Seel to speak for the amendment, Darrell was there, pacing the halls of the Arizona legislature, calling him repeatedly on his cell phone, wondering where he was… and why he would be so late… until it was too late.
And the amendment was never introduced in the legislature. Again. Gone without a debate, without a vote, without any consideration for the people of the State of Arizona.
In an unrelated story… or perhaps not, depending on how you look at it… Senator Michelle Reagan, who proposed the first bill pertaining to the need to declare proper chain of title prior to foreclosure, SB 1259… the one that disappeared on its way to the House after passing the Arizona senate… successfully settled her dispute with her own servicer, roughly a month after she decided to facilitate her own bill’s disappearance.
The Other Side of the Issue…
From what I can discern from talking to various involved parties, the consensus is that any bill that requires the banks or mortgage servicers to even discuss the issue of proper chain of title as being part of the foreclosure process is unquestionably doomed to failure in Arizona’s House of Representatives and therefore, there is no point in sending such a bill to the House… it is nothing more than an exercise in futility.
And it is on that basis alone that the opposition to SB 1259, or to the Blomberg amendment that was never proposed, justifies their actions to block any progress of these proposed legislative changes.
The problem with this line of thinking as it pertains to SB 1259 is that it subverts our democratic process. The Arizona state senate voted by a margin of 28-2 to pass SB 1259 into law, and the way our bicameral legislature works… when it works… is that next the House gets to vote.
If both the senate and the House pass the bill, it’s heads over to the governor’s desk where it might be signed into law… or it might be… class, class… oh, now lets not always see the same hands… it might be vetoed… that’s right boys and girls.
But not this time, I’m afraid. This time the senate passed a bill 28-2… but its opponents want me to believe that sending it to the House is nothing but a total waste of time.
Oh, really? Well, I’d like to see an example of another bill in Arizona’s legislative history that passed the senate 28-2, only to be unanimously voted down in the House. Has that ever even happened? 28-2 means someone was for it… no, check that… it means that an overwhelming majority were for it.
What’s the deal among Arizona politicians? Are Arizona’s state senators from Mars and the state’s members of the House of Representatives from Venus? Do Arizona’s state senators say the glass is half empty, while the members of the House say, “Hey, who the heck stole half my water?” If that’s the case, how in the world does any bill ever become law in Arizona? The damn state’s legislature sounds like a Push-Me-Pull-You, first discovered by Dr. Dolittle, in case you don’t remember Hugh Lofting’s childhood classic.
Look, I don’t even understand the problem here… if SB 1259 was a sure thing to be eviscerated in the House… what’s all the fuss, banker-people? Let it go there and die an honorable, democratic death. Why make it disappear in the middle of the night and then somehow make sure that no one even writes about it… until me, that is… and now look at all the commotion going on.
And banker-people… you guys should know me by now… I don’t quit, I tell the truth, and I don’t have a boss or make any money, so good luck with shutting me up. I promise you… when all this is over, you’re going to wish you had just let the dang bill get disemboweled in the House… if that’s really what would have happened.
Now you’ve got Senator Reagan… who after disappearing the bill… settled her case against her own servicer a month later. Now I’m sure the two events have not a thing to do with one another… they’re obviously entirely unrelated events… who would ever suggest otherwise… except maybe a whole bunch of those pesky voters that show up every couple of years to remind you that, as much as you might not think so… you are not actually the only people driving the state’s or our national bus.
And what about Rep. Nancy McLain… you remember Nancy… the Republican from Bullhead City… she needed Senator Reagan’s permission, but she’s the one who actually killed SB 1259 by making the decision to not even hold hearings on the bill. The state senate passed it 28-2 and it’s not even worthy of holding a hearing or two? This bill is so worthless and has no potential to pass whatsoever that it cannot even be discussed in a hearing?
My gal Nancy… who astonishingly is the Chairperson of the House Banking and Insurance Committee (I know, I couldn’t believe it either. I would have guessed Agriculture or Telecommunications), says that the bill that was passed by the senate was seriously flawed.
See… now I would have thought that a seriously flawed bill that passed the state senate 28-2 would be all the reason in the world to hold a couple of hearings on the subject. You know… to see if those serious flaws couldn’t be kicked around and perhaps even corrected, perish the thought.
