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Hawaii’s Legislature Poised to Pass Nation’s Strongest Foreclosure Protection Bill
American homeowners in all 50 states should take note that it was only last November when a group of homeowners in Hawaii, with the support of Faith Action for Community Assets (“FACE”), whose members are predominately churches of various denomination and non-profit community groups, embarked on a grass roots effort to bring meaningful change to the process homeowners were being forced to endure when faced with the prospect of losing their homes to foreclosure.
The group also partnered with Hawaiian Community Assets, a non-profit group that provides housing counselors and whose wonderful relationships with families made a huge difference throughout the campaign, according to those involved.
The dialog about the foreclosure crisis began when FACE member ministers began talking openly about there being no dignity for the families trying to save their homes from foreclosure by the mainland banks. That’s what motivated FACE to get involved in the first place.
The idea that some uncaring and enigmatic banking institution on the mainland would treat a homeowner at risk of foreclosure as the ministers were describing in their reports was intolerable to those involved in the group.
With the next legislative session scheduled to begin in January of 2011, FACE Policy Director, Kim Harman and other key members of the team, wasted no time finding out as much as possible about the foreclosure process, in order to begin drafting a proposed bill that would be strong enough to be effective.
The end result of their grass roots initiative is found in: Senate Bill 651
Harman explains:
“For example, our people went to the library each day in order to read all of the non-judicial foreclosure notices, and they compiled data on which banks were foreclosing on the most homes, among other things.”
Armed with the increasing breadth and depth of knowledge they were gaining through their research efforts, it quickly became clear that a cornerstone of the legislation the group would propose would be a mandatory mediation program.
Nevada State Senator-Ret. Barbara Buckley, who had been the driving force behind the creation and implementation of that state’s foreclosure mediation program, also became a supporter the group’s efforts. Harman says:
“She (Buckley) even took the time to get on the phone with legislators in Hawaii, which helped give the concept legitimacy.
Rev. Robert Nakata, a retired state senator from Hawaii, and an individual said to have more energy than most twenty year-olds, signed on to help with the group’s lobbying efforts. (The only way I can think to describe Bob Nakata, is to say that I spoke with him a couple of times over this past weekend and I hope to know him for the rest of my life.)
Rep. Bob Herkes sponsored the House version of the bill, and Sen. Roz Baker championed the bill in the state senate. Sen. Baker was responsible for the section of the bill that requires the servicer, at least 14 days prior to foreclosure, to present among other things, “a copy of the promissory note… including any endorsements, allonges, amendments, or riders to the note evidencing the mortgage debt.”
Policy Director Kim Harman had glowing things to say about everyone involved in the grass roots initiative, but she said the homeowners that came out and supported the initiative really made the difference.
“We have well over a hundred families that very actively support the bill. I mean people that came out for the hearings and press conferences, and carried signs during demonstrations,” Harman said.
Ding dong… Hawaii Calling
As part of the grass roots effort, the group specifically confronted Bank of America on two occasions… once bringing groups of homeowners to the bank’s offices in Honolulu and once on Maui. In addition, they confronted Wells Fargo in Honolulu on two occasions, and once they paid a visit to Chase. “At several of our demonstrations, we even had people playing the ukulele,” Harman says.
Harman believes that Hawaii’s legislators wanted to do the right thing, but in many cases were so busy with other priorities that it was difficult to develop a widespread understanding of what would constitute a really strong bill, and why such strength in a foreclosure prevention bill was unquestionably what was needed.
“We studied what wasn’t working in other states… we didn’t see any point to passing a bill that wouldn’t actually change anything for Hawaii’s homeowners,” Harman explains.
The state of the economy also made the establishment of a new program a harder sell, but Harman’s group is certain that a strong and effective foreclosure prevention bill will lead to cost savings for the state of Hawaii in the future.
She also pointed out that the legislative process itself was hard to deal with for many homeowners that wanted to support the bill, saying:
“Notices of hearings often don’t allow much time to notify members of the group, and of course not everybody can just stop working or drop whatever they’re doing to come support the bill with short notice. But, we were really blessed to have well over 100 families truly committed to this bill… and they continue to go above and beyond to support this effort.”
The Bill’s Current Status…
Hawaii’s Legislature Poised to Passes Nation’s Strongest Foreclosure Protection Bill
On April 29th, 2011… at 5:18 PM… what appears to be the strongest foreclosure prevention bill in the nation bill was passed by a vote of the Hawaiian legislature’s Conference Committee.
The floor vote of the House and Senate is scheduled for this coming Tuesday morning, May 3rd, but could potentially be postponed for as late as next Thursday, which is the end of the legislative session.
Harman says she has been assured by all of the legislators with whom she has spoken that it will pass the floor vote, and from there it’s straight to the governor’s desk where it will either be signed or, perish the thought, vetoed. The governor is expected to sign the bill between mid-June and early July.
“Both the governor and members of his staff have been great supporters of the mediation process contained in the bill,” explains Harman.
Ever-Present Risk, Brought to You by the Banking Lobby…
The banking industry doesn’t like this bill… no, wait… that’s not the right way to put that. The banking industry hates this bill with the white-hot intensity of a thousand suns… there, that’s a little better.
Why? Well, ask your friendly neighborhood banker and he or she will likely start talking about how the bill’s passage will lead to the people of Hawaii paying higher interest rates in the future. Such a claim, however, is pure horse pucky.
First of all, bankers LOVE reasons to charge higher interest rates, it might even be considered their single favorite sport, so if this bill were going to cause higher rates in the future, one would have to think that the bankers would be for it, not against it.
Secondly, interest rates are not picked out of thin air by bankers and then offered to the rest of us. That’s not how rates are set, banker-people, and you know that. What if Chase decided to increase interest rates because they wanted to punish Hawaii for passing this bill? What do you suppose the banks that compete with Chase would do with their own rates?
Not that our bankers are doing a whole lot of lending right now anyway… and they won’t be doing much for quite some time… but let’s say it’s 10 years from now and Chase wants to raise rates. What will Chase’s competitors do when Chase’s loans become more expensive? They’ll kick Chase’s butt, that’s what they’ll do. And Chase will bring rates directly back to where the market had set them … because that’s a large part of how rates are determined.
And third, the bankers make it sound as if this bill creates some new laws… but it really doesn’t. Banks are already supposed to have the promissory note, assignment, allonge, and whatever else is required by state law, before they foreclose… they’re supposed to make sure they own the loan and that the Chain of Title is intact… that is also already the law. The new bill just says you just have to show these items to someone before you foreclose.
The cornerstone of the bill is the creation of the state’s mandatory mediation program, and bankers should remember that other states have mandatory mediation too, but I don’t see those states swamped by higher borrowing costs. So, maybe you meant something else… like, you had a different lie in mind.
The real reason the bankers don’t like this bill is because it represents change, quality control… fairness, and accountability… and the bankers position is basically that they want to be able to do whatever they want, whenever they want as related to a homeowner behind on payments. Period. The banker’s position seems to be that nothing should interfere with foreclosing on someone’s home and that’s that.
Regardless any of these common sense points… none of that has stopped the banking lobby from giving it that old banker try to kill SB 651. Lobbyists have been swarming all over Hawaii chatting up anyone who’ll listen as to all the reasons why this bill is a bad idea.
Memo to those working on the passage of SB 651…
It’s not over until the ink used by the governor for signature is dry… and in fact the next few days are critical… remember what happened to the Arizona bill on the way to the Arizona House of Representatives just a couple of weeks ago?
So, for my two cents… I’d be getting on those phones, asking others to call their representatives to express their support for the bill… and keeping an eye on the banking industry lobbyists… because as we all saw in Arizona recently, they are capable of making a bill that’s already passed the state senate 28-2… completely disappear over a weekend.
FACE’s Efforts to Prevent Corruption…
While I was speaking with Kim Harman yesterday, she started explaining one of the key tactics her group used in an effort to stop members of Hawaii’s legislature from turning a blind eye to corruption by banking industry lobbyists…
She told me that they had used Mandelman Matters articles.
Harman told me that she would read articles I had written and posted on Mandelman Matters that documented what had recently transpired in Arizona with the disappearing S.B. 1259, to Rev. Bob Nakata, and as a retired state senator, he then went to both the House and the Senate to make sure that the leadership saw and was current on what was happening in Arizona as it unfolded… asking for vigilance in making sure that such corruption did not visit Hawaii.
I have to tell you that as I spoke with FACE’s Policy Director, Kim Harman, and she told me how the group had distributed and used my articles in conjunction with their lobbying effort and grass roots movement, I had tears in my eyes as she spoke and I am honored to have been able to help.
Maui homeowner, Marcy Koltun-Crilley, another key member of the group…
Marcy is a reader of mine, who is originally a New Yorker who came to live on Maui just shy of 20 years ago… and after experiencing the lies being told to homeowners by Bank of America first hand, she became resolute in her desire to help fix what was obviously broken.
Marcy wrote to me about what was going on in Hawaii, and because I love Hawaii… I jumped at the chance help. I wrote an article about how a group of homeowners, accompanied by FACE leadership, had visited Bank of America without an appointment. Homeowners Pay Unexpected Visit to Bank of America in Honolulu
I wrote it to say something very seriously and very clearly… although I will admit… it has the very definite potential to make you laugh if you know anything about the people of Hawaii. According to Kim, the article had a very positive impact on many in the group working towards the passing of the bill, and I could not have been happier to know that.
We who live in the contiguous 49 states of the United States of America have a lot to learn from the people of the Great State of Hawaii.
My prayers are with them during these next few days… I hope yours are as well. If this bill passes as expected, we have reached the turning point in the foreclosure crisis, and I’ll be writing about we need to do next.
Mandelman out.
