Jan
25

KABOOM | JPMORGAN FAILED TO ENSURE THAT TITLE TO THE UNDERLYING MORTGAGE LOANS WAS EFFECTIVELY TRANSFERRED

Yesterday we put up John Hancock Life Insurance Co. v. JPMorgan Chase | JPMorgan Chase Sued by John Hancock Life Over Mortgage-Backed Securities. Unfortunately I do not have time to read every complaint I put up. That is what I rely on you all for. Well, someone just brought to my attention section IX from … Read more Related posts:
  1. Wells sues JPMorgan over 800 mortgage loans
  2. KABOOM – WOW – JPMorgan Chase Dumps MERS, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems
  3. John T. Kemp v. Countrywide Home Loans – Countrywide NEVER Transferred Notes
Jan
25

KABOOM | JPMORGAN FAILED TO ENSURE THAT TITLE TO THE UNDERLYING MORTGAGE LOANS WAS EFFECTIVELY TRANSFERRED

Yesterday we put up John Hancock Life Insurance Co. v. JPMorgan Chase | JPMorgan Chase Sued by John Hancock Life Over Mortgage-Backed Securities. Unfortunately I do not have time to read every complaint I put up. That is what I rely on you all for. Well, someone just brought to my attention section IX from … Read more Related posts:
  1. Wells sues JPMorgan over 800 mortgage loans
  2. KABOOM – WOW – JPMorgan Chase Dumps MERS, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems
  3. John T. Kemp v. Countrywide Home Loans – Countrywide NEVER Transferred Notes
Jan
24

John Hancock Life Insurance Co. v. JPMorgan Chase | JPMorgan Chase Sued by John Hancock Life Over Mortgage-Backed Securities

JPMorgan Chase Sued by John Hancock Life Over Mortgage-Backed Securities JPMorgan Chase & Co. was sued by Manulife Financial Corp.’s John Hancock Life Insurance unit, which accused the bank of fraud in connection with the sale of residential mortgage-backed securities. The lawsuit, filed today in New York state Supreme Court in Manhattan, seeks unspecified damages … Read more Related posts:
  1. Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities Trust 2005-4 v. EMC Mortgage Corp | JPMorgan Sued for $95 Million Over Mortgage Securities
  2. Case Unsealed | IRVING H. PICARD, Trustee for the Liquidation of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, Plaintiff, v. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES LLC, and J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES LTD
  3. Credit Suisse Sued Over Mortgage-Backed Securities
Jan
24

Sealink Funding Ltd. v. Morgan Stanley | Morgan Stanley Sued by Sealink Over Mortgage Securities

Morgan Stanley Sued by Sealink Over Mortgage Securities Morgan Stanley (MS) was sued by Sealink Funding Ltd., which accused the bank of fraud in connection with more than $556 million in residential mortgage-backed securities. Sealink, a fund created to manage Landesbank Sachsen AG’s riskiest assets after the German lender almost collapsed, filed the lawsuit in … Read more No related posts.
Jan
23

Credit Suisse | Mortgage Principal Cuts Don’t Help Homeowners

Mortgage Principal Cuts Don’t Help Homeowners Reducing mortgage balances is a risky idea that hasn’t been shown to keep borrowers who owe more than their property’s worth in their homes, according to Credit Suisse Group AG. (CSGN) Of the 11 million of “underwater” homeowners, about 6.5 million have never missed a payment and 2 million … Read more Related posts:
  1. Credit Suisse Sued Over Mortgage-Backed Securities
  2. Fraudclosure | Bondi: Don’t Cut Homeowners’ Mortgage Principal
  3. MBIA Insurance Corp. vs. Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, DLJ Mortgage Capital, Inc. and Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc
Jan
20

Dexia v. Bear Stearns | “Egregious Fraud” Dexia Sues JPMorgan Over $1.7 Billion in Mortgage Securities

Dexia Sues JPMorgan Over $1.7 Billion in Mortgage Securities JPMorgan Chase & Co., the biggest U.S. bank by assets, was sued over mortgage-backed securities sold to Dexia SA (DEXB) because the loans underlying the securities were allegedly riskier than promised. Dexia accused JPMorgan and companies it acquired — Bear Stearns Cos. and Washington Mutual — … Read more Related posts:
  1. Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities Trust 2005-4 v. EMC Mortgage Corp | JPMorgan Sued for $95 Million Over Mortgage Securities
  2. Daily Finance | Did Bear Stearns Know Its Mortgage Securities Were a House of Cards?
  3. In Re Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. Securities, Derivative, And Erisa Litigation | Motion to Dismiss Securities Fraud Complaint is Denied
Jan
19