Now, guess what’s going on now… poor Nancy McLain is being accused of being a puppet for the banking industry. Oh, yes she is… how unfair is that? In response, at this past Wednesday’s Tri-City Council meeting, Nancy had the following to say, as quoted by The Daily News, which I assume is an Arizona paper:
“I do listen to their point of view. I listen to the other side and then I make up my mind. And I have to say flat out, because this is the accusation that’s been made is that I’ve somehow been paid off by the banking industry. Flat out, no. I have not received a cent from them for this vote or any other.”
Oh dear, this is not going to end well…
For one thing, now I’m going to have to dig around and find out how much Nancy has received in the past from the banking industry, and then should she ever run again, I’ll have to set up a Google Alert to pick up on any contributions she gets from the bankers for future elections. Geeze… wouldn’t you just hate to have me and a bunch of other bloggers up your tail after telling such an obvious lie as she did.
Come on, Nancy… don’t treat me like I’m six… I hate it when politicians or bankers treat me like I’m six. You Chair the House Banking Committee… why don’t you just come right out and say what the real truth is:
“Okay, I’m sorry folks but the bankers said no to this one… I know, it’s disappointing… I told them you’d be upset but they said ‘no’ means ‘no’… come on, we’ll all get over it… okay now… break it up, time to go on home… there’s nothing to see here… move along.”
At the meeting, Nancy added:
“I probably had about eight or 10 other bills dealing with various attempts to prevent foreclosures which I did not hear as well. So this was not an exception. This was one of many. Now if that makes me an even worse person, well, so be it.”
See… Nancy… we need to talk. It’s not so much that it makes you an even worse person… it’s more like it makes you entirely unsuited for public office, derelict in your duties, some might say a traitor to the people of Arizona, and in my personal opinion… an uninformed and callous bitch with a heart of ice and the brains of a ferret.
You’re worried about being an even worse person? Relax, there’s nothing I can think of at the moment that could possibly make you a worse person… it’s quite evident that you’re already as bad a person as persons can ever hope to become. You’re tipping the scales on appalling personage, Nancy my girl. If it makes you feel more at ease, I wouldn’t give another thought to the risk of worsening.
NOTE TO READERS: And for the reader who thinks I’m being too harsh… or unnecessarily harsh… I’d encourage you to keep in mind that far too many people have taken their own lives over this “fraudclosure” abomination, and there are children without fathers as a result. There are senior citizens that have been reduced to living as virtual shut-ins, afraid to answer the phone as a result of the treatment they have received by servicers.
Untold hundreds of billions in consumer wealth has evaporated because of the acts committed by Wall Street’s elite. The aggregate stress servicers have caused the people of Arizona and elsewhere is incalculable; I don’t think there’s any question that countless lives have been shortened as a result. Rep. McClain has taken it upon herself to decide that the Arizona legislature should do nothing. She deserves to be called out for what she’s done and who she is.
And besides all that, Ms. Nancy McLain, I have four simple questions: 1. Did the Arizona legislature pass a single bill with the potential to prevent foreclosures this session? 2. Last session? 3. Got anything on the drawing board for next session? 4. The session after that?
Want to know how easy my job is getting because of the banking lobby? I’m not even going to research the answers to those four questions, and I’m feeling absolutely rock solid safe in answering all four of them off the cuff, as they say:
- No.
- No.
- No.
- No.
So, let me see if I’ve got my arms around this… I guess you could call it a situation.
You had either nine or eleven bills presented to you that all proposed various ways of preventing foreclosures in Arizona… a state being utterly destroyed by the foreclosure crisis… and you alone… all by yourself… made the decision not to even hear any of them? Didn’t even schedule hearings on a one of them?
They were all that bad, I suppose… wholly devoid of any ideas even remotely worthy of debate? Basically, all nine (or possibly eleven) bills containing various attempts to at least slow the pace of foreclosures and possibly prevent the people of Arizona from being stripped of any modicum of equity or homeownership still present in the state, were essentially one step above gibberish, is that what you’re telling the people of Arizona, Ms. Nancy McClain?