P.S. Coincidentally , the State of Arkansas has just passed a foreclosure prevention bill that, although it does not go quite as far as Hawaii proposal, is still a bill that will prove effective to some significant degree. Here’s a link to the
The Psychology and Politics of Foreclosure
This article originally ran in December 0f 2009, but I’m reposting it because maybe it will be read by someone who will find it even the least bit interesting.
Training personnel to properly interact with those losing homes to foreclosure is not only the right thing to do… it’s also likely to improve a mortgage servicer’s bottom-line.
Losing a home to foreclosure is something most people never forget. It’s an event likely to stay with you for the rest of your life. It’s certainly not something most people think will happen to them… until it does. And it can happen to anyone at any stage of life, young, old, rich, poor… all can find themselves at risk. As the off-color colloquialism says about life… stuff happens. Although many people might not readily agree, foreclosures are statistically a “there-but-for-the-grace-of-God-go-I” type of situation.
Of course, there are times when more stuff happens to more people, and today is obviously an example of such times. The economic conditions that we’re experiencing today are causing more foreclosures than at any time since the 1930s. When housing prices began to collapse a couple of years back, no one could have seen just how far things would go, and how difficult it would be to bring our economy back to life, as we’ve known it.
One of the causalities of our accelerating economic downturn has been a shared understanding of its cause. Some blame our politicians, some blame Wall Street’s bankers, some blame the Federal Reserve, and we’ve all heard that it was the sub-prime borrowers themselves that are the root cause of our recession.
Belief in a Just World
As human beings, we need to understand the causes behind events that negatively impact our world in order to feel safe. When we don’t understand how or why something happened, when something appears
to have been a truly random occurrence, it frightens us terribly because we can’t plan to protect ourselves from such an event.
Melvin Lerner is a prominent social psychologist. In his 1980 book, “The Belief in a Just World: A Fundamental Delusion,” he argued that people want to believe in the inherent justice of the economic system in which they live, and want to believe that people who are suffering are responsible for their own situations. He conducted a series of experiments and provided empirical evidence showing that after an initial feeling of sympathy, people tend to develop negative views toward others who are suffering. And that’s the type of negative tendency that seems to be in play today.
So, perhaps it shouldn’t be surprising that instead of having sympathy for homeowners that are losing their homes to foreclosure, many people are blaming the homeowners themselves for their predicaments. It’s just an example of the general tendency that was documented by Melvin Lerner and other social psychologists many years ago.
The Sanctity of Contracts
The other factor that comes into play involves the phrase: “sanctity of contracts.” We live in a nation with a capitalist economy that depends on the sanctity of contracts. Our founding fathers put the contract clause into the U.S. Constitution to make clear that people need to live up to the documents they sign. Article I, Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution states: “No state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.”
So, people have the tendency to view those losing homes to foreclosure as not living up to the contracts they’ve signed. They bit off more than they could chew, is a phrase often heard by those who lack sympathy for borrowers in foreclosure.
How do these factors manifest themselves in human terms? To understand, picture a line of moving trucks extending for hundreds of miles, taking the furniture of countless families to storage lockers. Picture the schoolchildren saying goodbye to their classmates, leaving the comfort and security of their own bedrooms. Picture the parents sitting up late at night looking through bills trying to figure out how they can save their home, or resigning themselves to the fact that they can’t make it. Picture the arguments, the crying, feelings of loss, of failure… picture the moment when all hope is lost.
Picture the day they must leave their home, getting in the car, pulling away from their home, the ones that turn to look back, the ones that force themselves not to look. The radios that aren’t turned on because no one wants to hear music at a time like that. These people you’re picturing aren’t going on vacation, they are being abruptly moved to the other side of town. They won’t have their own yard to play in. They won’t have their patio to relax on as they watch their children run and play. They’re losing their most prized possession… their home.
Yet, it’s also easy to take a stern view of this spectacle. The arguments go something like this: Foreclosure is not the end of the world. There are valuable lessons to be learned from such a life experience. They got themselves into this mess, now they have to pay the price for their own irresponsible actions.
The Price Paid by Children
Some of the hardest-hit victims of foreclosures are children. According to the Center for Responsible Lending, over the last two years: “Over 1.95 million youth have been affected by foreclosure.”
Brenda Jones Harden, Ph.D., wrote that “children exposed to violent, dangerous, and/or highly unstable environments are more likely to experience developmental difficulties.” Children hear more than most parents think they do, so parents’ stress is transferred to their children more than anyone might think.
Oftentimes, the kids come to feel that they are both a financial and emotional burden. They can begin making sacrifices for their families, wanting less, eating less. Some children are forced to quit teams they’re on, or stop taking music lessons simply because their parents cannot afford them. Even young children start taking on weekend jobs to help pay the family’s bills. Vacations are cancelled, and other normal childhood comforts are left by the wayside.
There are other enduring side effects as well. Being uprooted creates instability in a child’s life. They lose friends, teachers, teammates, social circles, perhaps most importantly, confidence. Being forced to change one’s lifestyle is both difficult and stressful for adults. For children, it can be a nightmare.
Children that are displaced by foreclosures often start bringing home lower grades. They exhibit behavior caused by lowered self-esteem. Behavioral issues often become common problems among kids because they feel that they don’t belong in their new setting. Frequently, families that lose their homes can’t afford to move into a neighborhood of equal socio-economic standing. The children can find themselves in new surroundings that may have more crime, inferior school systems, and fewer activities available for youth.
The Great Depression of the 1930s changed a generation. Those that lived through those difficult times altered the way they lived the rest of their lives. What will our nation experience a decade from now as a result of the millions of foreclosures our country continues to experience in these difficult times? No one can know the answer to that question, but it seems clear that there will be some discernable impact on segments of our population, and today’s children are certain to pay a price.
Exhibiting Anger
The crisis we’re experiencing is morphing as it continues, and we can expect continued changes that lead to further problems in our society as the recession lengthens and broadens in scope. One of the factors that’s changing is that the level of anger among foreclosed homeowners certainly appears to be rising, and lenders and mortgage servicers, faced with managing and marketing the volume of foreclosed properties, are increasingly seeing that anger in very tangible terms.
According to the National Association of Realtors, foreclosed properties already make up 45% of home sales, and the number is climbing. Home prices have continued to decline at record pace in 2009, and there are no signs of them stabilizing. Further price declines will undoubtedly result in even more foreclosures. Homeowners remain unable to refinance out of unaffordable adjustable rate mortgages (“ARMs”), and as the market continues its decline, more homeowners, realizing that they have little hope of building equity, will choose to walk away from their properties.
Homeowners losing homes to foreclosure have started advertising their home’s fixtures on Websites like craigslist.com. Some are stripping their home down to its wiring, destroying its plumbing, tearing out entire kitchens, and even removing roofing tiles. Garage doors are disappearing. Built-in cabinets are gone. Even furnaces and air conditioning units are up for sale by homeowners losing their homes to foreclosure.
Recently, the media reported that one homeowner in Monsey, NY, actually leveled his home with a bulldozer just a few days before the property was scheduled to be sold at auction.
Of course, not all homeowners experience that level of anger, or if they do, choose not to exhibit their anger in such extreme ways. But the trends are disturbing. More and more often homeowners are damaging their homes before being forced out as a result of foreclosure.
Communities Suffering
The large number of foreclosed homes on the market today means hundreds of thousands of homes sitting vacant. And vacant homes are magnets for partying teenagers, drug users, vandalism and crime. Broken windows, smashed plaster, huge holes punched in walls, graffiti on walls throughout the homes, debris, and much worse are becoming more commonplace, as more neighborhoods are seeing more foreclosed homes remain on the market for longer periods of time.
Abandoned homes from the foreclosure crisis have a direct impact on the rise in crime in numerous communities. Even when not the result of homeowners or local teenagers, thieves start breaking into these vacant houses, stripping them of valuables, and the destruction of property and vandalism is making the homes even more difficult to sell. Often, as a result, it requires more money to repair these homes than the homes would sell for in today’s market.
According to a recent study by Dan Immergluck of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, and Geoff Smith of the Woodstock Institute in Chicago, “when the foreclosure rate increases one percentage point, neighborhood violent crime rises nearly 2.5 percent.” A study conducted in Austin, Texas last year, found that “blocks with unsecured buildings had 3.2 times as many drug calls to police, 1.8 times as many calls reporting theft, and twice the number of calls reporting violence as blocks without vacant buildings.”
According to a paper on the impact of foreclosures, published by NeighborWorks America:
“When homes are abandoned because of foreclosure, entire communities begin to deteriorate. Garbage, un-mowed lawns, pests and dilapidated roofs and porches are eyesores. The lack of care can change the entire atmosphere in a community. The people who remain may have feelings of loneliness, fear and frustration. To make matters worse, potential buyers find conditions like these unattractive, turning them away and cause the empty homes to remain on the market for months and even years.”
Neighbors Pay Too
According to the Center for Responsible Lending, “Foreclosures cost neighbors $223 billion.” The Center also cites that “Over 44 million homes in the United States will experience property devaluation as a result of foreclosures in their neighborhoods. Forty-two counties in the United States can expect to see their property tax base erode by more than $1 billion. And households located in proximity to lost properties could see the value of their property decrease by $5,000, on average.”
According to a story in USA Today, Vallejo, California, once a vibrant and flourishing place to live, recently had to declare bankruptcy when the collapsing housing market caused their local economy to go over the edge. “Vallejo cut 87 jobs and slashed funding for parks, a library, a senior citizens’ center and other public services, but it wasn’t enough to hold off the bankruptcy filing.”
Unfortunately, social programs and public services are often the first things to be cut from municipal budgets, and seeing the irony in this vicious cycle is unavoidable. The programs that are cut first are often the programs that exist to help those suffering from the crisis that caused the cuts in the first place.