New York Fed Secretly Sells $7.014 Billion in Face Value of Maiden Lane II LLC Assets To Credit Suisse Without Public Auction

Instead of opting for a publicly transparent auction in the disposition of its Maiden Lane II assets, the Fed has once again gone opaque and proceeded with a private sale, without any clarity on the deal terms, in which it sold $7 billion in face amount of Maiden Lane II assets direct to Credit Suisse. … Read more Related posts:
  1. JPMorgan Said to Face SEC Subpoena Along With Credit Suisse Over Failed Mortgages
  2. Credit Suisse Sued Over Mortgage-Backed Securities
  3. False Statements | Lender Processing Services Maiden Lane ABS 2008-1
Jan
19

Deutsche Bank Analyst Sounded Alarm When Asked to Alter Numbers RE Mortgage-Backed Securities

Deutsche Analyst Sounded Alarm When Asked to Alter Numbers by Carrick Mollenkamp, Special to ProPublica At a time when mortgage-backed securities were imploding and customers were fleeing the market, a junior analyst at Deutsche Bank AG protested when he was asked to alter the numbers in a spreadsheet to make a Deutsche security look less … Read more Related posts:
  1. Why Mortgage-Backed Securities Aren’t (Backed by Securities): How MERS Toasted the Banks
  2. Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities Trust 2005-4 v. EMC Mortgage Corp | JPMorgan Sued for $95 Million Over Mortgage Securities
  3. Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco v Deutsche Bank Securities Inc Et Al
Jan
04

MBIA v. Countrywide Ruling

There's been a lot of media coverage of the recent ruling of the NY Supreme Court (that's the trial court, not the final Court of Appeals) in MBIA v. Countrywide, a suit by the monoline bond insurer against Countrywide for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, etc. that induced it to insure Countrywide's mortgage-backed securities. This and Syncora's similar suit are being carefully watched because they are the MBS litigation that is the farthest along and thus seen as a belleweather for other rep and warranty suits.  While the monolines are in a somewhat different position than MBS investors, they provide a good indicator of what to expect from investor suits.  

For all the discussion of the opinion, no one seems to have actually read the damn thing, so here it is.

To summarize:  MBIA is suing for insurance fraud and breach of reps and warranties in the insurance policy it issued at CW's request for some 15 MBS trusts. The main issue in this decision was whether MBIA had to prove that the alleged fraud and breach of warranty resulted in its losses.

CW argued that loss causation was necessary, which presented a real challenge in terms of sorting losses from the fraud vs. losses from market factors. The NY Supreme Court said that loss causation was not required here.  MBIA must merely prove that CW made a material misrepresentation, meaning that increased the risk that MBIA assumed.  Put differently, but for the misrepresentation MBIA would not have issued the policy on the same terms. The Court ruled for MBIA and says no loss causation is required. There's good policy for this ruling.  As late John Marshall (Chicago) Law School Professor John Dwight Ingram explained, requiring a causal connection may encourage fraud because "If [the rule were otherwise and] the cause of loss is not connected [to the misrepresentation], [it means that the insured] has coverage he otherwise couldn't have obtained.  Thus, [the insured] had nothing to lose by misrepresenting."  

What's puzzling, then is that having said that MBIA doesn't need to prove loss causation, the court states "MBIA must then prove that it was damaged as the direct result of the material misrepresentations. As has been aptly pointed out by Countrywide, this will not be an easy task." (p.15).  So no loss causation required, but damages must be shown to be linked to the direct result of the material representations?  Is it yes or no?  

I'm not sure how to square this.  My first thought was that the Court was making a technical distinction between not having to show loss causation to prove materiality of a misrepresentation (which goes to increased risk, not increased loss), and loss causation on the issue of damages. But I really don't see anything in the opinion or order to support such a reading.  Instead, the best way I can square these seemingly contradictory statements is that the court is saying that MBIA will have to prove its payouts on the policies, given what the court says is the proper remedy, namely "rescissory damages" (which might be better termed "reliance damages").  I think this means MBIA doesn't have to wade into what damages were from the financial crisis and what from the fraud, but there is still that reference on p. 15 to this not being "an easy task".  I really wish the court had been clearer on this point. 

The other interesting issue in this case relates to damages.  There is a dispute between the parties as to whether the damages should be rescission or rescissory (reliance) damages.  It's hard to tell the difference from the opinion:  it would appear that the difference between these remedies is whether the insurance policy remains in place going forward. In either scenario, MBIA would receive back its payouts on the policies and have to return  (or deduct) premiums already received.  