Nine or maybe even eleven bills designed to mitigate the damage that the foreclosure crisis is wreaking on Arizona… and they all sucked so badly that none was even close to being worthy of debate… even though the one that got to a vote in the senate passed by overwhelming majority, 28-2?
Nancy… I must know… do you make sense to you when you hear yourself talk?
Here’s Nancy’s rationale for killing this bill, SB 1259:
“To my way of thinking, it gave false hope to people who are honestly trying to save their homes from foreclosure and due to whatever circumstances, they weren’t able to make their mortgage payments. And suddenly, you hold out this idea, well, if you make the bank show you the chain of title and they can’t do it, then they can’t foreclose. Well, they can. It’s the servicing agent that forecloses, not the actual bank that holds the title to it, so they can still be foreclosed upon.”
Okay, Nance… do you mind if I call you Nance…
Nance… you’re just not understanding the bill or the laws governing foreclosures. Allow me to help you with this.
First of all, the servicer is already supposed to make sure the chain of title is intact and the documents are in order prior to foreclosing. You know, it’s to make sure that the loan hasn’t been sold to anyone else… or perish the thought… to two or three different people. That’s already the law.
This bill, SB 1259 only required the servicer to double check that everything is hunky dory before foreclosing and then submit a declaration confirming the same. It’s a declaration saying that we’ve checked it all out… as the law has always required us to do… and it’s clear sailing foreclosure-wise. Signed, Mr. Banker-Servicer.
And Nance… the OCC, OTS, and Federal Reserve concluded their investigation just over a week ago, and they concluded that the whole chain of title thing is right as rain. It’s true, I swear… here’s what the federal banking regulators had to say on the subject in their report:
“Examiners generally found adequate evidence of physical control and possession of original notes and mortgages. Examiners also found, with limited exceptions, that notes appeared to be properly endorsed and mortgages and deeds of trust appeared properly assigned.”
See… so you can just calm your little banker friends down right this instant. Everything’s going to be just fine… it’s all in order. I mean, that is unless your banker buddies somehow deceived the federal banking regulators to get them to conclude something that wasn’t true, and I just refuse to believe that there’s one single banker in this country that would ever even think of doing something like that. (I refuse to believe there’s one banker, but 12,000 of them? Oh yeah, that I’d believe fore sure.)
So, since I’m one to always take federal banking regulators at their word, as I’m quite certain you are as well, there should be no problem having servicers or bankers or trustees for that matter sign a declaration saying they’ve checked and they do actually own the loan they’re about to foreclose upon, and haven’t sold it to anyone else during the chaos of the meltdown or during the go-go days of the real estate boom.
Why is this so important now? There are a couple of reasons but it’s actually quite simple: You’d have to be a witless dolt to believe anything the banking industry says about anything.
Here’s what the federal banking regulators said after concluding their six or so month investigation of the country’s largest mortgage servicers:
1. Foreclosure governance processes of the servicers were underdeveloped and insufficient to manage and control operational, compliance, legal, and reputational risk associated with an increasing volume of foreclosures. Weaknesses included:
- Inadequate policies, procedures, and independent control infrastructure covering all aspects of the foreclosure process.
- Inadequate monitoring and controls to oversee foreclosure activities conducted on behalf of servicers by external law firms or other third-party vendors.
- Lack of sufficient audit trails to show how information set out in the affidavits (amount of indebtedness, fees, penalties, etc.) was linked to the servicers’ internal records at the time the affidavits were executed.
- Inadequate quality control and audit reviews to ensure compliance with legal requirements, policies and procedures, as well as the maintenance of sound operating environments.
- Inadequate identification of financial, reputational, and legal risks, and absence of internal communication about those risks among boards of directors and senior management.
2. Examiners found inadequate organization and staffing of foreclosure units to address the increased volumes of foreclosures.
3. Individuals who signed foreclosure affidavits often did not personally check the documents for accuracy or possess the level of knowledge of the information that they attested to in those affidavits. In addition, some foreclosure documents indicated they were executed under oath, when no oath was administered. Examiners also found that the majority of the servicers had improper notary practices, which failed to conform to state legal requirements.
4. Examiners found weaknesses in quality control and internal auditing procedures at all servicers included in the review.