Gimme’ Shelter
Of course, the question we should all be asking, with so many people losing homes, is where is everyone moving to? According to the National Coalition for the Homeless:
- 76% of displaced homeowners and renters are moving in with relatives and friends.
- 54% move to emergency shelters at some point.
- 40% are already ending up on the streets.
- 61% of state and local homeless coalitions say they’ve seen a rise in homelessness since the foreclosure crisis began in 2007.
Of course, many homeowners that lose their homes to foreclosure ultimately become renters, and the increasing demand for rentals has, quite predictably, led to rising prices. So, not only do foreclosure victims have a tough time qualifying for rental housing due to their damaged credit scores, but many are being priced out of the market as well.
And that’s not the end of the rental story. Foreclosures are affecting renters too. Many of the foreclosed properties nationwide are apartment unit buildings. According to the Furman Center: “60% of the 15,000 foreclosure filings in New York City last year were on multi-unit buildings.” And the result is families forced out of their apartments often with very little notice. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, “In the State of Nevada alone, 5,000 families have been evicted from their rental homes in the last 18 months.”
The coalition also reports that in suburban Los Angeles, a tent city of more than 200 displaced residents has emerged. Notoriously high rent payments in the LA basin are leaving many with no other option than to pitch a tent or live out of their car in settlements like this. At this settlement there is no electricity, no plumbing and no drainage. There is nowhere to properly store food. Clearly, the lack of plumbing and refrigeration poses serious health risks to the residents of this makeshift community.
Homeowners Attitudes About Banks Worsening
Lenders, mortgage servicers, hedge funds, and various real estate investors are all more than aware of the crisis and its ramifications. Yet, distressed homeowners continue to report their frustration and anger over the way they are treated by their bank. And for banks and mortgage servicers wondering about the outcome of this increasing homeowner dissatisfaction… well, the writing is on the wall.
In a November 2008 story, published by the Oakland Tribune (Oakland, California), customers of Countrywide, Wachovia, and Wells Fargo, among others, describe the banks as uncooperative, ineffective and rude.
“Countrywide says it wants to help people restructure? That’s baloney,” said Dawn Aguiar, who bought her Fremont home for $587,000 in 2005. “They have not been helpful at all.” She financed the purchase with a $586,000 mortgage from Countrywide, but homes in her neighborhood now sell for $450,000 to $500,000, so her house is “under water” – worth less than the loan. Her adjustable rate loan balance increases monthly, and she’s behind in her payments.
“One lady I spoke to was so rude, she had a real attitude,” Aguiar said. “She talked down to me like I was a deadbeat.”
The complaints from homeowners at risk of foreclosure about rude treatment by bank personnel are mounting in number and visibility. A quick check online yielded the following:
Mark Gagliardi about Countrywide: “They’re not proactive. No calls, no follow-ups. And when I call them, I get put on ignore.”
Sue Chai Spaulding about Bank of America: “They don’t want to help you. But they shouldn’t take this so lightly. These are people’s lives. They have been rude to me.”
Rachelle Gonzales about American Home Mortgage: “It’s so frustrating. They say they’ll help. Then they say no. They have called me names. They have called me a slime. This has been awful. Just awful.”
On one Website discussion about homeowners losing homes to foreclosure, the following discussion thread was easily found:
The first comment said: “The best way to ruin a house beyond repair is this… Get yourself a couple of bags of cement and mix a lot of water to make it a bit light… Drop it down every open pipe in your house (sink, toilet, bathtub, sewer pipes, main water pipe) then let it set. The repair will cost the bank more than the house… replacing every pipe in the house means they have to redo the house. They might be able to charge you tho… ha, ha.”
To which another replied: “Awww… the poor banks. Whatever will they do? Ain’t karma a bitch?”
And then another added: Yes they could, but, what can they get out of you when you have nothing to lose? Remember kids, fire cleanses everything.
And then another: “Great point. I hate banksters.”
And another: “Payback’s a bitch.”
And then another: “I think this is funny as hell. Everyone getting evicted should take all they want, then burn the place down.”
And another: “The bank may own the house but not the appliances! Of course they should take them – they are theirs. I can find NO sympathy in my heart for bankers or real estate agents – they’re right up there with tax collectors.”
And then another: “If the lender makes things hard, they get to live with the consequences. That house will be torn to shreds.”
And lastly: “If you ask for peace, prepare for war.”
The Cost of Foreclosing
The costs involved in foreclosing on a home are high and getting higher. Lost principal and interest payments, tax and insurance payments, maintaining the property, lost servicing fee income, costs of collection efforts/servicing, legal costs for handling the foreclosure, administrative fees, costs of restoring the property to saleable condition, real estate commissions… all play a role in negatively impacting a lender’s bottom-line.
According to estimates from Standard & Poor’s, published in 2008, the average cost to a lender, expressed as a percentage of the loan balance is 26%. The costs breakdown as follows:
Amount lost in interest payments: 13.6%
Property taxes paid by lender: 3%
Legal fees paid by lender: 1%
Real estate agent commissions: 6%
Home maintenance: 3%
With the housing crisis still in full swing, home prices still not at bottom, and many forecasting millions of foreclosures still to come, it’s clear that lenders will endure more pain over the next few years. What banks and servicers need to consider is how homeowner attitudes are likely to change for the worse as the crisis continues.
Our politicians have recently started to see how populist anger can make governing much more difficult. The outrage over the AIG bonuses provided an example of how close many of our nation’s citizens are to marching in the streets. One can only imagine how homeowners will feel a year or two from now, when many of those who thought they could make it through our economic downturn, find that they have not. No one can know for sure, but one thing seems certain: If they’re getting angry today, they’ll be that much angrier a year from now.
Loan Modifications
As the economy has deteriorated, the number of foreclosures has continued to increase, which places further downward pressure on home values, which in turn causes more foreclosures and does further harm to our economy. Today, we all realize that foreclosures benefit no one, although to-date, we have not united behind a solution to this very serious ongoing problem.
As a result of this dangerous, downward spiral, the cost of foreclosure in some parts of the country is reaching the level at which no one, including the investors that own the property, wants to foreclose.
One alternative is loan modification. If, by modifying the terms of an existing mortgage, the borrower can afford the mortgage payments and therefore remain in the home and avoid foreclosure, it’s often true that everyone, even the investors that hold the mortgage on the property, comes out ahead. For investors, it’s really a question of which alternative, foreclosure or modification, offers the greater financial return. There are several methods for determining the cost differential between the two alternatives, for example one could compare a present value calculation with the expected cost of foreclosure, factoring in variables like repairs and reconditioning, expected time on the market, and assumptions about trends in home prices.
It’s worth considering, however, that lenders and servicers continue to struggle with loan modifications, which are transactions that are particularly time and labor intensive and often produce unsustainable results. As an example, studies published last year indicate that when banks attempt to handle loan modification negotiations directly with a borrower, the end result is that 60% are back in default in six months.
The reasons for this are many, but the overriding fact is that negotiations between a bank and an individual homeowner at risk of foreclosure, are obviously not negotiations between equals, and that manifests itself
in high re-default rates in the first year.
By contracting with qualified and quality loan modification firms, banks may be able to increase the diameter of the pipeline and therefore modify more loans, keeping people in their homes where they’re supposed to be.
Cash for Keys
A number of lenders have adopted the practice of offering to pay a homeowner about to lose a home to foreclosure a cash payment for leaving the home undamaged. Lenders report offering payments of $1500-$3,000. But with the incidence of borrowers damaging their homes before they leave rising, offering three grand may only be keeping the already honest… honest.
For those angry enough to strip wiring out of a home, remove a garage door, or even sell the air conditioning unit, three thousand dollars is not likely to accomplish much.
The Best Way to Catch Flies
Lenders seeking to reduce their costs of foreclosures should consider the old axiom: You catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar.
As it relates to a lender’s loss mitigation and collection personnel, it means that training them to better understand the psychology of foreclosures, to feel more empathy for those losing homes, to identify with a parent with children in financial distress… and more… banks can expect to be repaid hundreds of times over.
People in foreclosure, and those at risk of going into foreclosure, are often scared, lonely, tired, insecure, and sometimes confused. They’re not thinking clearly and they’re on the edge. A little kindness at a time like that can go a long, long way. A little rudeness, on the other hand, can push someone into a rage. It’s not easy to work with distressed homeowners day after day. And even though some might feel like they’re not letting their true feelings come through, at times like these, that can be difficult, if not impossible to do.
Here are some ideas that I think bank management could consider to change the way their personnel behave toward distressed borrowers.
- Explain what distressed borrowers are thinking and how they are feeling. Give them the details. Ask them to imagine what they would do and how they would feel. By bringing them into this kind of discussion, you’ll force people to realize that others worry about the same things they do, and once they share their thoughts and feelings with co-workers, they’ll stop seeing those in trouble as getting what they deserve.
- Share the facts about the costs that neighborhoods, communities and society as a whole pay as a result of foreclosures. You can use some of the statistics presented earlier. People sometimes fail to see how something that hasn’t happened to them personally, affects everyone personally.
- Play the Foreclosure Game – Ask people to calculate what would have to happen to place them at risk of losing their homes to foreclosure. You can even create cards that describe various catastrophes that happen to people in life. For example: You are injured in a car accident that leaves you unable to work for three months; the driver that hit you is uninsured. A month later your spouse is laid off from work, and you have a tuition payment of $18,000 due in 90 days. You can’t take out an equity line on your home, nor can you borrow from the bank. And your retirement plan account has been reduced by 40% as a result of the latest market correction.