With rescission, the contract would no longer exist, meaning there would be no more insurance on the MBS, and MBIA wouldn't receive any future premiums.  That would leave the MBS investors kind of screwed, but with a suit against CW.  With rescissory damages it seems (but the court isn't clear on this) that the policy would remain in force, but--and here's the big point, but it's only apparent in MBIA's reply brief--with rescissory damages, the contract will remain in force and CW to repurchase the performing loans that do not conform to representations.  In other words, MBIA will continue to get premiums going forward for insuring the good loans.  So what MBIA is trying to do is to split the deal in half.  For the loans that have gone bad, to have CW cover the payouts minus the premiums and then for the loans that haven't gone bad, MBIA wants to keep doing the original deal as envisioned.  That's a very strange remedy.  Either the contract is rescinded or it isn't.  You can' t usually rescind the contract up until today and then honor it going forward.  It's a non-severable package deal.  I would have thought that the answer here for a fraud in the inducement type claim would just be plain old rescission and let the MBS holders have at CW on their own.  The court doesn't completely resolve this. It denied MBIA's motion for summary judgment on whether it could compel repurchases of perfoming, but non-conforming loans.  That doesn't mean that MBIA loses on that issue, just that it didn't win yet.  Reading this all together, though, it seems like MBIA is going to get partial rescission and partial selective repurchase of the bad loans.  

Final thought:  I'm kind of surprised that the MBS holders haven't intervened or been interpleaded given their interests in all of this.  

So to recap, I think this is a win for MBIA, quite possibly a very big win, but it's really hard to tell just given the lack of clarity in the opinion.  If you think they'll help decipher things, here is MBIA's original brief, the CW opposition brief, and the MBIA reply brief

Nov
30

Mandelman’s Monthly Museletter – Version 16.0

Okay, so here’s the next installment of Mandelman’s Monthly Museletter, which I’ve decided I post whenever there are a bunch of things going on that need to be put into proper perspective, but there’s just no way I can write individual articles on each because to do so presents a serious health risk.  Capisce?  So, without further delay… here’s Version 16.0… it’s the DECEMBER EDITION, hence the festive photo above and throughout.

1. Robo-Signing KILLS…

First the facts of the matter, as reported: Tracy Lawrence was only 43 years old when it appears she took her own life after blowing the whistle on a foreclosure scheme involving “robo-signing,”  which was implemented by a company used by most banks when repossessing homes, Lender Processing Services (“LPS”), based in Jacksonville, Florida.  According to KLAS-TV in Las Vegas, Lawrence admitted that she had fraudulently notarized about 25,000 documents as part of the fraudulent foreclosure scheme.

Lawrence blew the whistle on the LPS operation in which title officers Gary Trafford, 49, of Irvine, Calif., and Geraldine Sheppard, 62, of Santa Ana, Calif. allegedly told employees to forge their names and notarize the signatures on tens of thousands of default notices from 2005 to 2008, which were used to initiate foreclosures, according to the Nevada AG.

Two weeks ago the State of Nevada charged Trafford and Sheppard with 606 counts of offering false instruments for recording, false certification on certain instruments and notarization of the signature of a person not in the presence of a notary public. You can read the indictment here: Nevada Robosigning Indicment 11-16-11

The Nevada AG’s office sent investigators to Lawrence’s home after she didn’t show up for her sentencing on Monday morning.  And here’s the fact that caused me to pause… she would have faced up to a year in jail and a possible fine up to $2,000.

Now, my views on this story: Am I being asked to believe that Tracy Lawrence took her own life because she might have been sentenced to up to a year in jail and a perhaps fined two grand?  Because if that’s what I’m supposed to believe… well, I don’t.  And yet the fact remains that she’s dead, and it certainly appears to be suicide.  I also don’t believe that she was overcome with guilt at having done what she did and that’s what caused her to take her own life.  Nope, I’m not buying either of those explanations.

The other thing I don’t like about the way the story has been reported is that LPS is mentioned sort of secondarily, as if Trafford and Sheppard were committing their crimes independently… like rogue employees… and that LPS had nothing to do with it.  And that is simply pure, unadulterated crap.  Robo-signing, as these crimes are euphemistically called, went on all over the country… all the major banks were involved, as were LPS and other vendors used in the foreclosure process.  It’s obviously anything but an isolated incident… plainly, as practices go, it is ubiquitous.  (And you know what they say about ubiquity… it’s everywhere.)

Did LPS know about the rampant robo-signing?  Of course they did.  Someone had to produce the documents for her to sign them, right?  Did the banks know it was going on?   Of course they did.  Did the CEOs of the banks know what was going on?  Of course they did.