Nance… hi… I’m back. Did you catch all of that, my little Banking Committee Chair-Sweetie? And do you have children, Nance? If your kids came home with a report card that read like that, would you say that from now on either you or their father is going to have to check their work before they hand it in at school? I’m betting you’d do at least that, wouldn’t you Nance? Me too, by the way… it would be the only responsible thing to do, Nance, don’t you think?
But, there’s something else, Nancy McClain… I realize you’ve been busy, what with all the legislation you’re not holding hearings on, so I’ll catch you up if you haven’t already heard the news.
The first of the banking and mortgage industry CEOs was criminally convicted last week… the CEO of Taylor Bean & Whittaker, Lee Farkas, is most assuredly headed to the Big House, having been convicted on all 14 counts of wire fraud, bank fraud, securities fraud and conspiracy. You knew that? Okay, I thought you might… but that’s not the part of the story that’s ‘germane’ here, Nance.
Here’s the part of the Taylor Bean & Whittaker story that you need to acknowledge, and I’m quoting from my story about the conviction:
“Taylor Bean’s financial hole grew to over $100 million, so Taylor Bean and a handful of Colonial Bank executives hatched a plan in which Taylor Bean would simply sell hundreds of millions of dollars in mortgages… THAT HAD ALREADY BEEN SOLD TO OTHER INVESTORS… to Colonial Bank. “
Now… let’s put it all together, shall we Nancy McClain?
When you combine what the federal banking regulators said about the servicers being entirely out of control, with no adequate process or audit trails… or anything else for that matter, with the fact just established by federal prosecutors in the criminal conviction of Taylor Bean & Whittaker’s CEO that the same mortgages were sold more than once… what do you have?
I’ll tell you what you have… you have the express need for servicers to at the very least double check to make sure they have the proper chain of title and assignment documents required by existing law in order to foreclose on a home in Arizona.
Because we can’t even be sure that the mortgages were only sold to one investor… as has now been established by federal prosecutors… the same mortgage sold to more than one investor by Taylor Bean & Whittaker..
And, since we have also received confirmation that mortgage servicers, among many other equally damning charges had:
Individuals who signed foreclosure affidavits often did not personally check the documents for accuracy or possess the level of knowledge of the information that they attested to in those affidavits. In addition, some foreclosure documents indicated they were executed under oath, when no oath was administered.
And further, servicers overall:
Foreclosure governance processes of the servicers were underdeveloped and insufficient to manage and control operational, compliance, legal, and reputational risk associated with an increasing volume of foreclosures.
So, in conclusion…
A bill that requires the servicer to be diligent and make certain that the chain of title and related documentation, in compliance with existing laws governing foreclosures in the State of Arizona is in order prior to foreclosing and signs a declaration stating the same prior to foreclosure is entirely warranted, and in fact to not pass such a bill in light of the evidence before us today, would be the equivalent of continuing to allow passengers with box cutters in their carry-ons to continue to fly on commercial aircraft after 9-11.
Do you not see that now that I’ve helped to frame the issues involved properly, Banking Chair Nancy McClain… Senator Michelle Reagan… and Rep. Carl “Principal Reduction” Seel?
Once again, all the SB 1259 would do is require servicers to double check everything so they could sign a declaration that existing Arizona laws are being followed prior to foreclosing. That’s it and that’s all. And in light of the evidence of servicer misconduct and abuses… I think it’s safe to say that many would consider such a bill the most gentle response imaginable.
Nancy McClain had one more thing to say…
Nancy McClain also made a statement about SB 1259 creating a loophole for people who have no intention of paying their mortgage, and I think it has to be mentioned.
Once again, as quoted by The Daily News, McClain said:
“They’ve got a place to live for two, three, four years, however long it takes to get resolved and they’re getting a free ride. So I thought, for those reasons, it was a bad bill and that’s why I chose not to hear it.”
In the spirit of full disclosure, I’m quite sure that Nancy McClain and I do not speak the same language. I’m quite certain that she would not understand me, and I think she’s nothing more than a corrupt political potted plant, owned by the banking lobby and programmed to do only their bidding regardless of the facts before her.