- Consider asking a borrower who already lost his or her home to foreclosure to come in as a guest speaker. Often times, it’s harder to harbor ill feelings about someone you’ve met face-to-face, and the personnel stories from people who have come through it, can have a lot of impact.
- Conduct role-playing exercises in which one person is the borrower and the other the bank manager. The borrower starts by explaining to the bank manager how they got in so much trouble. The rest of the group votes on the level of empathy and compassion the bank manager has communicated during the call.
- Review your personnel training manuals to ensure that they are not placing counterproductive restrictions or using guidelines that make it more difficult for your people to spend the time needed. For example, do your people try to spend less than a certain amount of time per call? If the answer is yes, you may want to consider either lifting that requirement, or lengthening it.
- Changing culture has to start at the top. Have all of your organization’s top managers speak at your training sessions. When your loss mitigation personnel hear the CEO talk about foreclosure victims with sympathy and caring… they’ll stop and listen.
- Clip and distribute articles that highlight the heartbreaking stories of people losing homes due to no fault of their own. Many people today, still have the impression that those that got in trouble did it to themselves. Show data on the number of prime loans that are now defaulting. Examples that destroy that perception help to open minds.
- Encourage your people to share stories with each other at regular meetings. This is not something you want to do just once and leave it alone after that. This is an ongoing program intended to make sure that the people you have on the phone aren’t causing someone to punch holes in their walls when they hang up from the call.
- Consider increasing the number of breaks your people take during the day. And consider providing some items “just for fun” in areas where breaks are taken. An Etch-a-Sketch, Slinky, or even Play-Doh, can all bring back happy memories and help to relieve stress, or on the more serious side, provide an exercise ball, weights, or even a treadmill or two… exercise kills stress.
Conclusion
Human beings have a need to see bad things that happen to someone as not being their problem. And because of how this crisis has unfolded, many people have come to believe that everyone losing a home is an “irresponsible sub-prime borrower”. This belief can color how someone interacts with a distressed homeowner.
Those losing homes today are going through very stressful times. Many have lost jobs, and are struggling to make ends meet. Many have young children. And many have lost all hope. It’s easy for someone under that kind of stress to become angry, and an angry homeowner losing a home to foreclosure is likely to damage the home before leaving.
Banks and servicers need to take a look at how loss mitigation personnel are trained to deal with homeowners at risk of foreclosure, because as the months and even years go by, the situation will only get worse. By helping personnel to better understand what’s happening and how these customers are feeling, they can spend a little extra time, or offer a kind word that can make the difference between a home left in decent condition, and one in need of thousands of dollars in repairs.
Most importantly, communicate with the people that interact with troubled borrowers on the phone every day. It’s a hard job and constant exposure to tragic situations and frustrated or angry customers can wear one down, even if the person doesn’t realize it.
Today, just like my mother used to say… It pays to be nice.
Mandelman out.
Palm Beach Post- Fannie Mae fires second South Florida law firm
(I wonder what happens to all those files that got transferred? So much for that swarthy swagger I saw in court yesterday, the mill attorney proudly asserting the right for any old party to foreclose, picking up files and arguing for one firm after another, just having a field day in the courtroom…a real grand pooh bah.)
Federal mortgage giant Fannie Mae has cut ties with a second South Florida law firm handling its foreclosure cases, requiring an immediate transfer of those files to other attorneys and likely causing more turmoil in the state’s foreclosure courts.
The termination of its relationship with the Fort Lauderdale firm of Ben-Ezra & Katz, P.A. was announced today in a notice to loan servicers. The notice says payments to the firm should be stopped immediately and gives servicers a Feb. 15 deadline to find new firms to handle the Ben-Ezra & Katz files.
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Who Cares About Title Insurance? You Do
“By Dunstan Prial
Published October 14, 2010| FOXBusiness
The last thing most homebuyers want to think about at their closing is title insurance. They’ve already been through the ringer, paying thousands of dollars in often-confusing fees and signing mountains of documents.
Title insurance is almost certainly an afterthought.
But homebuyers may want to think again.
The messy fallout from badly — and, in some cases, perhaps fraudulently — processedforeclosures has cast into sharp focus the need for comprehensive title insurance. As always, homebuyers should make sure they’re getting a policy that covers any costs tied to hidden fees or liens placed against the property that may have not been detected during a title search.
But, now more than ever, homebuyers, especially those purchasing homes through a foreclosure or a short sale, need a policy that covers legal fees if someone challenges the validity of their title.
Lita Epstein, a foreclosure expert and author of several personal finance books, said one of the root causes of the recent financial crisis — a rush by lenders to sell mortgages willy nilly to as many investors as possible — can also be blamed for the current mess.
“These loans were sold so many different times that no one knows who has the original paperwork. That really gets to the core of the financial scandal. The original closing documents for these properties have been lost as those loans were sold and spread out among many investors,” said Epstein.
In recent weeks, many of the major mortgage loan servicers, including Bank of America (BAC: 11.99 ,-0.51 ,-4.08%), Ally Financial’s GMAC Mortgage, and JPMorgan Chase (JPM: 37.17 ,-1.58 ,-4.08%), have suspended foreclosures in the wake of legal challenges charging all manner of improprieties. And as of Wednesday all 50 state attorneys general have said they will investigate how foreclosures were conducted in their states.
The investigations will attempt to determine if loan servicers handling foreclosures processed all the paperwork properly. In affidavits made public since the foreclosure mess gained steam, some loan servicers, dubbed robo-signers, have acknowledged signing off on hundreds of foreclosures each day without ever verifying or even reviewing the documents included in the paperwork crossing their desks.
Thousands of homeowners whose mortgages were foreclosed on are now challenging the loss of their homes, and that number is rapidly climbing. These challenges throw into question the rightful ownership of homes sold through foreclosures.
“There are going to be cases where a homeowner has a right to walk back in that home,” said Matt Weidner, a Florida-based real estate attorney. “The title industry has to decide how they’re going to deal with these cases.”
That’s why comprehensive title insurance has suddenly become so important. So what is title insurance and why is it required by all banks making mortgage loans?
Title insurance is defined as protection against losses stemming from any problems connected to the title of a piece of property. So if there were homeowners’ association fees that went unpaid by a previous owner, or liens against the home placed by local tax assessors that weren’t detected during the title search conducted while the home was being purchased, those costs would be covered by title insurance. The insurance company will also cover all legal fees rising from the dispute.
The problems that have arisen in the wake of the real estate craze early last decade stem from the fact that mortgages and titles changed hands so quickly and so many times that, in many instances, no one knows how to track down all the original paperwork.
In regions hard hit by foreclosures — Florida, for example — much of that paperwork isn’t showing up when title searches are being conducted on sales of foreclosed home. Consequently, lots of potential problems are going undetected.
“There is information that isn’t making it to the proper place quickly enough and it’s making it difficult to be certain that the title has completely cleared,” Epstein explained.
Epstein said there are cases in which mortgages were split up among several investors and those separate investors have foreclosed on the same mortgage at different times, leaving the current title holder in an uneasy state of legal and financial limbo.
That’s the sort of dispute that title insurance is designed to settle.
At least one large title insurer isn’t exactly embracing these issues. On Oct. 1, Old Republic National Title Insurance Co., a unit of Old United International Corp (ORI: 13.93 ,+0.07 ,+0.51%), announced it wouldn’t issue new policies on homes recently foreclosed by GMAC or JPMorgan Chase.
Old Republic did not return calls seeking comment on its new policy.
Weidner said the title insurers should have seen this coming.
“Now they’re looking at all these allegations, and they’re asking how big is the risk and wondering what are we gonna do about it. The magnitude and the proportions are so big, you struggle to find an adjective,” he said.
According to Weidner, Florida alone has more than 500,000 foreclosure cases pending.
“Even if there’s a problem with a small fraction of these, it’s incredibly destabilizing to the real estate industry and financial markets in general,” said Weidner.”
Click to find original Fox Business report…
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Who Cares About Title Insurance? You Do
“By Dunstan Prial
Published October 14, 2010| FOXBusiness
The last thing most homebuyers want to think about at their closing is title insurance. They’ve already been through the ringer, paying thousands of dollars in often-confusing fees and signing mountains of documents.
Title insurance is almost certainly an afterthought.
But homebuyers may want to think again.
The messy fallout from badly — and, in some cases, perhaps fraudulently — processedforeclosures has cast into sharp focus the need for comprehensive title insurance. As always, homebuyers should make sure they’re getting a policy that covers any costs tied to hidden fees or liens placed against the property that may have not been detected during a title search.
But, now more than ever, homebuyers, especially those purchasing homes through a foreclosure or a short sale, need a policy that covers legal fees if someone challenges the validity of their title.
Lita Epstein, a foreclosure expert and author of several personal finance books, said one of the root causes of the recent financial crisis — a rush by lenders to sell mortgages willy nilly to as many investors as possible — can also be blamed for the current mess.
“These loans were sold so many different times that no one knows who has the original paperwork. That really gets to the core of the financial scandal. The original closing documents for these properties have been lost as those loans were sold and spread out among many investors,” said Epstein.
In recent weeks, many of the major mortgage loan servicers, including Bank of America (BAC: 11.99 ,-0.51 ,-4.08%), Ally Financial’s GMAC Mortgage, and JPMorgan Chase (JPM: 37.17 ,-1.58 ,-4.08%), have suspended foreclosures in the wake of legal challenges charging all manner of improprieties. And as of Wednesday all 50 state attorneys general have said they will investigate how foreclosures were conducted in their states.
The investigations will attempt to determine if loan servicers handling foreclosures processed all the paperwork properly. In affidavits made public since the foreclosure mess gained steam, some loan servicers, dubbed robo-signers, have acknowledged signing off on hundreds of foreclosures each day without ever verifying or even reviewing the documents included in the paperwork crossing their desks.