Look, I spent twenty years working as a consultant for large corporations at the C-Suite and senior management levels, including several of the TBTF banks, and I’m very familiar with their corporate cultures and operations.  No mid-level manager at JPMorgan, for example, made a call to start committing fraud and forgery.  Why?  Because there’s be no reason to do so, that’s why.  Faced with the problems that robo-signing addresses, any mid-level manager at a Fortune 500 company could and would simply kick it upstairs for a decision.  There just wouldn’t be any upside to trying to handle it alone.

A First Vice President at Bank of America once told me the following story about the path to advancement at the bank.  He said that when you take over a department, as long as you don’t change anything, you’ll move up regardless of how your department performs.  But, if you so much as changed the brand of pencils ordered by that department, and then the department performs poorly… you’re fired.  Now, I understand that the story is an exaggeration, but it’s an exaggeration to make a point.

The people that work in giant organizations like JPMorgan are not entrepreneurs, if they were they’d be starting their own businesses.  Consequently, they are not the type to go around attempting to solve problems not of their own making, and for which they would receive no reward, especially when you realize how easily the issue can be kicked upstairs.

Lastly, robo-signing is not a solution that exists on a list that contains other solutions.  In other words, if you’re a giant financial institution, and you chose robo-signing as your solution, it’s because you didn’t have anywhere else to go.  For example, you didn’t say to the others at the conference table, “Well, we could solve the problem by doing XYZ.  But, no… lets go with the fraud and forgery idea instead.”

Now, as to why robo-signing only seems to be a serious prosecutable crime in the State of Nevada?  Why, hat’s a darn fine question with which few in positions of power seem to be concerned.  Of course, the question of MERS assignments, or even the question of proper legal standing seem to be the same sort of thing… in some states it matters, while in others it doesn’t.

Frankly, I’d be fine with it either way.  If many of our current laws governing the transfer of property don’t matter and aren’t going to be enforced then let’s get rid of them.   Just change the existing statutes to reflect our new definition of acceptable practices as related to foreclosure.  You don’t need standing, anyone can sign off on any required document as long as their boss say it’s okay, and nothing needs to be recorded.  If you receive a foreclosure notice from your bank, the only thing to do is pack your stuff.  You see?  Problem solved.

So, why did Tracy Lawrence take her own life?  Obviously, I couldn’t know for sure… but it also seems obvious that LPS is a very large and very powerful company with employees all over the country, and Tracy blew the whistle.  I don’t believe she was so scared that she might be sentenced to under a year in jail and up to a $2,000 fine, especially because as the whistle blower, she may have been sentenced to neither.  Nor do I believe that she was overcome by guilt at having fraudulently signed and notarized documents used to foreclose on people’s homes because it wasn’t her idea… she was told by her employer to do it.

But I do believe that she was scared of the repercussions for her having blown the whistle on LPS … in fact, I believe she was scared to death as to what the rest of her life would be like having turned on LPS and the largest financial institutions in the world.  And I also believe the Nevada AG should indict LPS or do whatever is necessary to put them on the stand, answering questions under oath.  Because there is no doubt in my mind that Tracy Lawrence’s death is on their collective hands.

2. OCC proposes credit rating duties go to banks – A real conversation with a banker-friend of mine.

Okay, so I might as well admit it… I do happen to have a few friends that are bankers.  They’re evil, of course, but it doesn’t make them bad people.  Well, actually it might… but they’re friends anyway.  I’ve also got a number of regular readers that are bankers, although I’d never give away their identities… if anyone knew they were reading me, they’d likely be killed.  One such senior executive at a major bank told me in an email that reading my column is her guilty pleasure… LOL.

So, you probably saw that yesterday Standard & Poors reviewed 37 banks, downgrading 15 of them, including the six largest U.S. banks each by one notch.  JP Morgan Chase went from A+ to A; Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup were downgraded from A to A-; and Wells Fargo was cut from AA- to A+.  S&P said that it was applying some new standards to its rating methodology that “focus on how institutions manage their businesses under market and economic stress.”

Now, you might be thinking… oh, big deal, who cares?  But, to give you an idea of the impact, in a regulatory filing, Bank of America said that a downgrade of one level would mean that the bank would have to post an additional $5.1 billion as collateral.  If you remember how credit default swaps, then you already understand what that posting of additional collateral means… if you don’t, however, then perhaps you could use a refresher course at Mandelman U, where complexity we eschew… lol.