So, with that being said… what in the world is she talking about above? “They’ve got a place to live for two, three, four years,” and then something about how some group is “getting a free ride.” And that’s why she decided it was a bad bill and not to hear it? But, I thought she said that it would offer false hope? And that servicers would still be able to foreclose… so, now she’s saying… what is she saying?
Announcing a Mandelman Matters Contest: Deciphering Nancy McClain
Be the first person to email me with a plausible explanation of what Nancy McClain is saying just above and you’ll receive two tickets to see the hottest upcoming animated feature: Hoodwinked Too – Hood vs. Evil, at your choice of Edwards, Regal or AMC theaters.
It’s easy to win, just read the paragraph above, decipher what the heck the woman is talking about, and send your explanation of what she’s saying and what it has to do with SB 1259 or anything this article is discussing, along with your choice of theater chain and your mailing address to: mandelman@mac.com.
The last word: Want to know a secret?
Real quick… do you want to know a secret about where all this resistance to SB 1259 is actually coming from… why the bankers want this bill or any like it to disappear? It’s not the requirement that the servicer sign a document asserting that the chain of title is sufficient to foreclose… how could it be that… these are the same servicers that were perfectly willing to forge hundreds of thousands of lost note affidavits… they certainly don’t care about a declaration.
It’s the private right of action and provision for attorneys’ fees that the bankers cannot allow the rest of us to have.
In case you’re not following me, one of the things that I’ve learned this past year is that there are quite a few laws in this country that lack such provisions, and that means that even if these laws are broken and you’re damaged as a result, you can’t sue because the law doesn’t permit it.
Lawyers call it a private right of action, and it means that you can sue if the other party to the contract breaks the law and you are damaged.
A clear example is found in what are called the HAMP guidelines. It’s no secret that servicers break the rules of HAMP constantly, but the rules do not provide for a private right of action, so even when servicers break HAMP’s rules and you the homeowner are damaged as a result… tough cheese.
The other thing the banking lobby hates just as much, if not more, as homeowners having the right to sue, is the provision that says that if the homeowner wins the suit, the attorney handling the case for the homeowner is entitled to collect his or her fees from the bank who lost the lawsuit. Provisions for attorneys’ fees mean that lawyers can take your case knowing that if they win the bank will be on the hook to pay their fees.
But, notice how no one talks about either issue… Because it doesn’t sound good to say that a homeowner can’t sue if damaged by the bank breaking the law… that stinks, as a matter of fact.
So, under SB 1259, were a servicer to bring in a declaration stating that the chain of title is sufficient to foreclose, but the homeowner didn’t believe the servicer and filed suit… and it’s proven that the servicer’s declaration was false… the lawyer who took that case might be able to collect his or her fees from the bank… so the homeowner could very likely sue in such circumstances without having to come up with a dime.
Okay, so you get it? Watch it closely… if the bill or anything like it looks like it might come back… watch for the end run by the banking lobby to get rid of the private right of action and provision for attorneys’ fees.
Mandelman out.
P.S. Lots and lots more coming. The lies, spin and misinformation, emanating from the banking industry will not prevail… right always wins out over wrong in this country… eventually. It’s tiring to combat what is happening, I readily agree. In fact, I recently took a month off in an attempt to recharge my batteries… and even so it was hard for me to return to the fight.
People say things to me like: It’s hopeless… we can’t win… no one cares… Americans are too complacent… what can we do? And I tell them that although I understand what they are saying, and am capable of having the same thoughts… none of it is reason to do nothing. None is a rationale to give up the fight. I have a 15 year-old daughter… I’m fighting for her future, not mine.
Then yesterday morning, after having dinner with ex-Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann the night before, he introduced me to Elizabeth Warren… in the flesh… I shook her hand, introduced myself… and we spoke about the fight for the American middle class… what I’m doing… what she’s doing. She asked me to call her assistant at the White House and I will be doing so next week. She is a true American hero.
And, as I drove home from that meeting, I realized without question that if she can continue to fight for you and me… while being shot at from all sides… well, than you and everyone else had better believe that I can and will too. In fact, if you thought I was motivated before… you haven’t seen anything yet.
Hey, banker-people… let’s rock… I’ve written 455 articles exposing your crap and your crimes… I’m not proud… or tired… so what say I do another 455 and we see where we are at that point?