Thousands of homeowners whose mortgages were foreclosed on are now challenging the loss of their homes, and that number is rapidly climbing. These challenges throw into question the rightful ownership of homes sold through foreclosures.
“There are going to be cases where a homeowner has a right to walk back in that home,” said Matt Weidner, a Florida-based real estate attorney. “The title industry has to decide how they’re going to deal with these cases.”
That’s why comprehensive title insurance has suddenly become so important. So what is title insurance and why is it required by all banks making mortgage loans?
Title insurance is defined as protection against losses stemming from any problems connected to the title of a piece of property. So if there were homeowners’ association fees that went unpaid by a previous owner, or liens against the home placed by local tax assessors that weren’t detected during the title search conducted while the home was being purchased, those costs would be covered by title insurance. The insurance company will also cover all legal fees rising from the dispute.
The problems that have arisen in the wake of the real estate craze early last decade stem from the fact that mortgages and titles changed hands so quickly and so many times that, in many instances, no one knows how to track down all the original paperwork.
In regions hard hit by foreclosures — Florida, for example — much of that paperwork isn’t showing up when title searches are being conducted on sales of foreclosed home. Consequently, lots of potential problems are going undetected.
“There is information that isn’t making it to the proper place quickly enough and it’s making it difficult to be certain that the title has completely cleared,” Epstein explained.
Epstein said there are cases in which mortgages were split up among several investors and those separate investors have foreclosed on the same mortgage at different times, leaving the current title holder in an uneasy state of legal and financial limbo.
That’s the sort of dispute that title insurance is designed to settle.
At least one large title insurer isn’t exactly embracing these issues. On Oct. 1, Old Republic National Title Insurance Co., a unit of Old United International Corp (ORI: 13.93 ,+0.07 ,+0.51%), announced it wouldn’t issue new policies on homes recently foreclosed by GMAC or JPMorgan Chase.
Old Republic did not return calls seeking comment on its new policy.
Weidner said the title insurers should have seen this coming.
“Now they’re looking at all these allegations, and they’re asking how big is the risk and wondering what are we gonna do about it. The magnitude and the proportions are so big, you struggle to find an adjective,” he said.
According to Weidner, Florida alone has more than 500,000 foreclosure cases pending.
“Even if there’s a problem with a small fraction of these, it’s incredibly destabilizing to the real estate industry and financial markets in general,” said Weidner.”
Click to find original Fox Business report…
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Florida Law Firms Subpoenaed Over Foreclosure Filing Practices
Even though this is 18 months late, it’s a positive sign that the Florida Attorney General is finally getting it, or, more likely just making a political move to try and win some votes for November. Of course, this “investigation” will last well past November so voters will have to consider whether this is just political feint or if the stalwart AG McCollum actually posesses the balls to actually put someone in jail for all the fraud that’s been committed to date using the Florida judciary as pawns in the chess game called Wall Street and Banking. Mr. McCollum, ball’s in your court… pun intended. – mdn
Attorney General Bill McCollum News Release
August 10, 2010
Media Contact: Sandi Copes
Phone: (850) 245-0150
TALLAHASSEE, FL – Attorney General Bill McCollum today announced his office has launched three new investigations into allegations of unfair and deceptive actions by Florida law firms handling foreclosure cases. The Attorney General’s Economic Crimes Division is investigating whether improper documentation may have been created and filed with Florida courts to speed up foreclosure processes, potentially without the knowledge or consent of the homeowners involved. – (gee ya think?)
The new investigations name The Law Offices of Marshall C. Watson, P.A.; Shapiro & Fishman, LLP; and the Law Offices of David J. Stern, P.A. The law firms were hired by loan servicers to begin foreclosure proceedings when consumers were in arrears on their mortgages.
Because many mortgages have been bought and sold by different institutions multiple times, key paperwork involved in the process to obtain foreclosure judgments is often missing. On numerous occasions, allegedly fabricated documents have been presented to the courts in foreclosure actions to obtain final judgments against homeowners. Thousands of final judgments of foreclosure against Florida homeowners may have been the result of the allegedly improper actions of the law firms under investigation.
The Attorney General’s Office is also investigating whether the law firms have created affiliated companies outside the United States where the allegedly false documents are being prepared and then submitted to the law firms for use.
Subpoenas have been served on each of the law firms listed above, and the investigations are ongoing.
BOMBSHELL- FLORIDA ATTORNEY GENERAL ANNOUNCES INVESTIGATION OF THE FORECLOSURE MILLS
Sometimes the screams of attorneys and activists who are protesting the conduct of the foreclosure mills seems like voices screaming in the wilderness. Having said that, the following press release from the Florida Attorney General’s office gives me some hope that raising all these alarms is not totally in vain.Phone: (850) 245-0150
TALLAHASSEE, FL – Attorney General Bill McCollum today announced his office has launched three new investigations into allegations of unfair and deceptive actions by Florida law firms handling foreclosure cases. The Attorney General’s Economic Crimes Division is investigating whether improper documentation may have been created and filed with Florida courts to speed up foreclosure processes, potentially without the knowledge or consent of the homeowners involved.
The new investigations name The Law Offices of Marshall C. Watson, P.A.; Shapiro & Fishman, LLP; and the Law Offices of David J. Stern, P.A. The law firms were hired by loan servicers to begin foreclosure proceedings when consumers were in arrears on their mortgages.
Because many mortgages have been bought and sold by different institutions multiple times, key paperwork involved in the process to obtain foreclosure judgments is often missing. On numerous occasions, allegedly fabricated documents have been presented to the courts in foreclosure actions to obtain final judgments against homeowners. Thousands of final judgments of foreclosure against Florida homeowners may have been the result of the allegedly improper actions of the law firms under investigation.
The Attorney General’s Office is also investigating whether the law firms have created affiliated companies outside the United States where the allegedly false documents are being prepared and then submitted to the law firms for use.
Subpoenas have been served on each of the law firms listed above, and the investigations are ongoing.
Click here to see the Mother Jones story and read the subpoenas.
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House Hearings to Answer Question: Are Loan Servicers Honoring Their Commitments to Help Preserve Homeownership?
On Thursday, June 21, 2010, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held a hearing they called: “Foreclosure Prevention, Part II: Are Loan Servicers Honoring Their Commitments to Help Preserve Homeownership?” The committee was supposed to be investigating the overall effectiveness of the processes put in place by loan servicers as related to the implementation of the administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program (“HAMP”) and any other loan modification programs designed to help homeowners avoid foreclosures.
Here is the list of people the committee brought in to testify:
Mr. Sanjiv Das, Chief Executive Officer, CitiMortgage, Inc.
Ms. Barbara J. Desoer, President, Bank of America Home Loans
Mr. David Friedman, President and CEO, American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc.
Mr. Michael Heid, Co-President, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Wells Fargo & Co.
Mr. David Lowman, Chief Executive Officer, Chase Home Finance, Inc.
Mr. Edward J. Pinto, Consultant
Okay, so if you click that link above, where the type is blue, it will take you to the House Committee’s Website, and you can read everyone’s testimony there, however, because I both know and like my readers very much for the most part, I want to be clear that I don’t recommend it. I read all of them, and I’m pretty sure I’m going to have gastro-intestinal problems for the rest of the week as a result. Yeah, I know, you found that funny, but you’re not the one who just washed down a Zantac 150 with a tall glass of straight bourbon.
Want me to cut to the chase, no pun intended? Go straight to the bottom-line? Okay, I will.
Everything’s going just fine. There are no real problems with HAMP or with the servicers who are implementing HAMP. Oh sure, there have been a few challenges, but most of them have been caused by the borrowers who just can’t seem to do a Gad damn thing right. Leave it to a borrower to be unable to send in the right paperwork six or seven times, unwilling to wait on hold for 4.5 hours in order to be disconnected, and unable to prove their income with anything but paycheck stubs, financial statements, and tax returns.
Clearly, all you have to do is read the testimony of those very credible bankers and it’s homeowners that are the problem here… they’re the ones that caused this whole economic collapse in the first place, and then when the Obama Administration went out of its way to come up with a program to save these poor saps from foreclosure, wouldn’t you know it… the homeowners screw it all up just like they’ve screwed up everything else in their paltry, unremarkable lives.
Honestly, after reading what the bankers testified to, I don’t know why I even talk to you people… you homeowners. Losers! If you guys would stop making a mess of HAMP and just let the banks take control, they could modify your loan and preserve home ownership in this country in no time at all, we can all see that very clearly now. Why do you homeowners insist on being such an impediment to the President’s program’s success? You just want Obama to fail, don’t you? You must all be Republicans.
Just look at a few of the things that Mr. David Lowman, the Chief Executive Officer of Chase Home Finance had to say:
“CHASE has consistently been among the leaders in implementing HAMP and other modification solutions for homeowners.”
Well, that’s certainly true, right? I don’t think there’s any question about that. CHASE has definitely been “among the leaders.” Every time you see the leaders hanging out, look left or right and there’s CHASE. Got to give it to them there. Point taken. Move on.
“CHASE has handled over 18 million inbound calls to our call centers from homeowners seeking foreclosure prevention assistance in 2009 and through May 2010, including 3.8 million calls to our dedicated customer hotline for modification inquiries.”
People, look… that’s a lot of phone calls. I’d like to see a homeowner handle that many phone calls. Let’s give credit where credit is… you know, that may not be such a useful expression going forward. Just thinking out loud over here.
“Mailed over two million letters to invite Chase customers to discuss their situation or help them complete their HAMP documents.”
Oh my Lord… now I did not know this, did you? They mailed over two million letters to CHASE customers inviting them to come discuss things? That’s a lot of work all by itself. Don’t scoff… do you know how many envelopes their employees must have had to lick? Yuck!