So, although I hadn’t seen the story  yet, I was on Facebook last night and a banker-friend of mine popped up in a chat window to deliver the good news.  Apparently, the bank-friendly site, HousingWire ran a story that caused his little banker heart to go all aflutter.  The headline is probably enough to make you throw up, it definitely was for me: OCC proposes moving credit rating duties to banks.
Yes, you read that right… if you don’t like being downgraded, no problem.  Just get your regulator to issue a proposal that says that you’ll be rating yourself from now on… that oughta’ fix the problem, right?  I’m thinking of doing the same thing, because frankly… the whole FICO thing often pisses me off too.  Why let Experian or Equifax rate me… surely I know me better than they do… and I’ve given myself an 850… so approve my loan, betch.

Here’s how the HousingWire story described the proposed new rule:

“The rule, when finalized, would effectively eliminate references to credit ratings agencies in OCC regulations, as required under the Dodd-Frank Act. These firms came under fire after the financial collapse in 2008 for rating many securities, particularly those backed by faulty mortgages, as high as AAA. In the years since, the credit rating agencies have been downgrading billions of RMBS deals.”

Yes, well I can see how those pesky downgrades could get annoying.  And as bankers, I suppose you are the best possible choice for rating your own crap… I mean, securities… especially if we want to completely destroy whatever is left of our global financial markets.

So, I was going to write a bunch of snarky stuff about how it’s inconceivable that we would allow such a rule to become a reality, but then… like I was just telling you… this little pop-up chat window appeared on my Facebook page and my banker friend was all excited to deliver the obviously outstanding news.  We got into a texting conversation, and when we were done, I thought to myself… why not just post the conversation as my article on the topic, and if you want more, just click the HousingWire link above and you can read it for yourself.  I’m not recommending that, by the way, it just gave me a stomach ache, but it’s your call, of course.

So… here it is in its entirety… my real life conversation with a banker on the proposed new rule and a few other things as well.  He’ll probably read my blog later today and go into cardiac arrest, but don’t worry LUCY… not his real name… no one could possibly know it was you… I’ve got over 3,000 Facebook friends and more than one or two are bankers, believe it or not.

I think you’ll like it…

BANKER: Woooo-hooooo – Now us banksters get to assign our own credit ratings!  No sense greasing rating agency palms–might as well do it ourselves!

MANDELMAN: What?  Did that happen today?

BANKER: I sent you a link to the story.

MANDELMAN: Oh, good Lord.
BANKER: OCC proposal… party-time… hey, what’s better than AAA?

MANDELMAN: And why not, you guys did such an outstanding job of risk management last time around.
BANKER: But we learned from our mistakes.  I’ve got it… A-Squared, Squared!!! That’s it, not just A-cubed.

MANDELMAN: There’s never been a banker that learned from a mistake in the history of the world… hence, we are where we are.

BANKER: Careful, my FB blood pressure app is registering an elevation…

MANDELMAN: LOL… banks should be public utilities.

BANKER: “A” to the 4th is called biquadratic – much more scientific sounding.  Public utilities have done so well, haven’t they?  Did you see LV robo-signer found dead on eve of sentencing.

MANDELMAN: Yes, I’m writing about it tonight.

BANKER: FYI – Retired OCC staff are like GS alumni infecting the executive ranks of major banks;  we have several very senior managers that retired from the OCC.

MANDELMAN: What are implications of that?

BANKER: Mostly, I’m  just saying that nothing changes… that the change agents don’t exist. New DNA/blood does not come from outside to strengthen the gene pool. They’ve seen what they’ve seen and will act according to their predispositions, experiences which were successful at regulators.

MANDELMAN: Got it.

BANKER: Not deep-thinkers; a little weak-willed — don’t like to offend others, don’t like to buck the trend – political… that sort of thing.

MANDELMAN: Gotcha… sounds encouraging… exactly the kind of people we want running the world.

BANKER: Well, the meek shall inherit the earth, remember?

MANDELMAN: Didn’t a bunch of banks get downgraded today?

BANKER: 37 of ‘em reviewed, I think 15 downgraded.

MANDELMAN: Yeah, I’m sure the rest are fine.  And so… the answer is to let them rate themselves from now on?  Brilliant!  I do love the way you guys think.  And by “love” I mean “deplore.”

BANKER: Oh, so what? We borrow from depositors for nothing, we borrow from the Fed for nothing. Since we are all downgraded and we have each other as counterparties with the Feds backing, it probably doesn’t matter much.  I haven’t read the justification for downgrades – seems counterintuitive to say our debt is riskier, when you consider the level of government support we all enjoy.

MANDELMAN: Yeah, and Europe is too far a flight to make any difference, right?