So… and I’ve always wanted to say this… hell’s coming… and I’m coming with it.
Thank you Professor Warren and Marc Dann… we’ll talk again soon… and I’ll keep writing about what matters.
As always, you can contact me at mandelman@mac.com.
A Crush on Matt Taibbi and a Pox on Both Their Houses
I admit it… I’m no different that most everyone else… I’ve got a crush on Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone. In case you’re unaware, Matt writes about many of the same topics I tackle on Mandelman Matters, except he’s younger than me, gets to swear like a sailor in his articles when he wants to, shows up on Bill Maher’s show now and again, lives in or near Hoboken, New Jersey, which is right across the Hudson River from Manhattan, and in general appears to have my dream job.
His recently published book, Griftopia, was one of my favorites of the past year… after reading the first seventy pages while in bed, I threw my copy onto my bed and said out loud… to no one but myself… damn it, he might just be funnier than me. And for a moment, I questioned why I would ever write another word now that Matt was on the job. I’ve since reconsidered, however, coming to the conclusion that while he is in fact clever, and occasionally even laugh-out-loud funny, he’s not definitively funnier than I am, and never breaks into show tunes in the middle of articles on the financial crisis that I’ve seen, so I’m going to continue my soirée with the printed word.
Matt’s also a relative newcomer to the financial and foreclosure crises, at least compared with me, but he does what he does for a living and obviously has resources that allow him to do some real investigative reporting, so when a reader of mine emailed me an excerpt from one of his recent articles, and the headline spoke of Wall Street “housewives” receiving $220 million from the Federal Reserve during the now infamous rich-guy-and-banking-buddy-bailout, well… I felt compelled to take a look at what Matt was describing… and I now wish more than anything that I hadn’t.
Just a few short days back from vacation and after reading Matt’s article, all I want to do is scream at the top of my lungs until I pass out.
You see, Congress has recently forced the Federal Reserve to at least partially open its books and allow the American people to see where some of the trillions in “bailout dollars” actually went. As Matt says in his Rolling Stone article of April 12th:
“It is as though someone sat down and made a list of every individual on earth who actually did not need emergency financial assistance from the United States government, and then handed them the keys to the public treasure. The Fed sent billions in bailout aid to banks in places like Mexico, Bahrain and Bavaria, billions more to a spate of Japanese car companies, more than $2 trillion in loanseach to Citigroup and Morgan Stanley, and billions more to a string of lesser millionaires and billionaires with Cayman Islands addresses.”
Well isn’t that just great to hear? Our government officials… our best and brightest, one would certainly hope… spent a relative dollar ninety-five on stopping the foreclosure crisis that continues to stalwartly impede any sort of economic recovery from mattering to anyone but our Wall Street bankers, and about as much to stimulate job creation to any significant degree.
But, we did help out the rich people and propped up our financial institutions, not to the point of their being able to re-start any real amount of consumer lending, but at least to the point where the Street’s bonuses are as egregious as ever. Absolutely crackerjack work is all I can think of to say, now can we please start making sense again?
Well, Matt’s story is titled, The Real Housewives of Wall Street, and it asks the question:
“Why is the Federal Reserve forking over $220 million in bailout money to the wives of two Morgan Stanley bigwigs?”
Here’s an overview of what Matt’s referring to, you’ll have to read his article in order to really become near suicidal or prone to acts of random violence.
Apparently, back in 2009, Morgan Stanley’s CEO, John Mack and his wife decided to purchase a $13.5 million property located on Manhattan’s tony Upper East Side, a 107 year-old limestone carriage house with an indoor 12-car garage, recently sold by the Mellon family of Robber Baron fame. At the time, Mr. Mack was earning just $800,000 a year in salary, and was declining to award himself a bonus in what was the midst of the worst financial crisis in 70 years.
Now, I assume Mack had plenty of cash with which to buy the property, although I really don’t know the details of the transaction, but I’m thinking $800,000 a year isn’t enough income to shoulder a $13.5 million mortgage. No matter, John Mack and his wife Christy together did purchase the inner-city estate so good for them. (That’s it, just below.)