“Hosted and participated in more than 711 homeowner events in 2009 and through May 2010 to educate and inform homeowners about the loan modification process and assist in the completion of required documents.”
For heaven’s sake… how much “hosting and participating” can one bank be expected to do over two years. I know my wife and I can only handle attending one or two Bar Mitzvahs a year and we’re burned out. I can only imagine what it’s like to be constantly hosting and participating, hosting and participating.
And why do they do it? To educate and inform stupid homeowners about the process and how to complete the required documents, and obviously we’ve got some remedial learners owning homes in this country, because they haven’t learned a damn thing, it seems.
“CHASE is committed to keeping families in their homes”
What more do you want… blood? They’re committed, homeowners. Committed to keeping your dumb, broke families in their shoddy little homes… that you shouldn’t have been allowed to buy in the first place. How many favors can JPMorgan CHASE do for you people?
“At CHASE we are working very hard to help families meet their mortgage obligations and keep them in their homes by making their home payments affordable. As a national leader in foreclosure prevention, we have continued to expand upon and improve our programs to keep families in their homes.”
Well, I just don’t know what else Mr. Lowman could say. Here you have a company working not just hard, but VERY HARD to help families meet their obligations by making their payments affordable. And you’re complaining? Don’t you think all you homeowners are being just a tad ungrateful here?
I mean, really… this is the testimony of a very busy man. He didn’t have to come testify, he could have just said he got fogged in, or whatever. He’s running a national leader in foreclosure prevention, and he’s busy expanding and improving in order to keep people in their homes. So, do you think you could stop being so critical, and let him get back to expanding and improving?
“We have made solid progress in offering HAMP trial plans to about 257,000 homeowners and have over 87,000 homeowners in active HAMP trial plans through May 2010. We are now working very hard to convert homeowners to permanent HAMP modifications and have successfully converted about 48,000 homeowners, but – like other servicers – we have faced challenges in getting documentation required from borrowers to complete the modification.”
See, stupid homeowners. It’s your fault. I mean, according to CHASE’s published figures, CHASE offered 846,542 loan modifications since the beginning of 2009. And here we are, only 18 months later, and they’ve made solid progress, with about 48,000 permanent HAMP modifications on the scoreboard. Hey, when you think about the challenges of dealing with stupid homeowners who can’t spell documentation, that’s pretty darn good, I think.
I mean, it’s not like they’ve only permanently modified like five percent of the total. That would suck. Not my CHASE, baby… they’ve modified 5.6% of the total, so the gloating lamp is lit, ladies and gentlemen. Hey CHASE… you go girl.
“Launched a program for discounted sales and donations of foreclosed properties, through which we have completed over 700 transactions with 182 non profit agencies in 30 states.”
Had you heard about this? I hadn’t heard about this. These guys are just overachievers. On top of having all those homeowners throwing challenges in their way as far as modifying loans goes, CHASE had time to launch a program for discounted sales, and for donations of foreclosed properties? And they did 700 transactions?
You mean to tell me that there have been 700 people in this country that donated their foreclosed properties to non-profits in 30 states? They didn’t want to reduce the principal for the people living there? They’d prefer to take it back and then donate it to a nonprofit? Wow. I’m getting all teary eyed over here. Really makes me proud to be an American.
(Side Note: Someone find me one of these pieces of garbage that refused to write down the loan’s principal for the homeowner, foreclosed, and then gave the house away to some non-profit… and I will fly there and beat the crap out of whoever it is. Think I’m kidding… go ahead, find me the person who did that and we’ll see who’s kidding.)
“Based on the actual re-performance of permanent modifications completed by Chase, payment reduction appears to be the primary driver of post modification re-performance.”
See, and they’re learning stuff at CHASE too. They studied it for a couple of years and they’ve come to the conclusion that when it comes to modified loans, payment reduction APPEARS to be “the primary driver of post modification re-performance”. They can’t be sure, of course, and no one would expect them to be. But, at this point in the game… it looks like if you lower the payment, damn if those stupid, broke, irresponsible homeowners don’t appear to actually make their payments. Who would have ever thunk it? Go figure.
You see… the first year they did modifications, 60% of them made the payments go up, but then… and quite surprisingly, I might add… 60% of those modifications re-defaulted a year later. For a while it was a real mystery, but then those innovative and inquiring minds at JPMorgan CHASE did some hard ciphering and came up with an idea: let’s lower the payments and see what happens then. Of course, there was a lot of disagreement in the boardroom, but to their credit they took the chance and by golly… it APPEARS to have worked.
“2MP – CHASE was one of the first major servicers to initiate the Treasury Department’s Second Lien Modification Program (2MP), which we began in May 2010. 2MP is a systematic approach to modifying all second liens where the underlying first lien has been modified under HAMP.”
Well, technically speaking, I don’t believe that any second liens have actually been modified under the 2MP program, but hey… at least CHASE was one of the first major servicers to participate. That’s something.
“There are many reasons borrowers face affordability issues. In our experience, the number one reason is a recession-driven decline in income, whether it is a spouse losing a job, fewer hours at work, underemployment, or finding a new job that pays less than the previous one. Data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency suggest that 75% of mortgage defaults nationwide are caused by issues of affordability: borrowers default when a life event (or cumulative life events) causes them not to be able to pay their mortgage with income and savings.”
See, there’s more of that learning happening again. 75% of mortgage defaults are caused by issues of affordability… so, borrowers default when they can’t pay! Good for you guys at CHASE! And the number one reason is “a recession driven decline in income”. Very good, as well!
And what was it that caused the worst recession in 70 years… the sharpest and deepest downturn in our economy since the Great Depression? Come on… you can do it… it was the incomprehensibly greedy and entirely unregulated asshats like you guys at JPMorgan CHASE! Yay! Very, very good! It’s the circle of life, Simba.
The only difference is, that when you guys went bankrupt, you bankrupted the entire global financial system and our government was so scared that we couldn’t live without you that you all got bailed out 100 pennies on every dollar. Even better that that… you got huge bonuses for being the biggest crooks and failures in the history of the world. And in fact, you guys at CHASE are still feeding at the taxpayer’s teat, aren’t you? Why yes you are. I know you are because my nipples are still sore.
Look, I could go on and reprint the testimony of the woman from Bunk of America… she complains a lot about how difficult it was to integrate all those messy Countrywide loans into BofA’s system. After that, however, she goes on to say pretty much the same unadulterated crap that Davey Lowman said above… so why bother. You can read it for yourself… just scroll back up and click the link, and then scroll down and you’ll see transcripts of each of their testimonies, and I use that term very loosely.
There was one person testifying at the hearing though, that wasn’t a clone of the others, and his name is Edward J. Pinto. I’ve actually emailed back and forth with Mr. Pinto, mostly because of his response to my calling him a jackass, or possibly a moron in one of my past articles. It seems that he didn’t like my calling him whatever I called him, and said that I shouldn’t call him those things because he’d been doing his research into HAMP “pro bono,” which means free, if you went to college, or are visiting from ancient Rome.
I didn’t understand his reasoning at the time, to tell you the truth, unless by “pro bono” he actually meant “okay to be sloppy and ill informed”. For a couple years, Pinto was the Chief Credit Officer for the now entirely bankrupt, and by that I mean both morally and fiscally, Fannie Mae, where perhaps he also worked “pro bono”. For the record, I was Pro Bono years ago when I lived out in the Palm Springs area. But then Sonny died in a skiing accident and so I became Pro Bono’s wife. And no, I’m not sorry about that… it’s late.
I do have to say that Mr. Pinto, in many ways, redeemed himself in my eyes with his testimony, meaning that it was at least much more honest and wasn’t totally insipid and inane. Speaking about HAMP he did make the following statements:
“The truth is HAMP has been a spectacular failure when measured against the original goal of helping 3-4 million homeowners avoid foreclosure.”
He also pointed out Treasury’s propensity for “applying a rosy gloss,” by showing that the May HAMP report stated:
“Most homeowners in canceled trials became current on mortgage payments or enter an alternative modification.”
But according to Mr. Pinto, and I’m confident that his numbers are right this time:
“It turns out that of the 194,000 canceled trial modifications with a disposition path, only 19,000 or 9.8% were current. Not quite as reassuring as Treasury’s statement. It turns out that some 95,000 or about 50% are in “alternative modification”.
Now, will you lookie at that. I believe what you have right there is the Treasury Department lying its ass off… again. Yoohoo… Mr. Geithner… why can’t you ever tell the truth about anything? It makes me sad. You make me miss our ex-Attorney Generral, Alberto “I-can’t-recall” Gonzales.
Then Pinto does it again, but right at the end he made me spit my coffee all over my desk. He said:
“The Treasury Department also promised “clear and consistent loan modification guidelines that the entire mortgage industry can use. There are only two words to describe HAMP’s guidelines: numbing complexity. At last count HAMP had 800 requirements and servicers are expected to certify compliance. With ever changing regulations, a constant need to re-evaluate past decisions in light of new regulations, and multiple appeals, it is no wonder that the HAMP pipeline became clogged through no substantial fault of servicers.”
At no fault of whom, Mr. Pinto? No fault of servicers? Why did you have to go and say something like that? I was being nice… was going to be nice to you through the whole article. And then you have to go running off at the mouth saying it wasn’t the fault of servicers. Okay dumbass… I want to know how many street level modifications you’ve seen up close. How many homeowners have you spoken with, and how many hours have you sat on hold waiting for Bank of America to answer the damn phone. BofA has 44 million credit card holders and they manage to answer those phone calls.