BANKER: Europe, schmeurope… makes the dollar stronger – Yay!

MANDELMAN: LMAO! Here, here! Clearly, I haven’t been looking at this correctly.

BANKER: Besides, GS can go over there and advise them on how to get out of the trouble they’re in because of them.  Just means more jobs, more bonuses… Yay again!  And European vacations might become cheap.  Mandelmanissimo can buy an Italian villa!

MANDELMAN: Another very solid point.  I definitely was not looking at it right.

BANKER: See – you need banker schooling. It isn’t about the cool-aid you drink… you need single malt scotch, cuban cigars, shiny wing-tips, an inability to feel empathy, an air of total superiority, and the belief that you can outsmart anyone else creating and harnessing the next financial weapon of mass destruction.  You gotta breathe Gordon Gekko.

MANDELMAN: Of course it probably helps to have the Federal Reserve’s checkbook and credit card.

BANKER: Hey, “you” gave it to us. You gotta’ be the parent/adult and draw the line.  You can use your forum to make the populace understand.

MANDELMAN: I’m working on that.

BANKER: I’m all for a coup d’etat.

MANDELMAN: Shall I order you a torch or are you more the pitchfork sort?

BANKER: Marginalize us… return us to the 99%… take away our social standing as the aristocracy.  Oh, you’re a legacy?   No, your gene pool no longer belongs here in positions of power and authority.  We want rational thinking, enlightenment, selfless behavior – you were elected to act on behalf of the population – 5 year no-compete clause with private industry – go back to law and write up some wills, divorces, trusts… try a Accident/Injury practice.  And no automatic pension for 1-termers.

Ya’ll (Nomi, Yves, Abigail, Max, April, et al) ought’a gather at USC, UCLA, etc. for a rally or giant speaking engagement.

MANDELMAN: I’d sure love to host that event… a Mandelman Matters conference.

BANKER: Put a simple slide presentation together, collage like an Apocalypse Now montage… boom-boom-boom… ”class war” atrocities… show scale, scope, impact… gotta’ bring the war into the living rooms of America, and show the body bags – it affects all of us.  Nothing opinion-based… just the facts, show cause and effect, make FactCheck the AAA rating. BTW, have you thought about a simple video background for your articles to post on YouTube?

MANDELMAN: Yes, I’m working on that too.  All it takes is money… why don’t you send me some?  How about a no doc, stated income re-fi at 150% of appraised value?  It’ll be just like old times, you’ll love it.  Wouldn’t want to do anything that’s not professional.

BANKER: I said YouTube not Universal Studios. Just a panorama of North Las Vegas, Phoenix, etc. to use as a background. Maybe snippets of public use video clips that aren’t too far out of context. With you narrating the video… your wife and daughter could be the audience that asks you questions.  Obama/Bush can plant journalists to lob softball questions, why can’t you can stage it too?  Any chance you could get on NPR?

MANDELMAN: I’d love to… or maybe MSNBC on Dylan Ratigan’s show.

BANKER: Hook up with Whalen and you might have a great shot at it.  I don’t think the NAR will be inviting you to their X-Mas party.

MANDELMAN: Oh gee… and I so wanted to hang out with a room full of delusional liars.

BANKER: You might be on the short list to keynote JPM’s X-mas party though.  BTW… Occupy LA Raid Happening Tonight, LAPD En Route to Begin Eviction.  Live coverage of the raid via Ustream says the raid is slow moving and strategic. Venice 311 tweeted information from an LAPD scanner, which said that 900 officers are currently en route to evict the remaining occupiers and that the LAPD has setup a processing and booking station at Dodgers Stadium.

MANDELMAN: Oh God…

BANKER: Hearing that when LAPD helicopter light is turned off that is a signal for cops to move in.  Police clad in riot gear are standing at Broadway and 1st.  CBS just stated that they are “working with law enforcement” and are not showing scenes they are “not allowed to show.”  Quote from KCAL-9, “We made an agreement with LAPD not to give away their tactics.”

MANDELMAN: Well, good then… about time we did away with that pain-in-the-neck 1st Amendment.  They’re just a bunch of whiny hippie types anyway, right?

BANKER: Hey, now you’re talking like the chairman of my bank.  Nice to have you back.

MANDELMAN: Sorry, but no thanks.  I think I’ll just go back to my work making you and yours look like the destructive, power hungry despots that you are. Besides, I took that vow of poverty when I started blogging, remember?

BANKER: Okay, well… have fun storming the castle!  I think I’ll go see which fees I can raise for no reason and without disclosure.