Matt Tiabbi describes Christy Mack as being: “… thin, blond and rich — a sort of still-awake Sunny von Bulow with hobbies. Her major philanthropic passion is endowments for alternative medicine, and she has attained the level of master at Reiki, the Japanese practice of palm healing.”
Here’s where it gets positively surreal…
Two months before the Macks purchased their Manhattan carriage house with indoor parking for 12 cars, it seems that Christy and her friend Susan, neither of which appear to have any background or education in finance, launched a new investment enterprise that would invest in student loans and commercial real estate, calling it “Waterfall TALF.”
The two Wall Street wives put up $15 million to set things up, and then they received $220 million in CASH from the bailout programs being offered by the Federal Reserve, most of which they used to buy student loans and commercial mortgages.
The loans from the Fed provided that Christy and Susan would keep 100 percent of any gains on their investments, while the Fed and the Treasury… as in, taxpayers… would cover 90 percent of any losses. The arrangement was made as part of a bailout program that was sold as being designed to help Main Street by stimulating consumer lending.
So, the strategy now seems quite clear: Our government decided to address the financial crisis and economic meltdown by handing out hundreds of millions to the wives of Wall Street executives so they could invest in student loans and commercial mortgages on a risk-free basis.
See… when you say it like that it doesn’t sound nearly as stupid as it did a few minutes ago. NO… WAIT A MINUTE… yes it does… it’s the dumbest idea in the history of the world, a complete abrogation of our democracy, and if there’s any justice in the world, those involved will be violently gang raped in prison every day for 50 years, or stricken with palsy.
The TALF bailout program was created just after Obama was elected with the stated purpose of stimulating consumer lending, but instead of just lending the money to consumers, our government… and yes, I’m talking about the Obama Administration here… decided to give the money to the same irresponsible greedy bastards that caused the crisis in the first place so they could lend it to consumers at a huge profit… essentially risk-free.
And the real beauty of TALF is that it doled out dough in the firm of NON-RECOURSE LOANS… the kind you don’t really need to pay back, unless it’s profitable to do so. You get your money from the Fed, you buy your student loans and commercial mortgages, which you transfer to the Fed as collateral for the loan you just got from the Fed. If your investments go down in value, you don’t re-pay the Fed, you just walkaway from the loans you invested in and send the bill to the taxpayer.
Of course, it should go without saying that if your investment increase in value, why then you take your investments and cash them in, repay the TALF loan you got from the Fed, and pocket the difference. Neat-O, don’t you think?
While all of this financial engineering has been going on… accomplishing nothing… people are losing their homes to foreclosure every day and in record-breaking number because servicers are inept and uncaring on a scale historically reserved for our enemies during times of war.
Our government’s incompetence in dealing with the foreclosure crisis has become so apparent and consistent that essentially no one believes that the administration or the legislature has the slightest idea what’s happening, why it’s happening, or what to do about it.
And yet, as I write this… we don’t even have a program on the drawing board that could potentially stop the free fall in the housing markets that continues to erase roughly $10 trillion in consumer wealth each year.
But, I think it was last week or the week before that our government was consumed by a debate about a miniscule amount of federal funding for Planned Parenthood, and now we’re about to start another 18 months of presidential election circus politics, during which time nothing substantive will be accomplished and millions more will lose homes, leaving behind nothing but vacant and rotting structures emblematic of losses all around.
Is this state of affairs okay with anyone?
Mandelman out.
OUTRAGE OF THE DAY- THE FED GIVES YOUR MONEY TO MILLIONAIRE WIVES!
Why Isn’t Wall Street in Jail?
Most Americans know about that budget. What they don’t know is that there is another budget of roughly equal heft, traditionally maintained in complete secrecy. After the financial crash of 2008, it grew to monstrous dimensions, as the government attempted to unfreeze the credit markets by handing out trillions to banks and hedge funds. And thanks to a whole galaxy of obscure, acronym-laden bailout programs, it eventually rivaled the “official” budget in size — a huge roaring river of cash flowing out of the Federal Reserve to destinations neither chosen by the president nor reviewed by Congress, but instead handed out by fiat by unelected Fed officials using a seemingly nonsensical and apparently unknowable methodology.
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