He even cites the GAO as proof that what he was saying was right:
The GAO observed: “Servicers faced challenges implementing HAMP because of the number of changes to the program, some of which have required servicers to readjust their business practices, update their systems, and retrain staff.”
Oh, so what Ed. The crisis has been going on three years, and we’ve given the banks and servicers a blank check to help them with their many “challenges”. It was like… when I was reading the Bank of America woman whine about Countrywide integration, I wanted to throw up, or smack her hand with a ruler. You bought Countrywide for $4 billion, as I remember it, Ms. President, or at least that moron Kenny Lewis did, so deal with it. Nobody forced you to buy it, although we realize that your bank was pretty easy to talk into anything. The point is, we’ve got something north of $100 billion into your insolvent bank, so go borrow a trillion at 0% and fix it, whatever it is.
Pinto also blames the failure of HAMP for creating strategic defaults, but even though I’d like to blame just about anything on HAMP, and the Obama Administration’s stupidity and insensitivity in allowing it to go on this long, I don’t know if you can blame HAMP for strategic defaults. I think strategic defaults are caused purely by homeowners with above average intelligence, actually using their noggins. They walk away because they should walk away.
And I know, Fannie wants to punish them by not letting them buy another home with a Fannie Mae loan for seven years, but besides the fact that no one cares about threats made by a bankrupt mortgage company that won’t even be around in seven years… in fact I’d be shocked it Fannie was still around next year or the year after at this time. And who are they going to sue… and how will they prove what happened? Nope, Fannie is just another barking dog trying to intimidate American homeowners, after being a big part of the problem in the first place.
I’ll tell you one thing their threat did for me… it made me want to strategically default, and since our homes that had appraised for $925,000 in 2005, just had a neighbor short sale sell for $360,000, I very well may just get my chance. I’m so looking forward to it. I’m thinking about blogging and Twittering all about it as it unfolds. What fun, don’t you think Fannie Mae?
Lastly, Herb Allison, the man from Treasury that simply cannot keep his mouth shut, had to weigh in with his “everything is going according to plan” speech. Yes, it’s Mr. Herb Allison, another past focus of mine. If you believe anything Herb says, and I’m pretty sure no one does, then HAMP wasn’t supposed to help 3-4 million homeowners avoid foreclosure. Are you sitting down, because this is going to give you Exedrin Headache #22.
You might remember me writing about Herb Allison’s testimony from March 25, 2010, but click that link and you can relive how distorted a human being’s though process can become.
“At the time we launched HAMP in March 2009, President Obama said that the program would “enable as many as 3 to 4 million homeowners to modify the terms of their mortgages.”
“The President’s statement about ‘enabling’ modifications is the reason that we have continued to report offers of trial modifications – the offer is when a homeowner is able to get a modification, and 1.4 million offers have been extended in the first twelve months.”
“A very similar picture of progress arises from the number of actual trial modifications begun, over 1.1 million in twelve months. Actual trial modifications are the point at which homeowners begin a lower mortgage payment — an average reduction of around $500 per month.”
“In a program scheduled to last nearly four years (March 2009 until the end of 2012), either the 1.1 million or 1.4 million in the first year places the program well on schedule to the goal announced by President Obama.”
“The Administration has never said that the program would implement 3 to 4 million permanent modifications, which take place only after the homeowner has been offered a trial modification, has performed for at least three months in a trial modification, and has met the full documentation requirements for the permanent modification.
One important reason for having permanent modifications in the first place was a recognition that not all trial modifications would become permanent, such as when a borrower does not make the three payments needed to receive a permanent modification.
Herb, Herb, Herb… no you didn’t. You did not just say that when President Obama said that HAMP would help 3-4 million homeowners by modifying their mortgages, he wasn’t talking about “PERMANENT” modifications, he was talking about trial modifications? Herb, do you understand that even the “permanent modifications,” offered under HAMP are really only lowered for five years, after which time the interest rates do go up again? So, even HAMP’s permanent modifications are only temporary, Herb. And now you’re saying that Obama only meant 3-4 million trial modifications? You are a jackass, Herb.
When you get home after work does your dog bark at you? It’s because he doesn’t trust you, Herb.
So, you see everybody… everything’s going just great with HAMP and the whole foreclosure thing. Stop being such Gloomy Gus’s, or Downer Dan’s… We held a hearing and the bankers said everything is fine… it was even on C-Span. One crazy guy named Pinto made some points but obviously there’s nothing to worry about.
And there’s no way that 20 million foreclosures, trillions in evaporated equity, near 20% unemployment and a basket of insolvent financial institutions could ever turn into another Great Depression. We’re fine I tell you… there’s nothing to fix here. What foreclosure crisis? I don’t see any foreclosure crisis. And don’t worry… I’m sure Congress will check with the bankers in a few months if they’re unsure how things are going.
I guess I’m going to have to find something else to write about. Bummer.
In a related story, I understand that the Gulf of Mexico is actually doing very well also. Yes, it’s true… people are swimming in it again. Apparently our guys in Congress asked the oil barons and they said…
Maiden Lane Disclosures — DISCOVERY CLUES
Analyzed and Presented by Charles Koppa, MORTGAGE AUTOPSIES
There are 131 pages within links at the bottom for Maiden Lane Disclosures (a year later). They give ONLY NAMES of nearly 800 underlying Securities Trusts with NO NAMES/LINKS to the original Grantors in the Deed of Trust for underlying “toxic mortgages” which attach real estate collateral that allowed securitization for each CUSIP. That information remains in the hands of third party loan servicers and third party bond servicers.
BEST THEORY: The Borrowers Loan Default triggers but one element within the Creditor/Depositor’s Security Trust Account. NOD and NOTS are filed in the loan servicer’s behalf, concealing the final Beneficial Trust. With help of MERS, they Assign these “rights” to a new “holder” without borrower approval or knowledge, as part of a process of Substitution of Trustee (to their “friends”?). The three collude against the Homeowner and mutually determine which “sub-trust” should receive the untitled transfer via an unlawful Trustees Deed Upon Sale (TDOS). Unlawful because the Back to Beneficiary process in a Trustees Auction does not meet the requirements of a Bona Fide Purchaser (BFP), especially when IT predatorily devalues the property by an unconscionable 20-25% below realty comps on the DATE OF AUCTION! Worse, such “sub-trust” cannot deliver a “real person” to a Jury Trial for recovery, because IT is simply a bookkeeping task managed by a DIFFERENT Trustee on in the chain of heritage of a top Wall Street Bank Holding Company!
Every property needs a scorecard to track dozens of middlemen between the loan debtor and the true creditor. We are witnessing massive Foreclosure TYRANNY and a generational transfer of wealth without an audit trail…
Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, Eviction, expert witness, foreclosure, GTC | Honor, HERS, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud, Servicer Tagged: Assign, audit trail, Back to Beneficiary process, Bona Fide Purchaser (BFP, Borrowers Loan Default, Creditor/Depositor's Security Trust Account, DATE OF AUCTION, discovery, final Beneficial Trust, Grantors in the Deed of Trust, HERS, HOLDER, Maiden Lane Disclosures, MERS, NOD, NOTS, Securities Trusts, sub-trust, Substitution of Trustee, TDOS, third party bond servicer, third party loan servicer, transfer of wealth, triggers, Trustees Auction, Trustees Deed Upon Sale (TDOS), unlawful Trustees, unlawful Trustees Deed Upon Sale (TDOS), untitled transfer
Loan Servicer Tactics… Foreclose don’t modify; lie, deceive, whatever it takes
As a citizen, please start asking tougher questions and demanding truthful answers of your elected officials. We MUST hold these men and women accountable to representing ‘we the people’ instead of their lobby pals.
Whatever you hear from the Administration or any of the large institutions via the drive-by media you can assume that it’s a lie or many shades of gray with dash or two of spin. Why? Well, of course, the truth is not going to get votes for politicians or more investors and account holders for any of these characters who operate in the shadows of financial institution corporate offices across America.
Let me give you a dose of truth serum in case you’re tempted to believe the drive by media reports on the foreclosures and the Making Home Affordable plan we’ve been told is going to rescue our economy and the housing market and the millions of families jobless and now facing foreclosure. You ready?
Here it is: the loan servicers don’t care about anything but money and the modus operandi is clear… foreclose as fast as possible on everyone in a mortgage hardship. Just modify enough loans to make everyone think we’re really on board with this. Make excuses for everything else. Lie to media about what’s really going on because mostly everyone believes what they hear anyway.
A deeper look into the numbers and statistics will leave you scratching your head though – and asking yourself the question, “but why?”
According to an article by Gretchen Morgenson from the New York Times, “Alan M. White, an assistant professor at the Valparaiso University law school in Indiana, analyzed data on 3.5 million subprime and alt-A mortgages in securitization pools overseen by Wells Fargo. The loans were written in 2005 through 2007; data on their performance is provided to the trusts’ investors. Mortgages handled by five of the nation’s largest loan servicing companies — Bank of America, Chase Home Finance and Litton Loan Servicing among them — are contained in the Wells Fargo data.
Mr. White found that mortgage modifications peaked in February and have declined in all but one month since. While servicers modified 23,749 loans in these trusts in February, they changed only 19,041 in May and 18,179 in June. This is exactly when servicers were supposed to be responding to the government’s loan modification urgings.
Foreclosures, meanwhile, keep rising. In June, 281,560 were in process, slightly above the 277,847 in May. Last January, there were about 242,000 foreclosures in the pipeline among the Wells Fargo trusts.”
Well, isn’t that interesting. You see, the numbers simply don’t lie. They tell the truth and expose the raw data of what is really happening. The report continues, “the most fascinating, and frightening, figures in the data detail how much money is lost when foreclosed homes are sold. In June, the data show almost 32,000 liquidation sales; the average loss on those was 64.7 percent of the original loan balance.”