MANDELMAN: Sounds like a gas… I’m sending you a current copy of GAAP for Christmas… figured you’d enjoy a little nostalgia.

BANKER: Yeah… I gotta go too… and FYI — The Fed has demanded capital stress tests by Jan 4th that consider Europe/unemployment, blah, blah, blah.  And as a result, many of us bankers have had to cancel vacations for the remainder of year.  But, at least we’re getting reimbursed for lost airline/travel spending, so that’s a relief. TTYL…

MANDELMAN: You’re disgusting… text me tomorrow… are you going to make it Christmas Eve?  Chinese food on me, as usual.

BANKER: Wouldn’t miss it.

MANDELMAN: Okay, and try not to bankrupt any sovereign nations before then, okay?

BANKER: You’re no fun… c-ya!

MANDELMAN: Mandelman out.

3. PMI Files Bankruptcy – Regulators step in and take over yet another mortgage insurer…

They’re almost dropping like flies… mortgage insurers, that is.  The latest casualty is PMI Group Inc. of Walnut Creek, California… a Delaware Corporation whose parent company is PMI Mortgage Insurance Co. whose headquarters are in Arizona.  And with all of those machinations in place to avoid paying taxes and no doubt obfuscate whatever else, they still went broke… so, nice job there… don’t you feel silly now?

Now, let me assure you that I could care less about PMI Group, or whatever other holding company is or isn’t involved.  The reason I’m writing this is because I found a few of the details involved fascinating.  The company’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, filed on November 23rd, showed assets of $225 million… and debt of $736 million as of August 4, 2011.  PMI had posted losses for the last 16 consecutive quarters.

I don’t know about you, but to my way of thinking, that makes them irresponsible insurers.

Last month, Arizona Director of Insurance Christina Urias took control of the PMI unit on an interim basis, directing that claims be paid at 50 cents on the dollar. (Wait until Secretary Geithner hears about this, he’s not going to be happy… he hates haircuts, don’t you know.)

Of course, it goes without saying that this is not the first mortgage insurer to fall from grace… Triad Guaranty Inc. stopped selling mortgage insurance policies when it ran short of capital back in July of 2008.  A state regulator ordered the company to defer 40 percent of claims payments because of “uncertainty” over whether it could meet its obligations.  And Old Republic International Corp. was suspended by Fannie and Freddie as an approved guarantor of loans this past summer when it failed to meet capital requirements.

It seems that these companies do much better when they don’t have claims… so, go figure.

Here’s where I thought it got interesting…

According to data provider CMA, the credit-default swaps that are tied to PMI’s bonds went up in cost after the bankruptcy filing, and the effect may be that that contract provisions trigger amounts owed totaling more than twice the company’s debt.  They’re talking about collateral calls associated with credit default swaps again… see how devastating their impact can be, even on this relatively small scale.

So, the cost to protect the company’s debt increased by 0.7 percentage points to 75.2 percentage points upfront, which is roughly twice what it would have cost to do the same thing last June.  That means that today, investors would have to pay $7.52 million up front, and $500,000 a year to protect $10 million of the insurer’s debt obligations (read: bonds).  If we’re talking about a ten year bond, that would seem a tad pricey, don’t you think?  I mean, that means the total cost would end up around $12.5 million to insure $10 million in debt.

4. Citigroup may settle, but federal judge says not Yeti…

Remember the Bumbles, from the animated television classic, “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” starring the voice of Burl Ives as Sam the snowman?  You know the one… Rudolph gets tossed out of the reindeer games because of his glowing nose, and he ends up taking off with Hermey, an elf who wants to be a dentist, and Yukon Cornelius, the gold prospector. They run into the Abominable Snowman… the Bumbles… and then they find a entire island of misfit toys.  I don’t want to say any more, because I don’t want to give away the ending.

Well, the reason I bring it up is that the Bumbles always scared the heck out of me as a kid, until of course, we learn that he’s really a nice Bumbles who just has a toothache.  That’s not the part that scared me though… the scary part was that Hermey doesn’t just want to be a dentist, he fancies himself an amateur dentist… and he actually performs dentistry on the Bumbles… like, OMG.  I tell you… it was decades before I could sit in a dentist’s chair without inhaling nitrous oxide… or at least that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.  But I digress…

The SEC today reminds me of the Bumbles.  They growl and wave their arms in the air as they file a lawsuit against one of the TBTF banks, basically alleging that the bank destroyed the national and even global economy, but then they turn into the most accommodating, if not entirely malleable regulator in the history of regulators, offering to settle the case for relative nickels and dimes, complete with no admission of guilt by the settling bankster.  It’s so distasteful to watch that I’d stopped watching.