Did you catch that? The AVERAGE loss on a house that a servicers takes to foreclosure sale is a whopping 64.7% of the original loan balance!!!! The average loan amount was $223,000. But in the liquidation sale, the property sold for $144,000 less, or a $79,000 sales price on average.
So any logical person goes, “why? Why would a servicer foreclose on the home instead of providing a loan modification for a homeowner who wants to pay but just needs a reduction in that payment?” I know I can’t be the only one who’s wondered that…
If you want to find the answer you just gotta follow the money… it’s that simple. And the answer does not shed any more favorable light on these servicers – who, by the way, are just subsidiaries of the main financial institutions. Example: Citimortgage is the servicer. They are owned by Citigroup. America’s Servicing Company is the servicer. They are owned by Wells Fargo.
So back to following the money. First, the pooling and servicing agreements governing these trusts, servicers and trustees usually contain “default servicing provisions” which provide the servicer which much higher fees when the loan goes into default. Then the servicer also gets all sorts of other fees reimbursed to them upon a liquidation sale such as BPO fees, inspection fees, legal fees, etc. These fees may get paid to the servicer right away but may not be reimbursed until the sale goes through. But, here’s the BIG reason…
Very often, if not most of the times, these servicers were paid in full for all these loans when they acted as the sponsor and sold the Notes (assets) to these trusts. The trust investors put up a lump sum amount to the servicer and the servicer agreed to collect the monies, manage the escrow accounts and in turn, made a guarantee of cash flow payments to the trust each month. The trust investors are most worried about one thing… their monthly payment on the cash flow. If they keep getting their monthly cash payment, do you think they’re going to be screaming bloody murder? Probably not. As long as the check keeps coming, I got no qualms. Stop the checks and I’m going to be gettin’ all in your business. Think about it… haven’t you noticed a peculiar lack of lawsuits being filed by MBS trust investors or the trusts themselves? One would think the federal courts would be littered with lawsuits by these trusts against all the institutions in the securitization chain for all sorts of allegations regarding the massive losses you’d think they’re realizing due to the defaults.
So, to keep the investors out of their “business” the servicer has to figure out a way to keep those cash flow payments going. Well, let’s say I’m servicing a pool of 1000 loans and the monthly cash flow on that pool is $1 million (or $1000 per loan average). But my default rate starts rising and now 10% of these loans are not paying. Well, that’s $100,000 per month less that I’m getting as the servicer. Shoot, how do I keep making the payment of $1 million per month if I’m only receiving $900,000?
Oh, I got it! If I can foreclose on a couple homes in default, take a 64.7% loss on it but I still get $79,000 in one lump sum from each home I liquidate, I can keep making that cash payment to the trust. All I need to do is liquidate about 1.2 homes per month on average, and, even though I take a huge loss on these homes, I can keep making that cash flow payment to the trust, keep my investors happy and better yet, keep them out of my business and away from asking all sorts of questions I really don’t want to answer. Note: this game can only carry on for so long. At some point the pied piper is going to pipe…
This my best stab at a simplified answer to “why” these servicers are ignoring the Making Home Affordable program and foreclosing as fast as they possibly can. Nothing else makes sense to me. If you have any other input, I’d love to hear about in the forum on this topic.
The kicker here is that these servicers don’t have legal standing to foreclose. They don’t own the Note in 80%+ of the cases – and that number is probably higher than 90% of the time. So they unlawfully seize a family’s home, sell it even though they don’t own it and in the process they also violate the servicing agreements they are governed by. These agreements mandate that the servicer act in a fiduciary manner with respect to the interests of the investors. I can tell you unequivocally that taking an average 64.7% loss on a trust asset is worse for the trust versus modifying the loan at a higher amount (still with principal reduction for the borrower) and recapturing the interest. There is NO WAY the current servicer model of foreclose and liquidate passes the NPV test for these trust assets – at least as far as I can see.
For reference and further context, here is the article written by Gretchen Morgenson at the New York Times.
So Many Foreclosures, So Little Logic
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
LAST week, the stock market tumbled on news that housing foreclosures and delinquencies rose again in the first quarter. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said that among the 34 million loans it tracks, foreclosures in progress rose 22 percent, to 844,389. That figure was 73 percent higher than in the same period last year.
But the comptroller’s office also said that amid the gloom, there was promising data about loan modifications: they rose 55 percent in the quarter. That growth came on a very low base, of course, but the move encouraged John C. Dugan, head of the comptroller’s office.
“As the administration’s ‘Making Home Affordable’ program gains traction and helps offset the impact of this very difficult economic cycle,” he said in a statement, “we should continue to see progress in future reports.”
A glimpse of second-quarter mortgage data, however, indicates that the progress Mr. Dugan and his colleagues in Washington are hoping for may take longer to emerge — raising questions about whether policymakers and banks are moving quickly or intelligently enough on the foreclosure problem.
Foreclosures remain one of the great financial ills for the economy. The Bush administration largely overlooked foreclosures affecting average homeowners, focusing instead on propping up elite, troubled financial institutions with taxpayer funds. The Obama administration has said it wants to wrestle the foreclosure issue to the ground by encouraging mortgage loan modifications, but its efforts have gotten little traction.
Loan modifications occur when a lender agrees to change terms of a troubled borrower’s mortgage; the most common approach is to reduce the loan’s interest rate. Cutting the amount of principal owed — an option that could be of more help to a borrower — is rare because it means homeowners pay less money back to the bank over time.
Lenders and their representatives, however, don’t like to modify loans through interest rate cuts or principal reductions because, of course, it reduces the income they receive from borrowers. No surprise, then, that loan modifications have been a trickle amid the recent foreclosure flood.
Enter the government, with the program it announced in March to encourage modifications. It offers incentives to loan servicers to change mortgage terms, providing $1,000 for each loan they modify. The program focuses on making payments more affordable through lower interest rates, but delinquent amounts and late fees are typically tacked onto the mortgage balance. “Making Home Affordable” does not compel lenders to reduce mortgage balances.
Servicers signed on to the program in April. The program’s early months were not covered by the O.C.C.’s first-quarter report. But other figures on modifications conducted in April, May and June are available. And they show a decline in modifications, not an increase as the government hoped.
Alan M. White, an assistant professor at the Valparaiso University law school in Indiana, analyzed data on 3.5 million subprime and alt-A mortgages in securitization pools overseen by Wells Fargo. The loans were written in 2005 through 2007; data on their performance is provided to the trusts’ investors. Mortgages handled by five of the nation’s largest loan servicing companies — Bank of America, Chase Home Finance and Litton Loan Servicing among them — are contained in the Wells Fargo data.
Mr. White found that mortgage modifications peaked in February and have declined in all but one month since. While servicers modified 23,749 loans in these trusts in February, they changed only 19,041 in May and 18,179 in June. This is exactly when servicers were supposed to be responding to the government’s loan modification urgings.
Foreclosures, meanwhile, keep rising. In June, 281,560 were in process, slightly above the 277,847 in May. Last January, there were about 242,000 foreclosures in the pipeline among the Wells Fargo trusts.
“I was hoping we would see some impact in June of the government’s program,” Mr. White said. “Is ‘Home Affordable’ working? My short answer is no.”
To be sure, the government’s data differs from that which Mr. White analyzed, and its loan modification figures for the second quarter may look better as a result. The O.C.C. includes prime loans as well as subprime, for example, while the Wells Fargo data contains no prime loans.
Nevertheless, Mr. White has collected the figures since November 2008, and he said that in the months since, the performance of the 3.5 million mortgages that he analyzes tracked the O.C.C. data pretty closely.
THE Wells Fargo data is illuminating. It shows that in June, 58 percent of modifications cut the payments that the borrower has to pay, a slightly smaller percentage than in April or May. The average reduction in June was $173 a month.
But the most fascinating, and frightening, figures in the data detail how much money is lost when foreclosed homes are sold. In June, the data show almost 32,000 liquidation sales; the average loss on those was 64.7 percent of the original loan balance.
Here are the numbers: the average loan balance began at almost $223,000. But in the liquidation sale, the property sold for $144,000 less, on average. Perhaps no other single figure shows how wildly the mortgage mania pumped up home prices. It also bodes poorly for the quality of the mortgage-related assets lurking in banks’ books.
Loss severities, like foreclosures, are rising. In November, losses averaged 56.1 percent of the original loan balance; in February, 63.3 percent.
Given losses like these, Mr. White said he was perplexed that lenders and their representatives were resisting reducing principal when they modify loans. His data shows how rare it is for lenders to reduce principal. In June, for example, 3,135 loans — just 17.2 percent of the total modified — involved write-downs of principal, interest or fees. The total loss from these write-downs was just $45 million in June.
And yet, the losses incurred in foreclosure sales involving loans in the securitization trusts were a staggering $4.59 billion in June. “There is 100 times as much money lost in foreclosure sales as there was in writing down balances in modifications,” Mr. White said. “That is not rational economic behavior.”
If banks have written down the value of these loans to the 40 cents on the dollar that they are fetching on foreclosures — the only true value for these homes right now — then why don’t they bite the bullet and reduce the loan amount outstanding for the troubled borrowers? That type of modification would be far more likely to succeed than larding a borrower who is hopelessly underwater with yet more arrears.
“You can reduce payments with a lot of gimmicks similar to those built into subprime loans — temporary rate reductions that defer a lot of principal, balloon payments,” Mr. White said. “To me that leads to a situation where American homeowners are paying 50 to 60 percent of their incomes for mortgages which reset in 2011 and 2012. That is not solving the problem.”
Certainly not for borrowers, that is. And because many of these losses will ultimately be passed on to taxpayers, it’s not solving our problem, either.