But, a friend of mine who’s a lawyer, recently brought to my attention what just happened in the latest SEC case, which is against Citigroup… the judge said no way to the flimsy proposed $285 million settlement.  It seems that Federal Judge Jed S. Rakoff believes that what’s interest of the public must be considered, and the proposed settlement clearly failed in that regard.

Now, get this… the SEC actually ARGUED in support of the proposed settlement, and part of their argument was specifically that the public interest was not a criterion that Judge Rakoff should consider.  Rakoff rejected the SEC’s argument and, citing legal precedent, refused to approve the settlement, and set the date for the trial to commence sometime next July.

Are you digging what I’m saying here?  The SEC actually argued that the judge should approve the settlement WITHOUT any concern as to what’s in the public’s interest.  I have to tell you… that revelation is, to me, proof positive of a regulatory agency that has so lost its way that it may never be able to find its way home.  I mean, were it Citigroup arguing the irrelevancy of the public’s interest  as related to the settlement, it wouldn’t faze me a bit… Citigroup, like the other TBTF banksters obviously don’t care about the public’s interests, but what in the Sam Hill is the SEC there for if not to represent… or at least be cognizant of the public’s interests?  In fact, how dare a federally funded regulatory agency stand up in court and attempt to convince a judge that the public’s interest should not be a factor in approval of a proposed settlement.

According to the SEC’s website, in the section describing the history of the agency, the SEC was created for two fundamental purposes:

  • Companies publicly offering securities for investment dollars must tell the public the truth about their businesses, the securities they are selling, and the risks involved in investing.
  • People who sell and trade securities – brokers, dealers, and exchanges – must treat investors fairly and honestly, putting investors’ interests first.

Okay, so call me crazy, but those two statements make it sound like the SEC is supposed to be concerned with the public’s interests, do they not?  And yet the SEC went as far as publicly and proudly proclaiming a settlement that the judge later described as being “POCKET CHANGE” for an organization of Citi’s size… and whether the settlement provided any benefit for the SEC beyond “A QUICK HEADLINE.”  And in the judge’s written opinion he said of the proposed settlement: “It is neither fair, nor reasonable, nor adequate, nor in the public interest.”

Keep in mind that we’re talking about allegations that center on Citi’s broker-dealer arm, Citigroup Global Market, for “intentionally misleading investors in relation to a $1 billion collateralized debt obligation known as Class V Funding III.”  You know the drill by now… Citi lied to investors, selling them crap, while betting against it on the side.

And in point of fact, it was that very behavior… far more than any sub-prime loans defaulting, that has caused an economic meltdown in this country, and around the world, not seen for more than 70 years.  Citigroup’s acts in this regard were the proximate cause behind the destruction of investor trust that has left the U.S. government the lender of first, middle and last resort.

5. Remember that final scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark?

Remember that final scene in the movie Raiders of the Lost Ark… the first one… when the U.S. Government is about to store the Ark of the Covenant and all you see are the rows upon rows of some giant government warehouse where nothing will ever be found once stored.  Well, a reader of mine was kind enough to send me a photo of one of the floors at Bank of America’s servicer… it’s where they store borrower files.

I think the photo speaks for itself. Happy holidays everybody!

Mandelman out.

Nov
28

U.S. SECURITIES COMMISSION v CITIGROUP GLOBAL MARKETS INC | $285 Million Citi Settlement With SEC Rejected by Judge Jed Rakoff

Citi Settlement With SEC Rejected by Judge Citigroup Inc. (C)’s $285 million settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over mortgage-backed securities was rejected by a Manhattan federal judge. U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff rejected the settlement in an opinion released today. The judge has criticized the agreement for permitting New York-based Citigroup to … Read more Related posts:
  1. Unsealed Complaint | Citi Tried to Pass Off Madoff Exposure – Irving Picard, Trustee for the Liquidation of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC v Citibank and Citigroup Global Markets Limited
  2. Wells Fargo to Pay $125 Million to Settle Billion Mortgage-Backed Securities Fraud Case
  3. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Bank of America Corporation, Civil Action Nos. 09-6829, 10-0215
Nov
22

Sometimes You Just have to Laugh! Louis CK on Bank Fees (VIDEO)

~ 4closureFraud.org Tweet Related posts:Open Letter to Louis Ranieri, Father of Mortgage Backed Securities – Solving America’s Foreclosure Crisis Pot, Meet Kettle | Bank of America Sues HOA’s, Trustees and Collection Agencies Over Foreclosure Fees Deadbeat Bank | Tuesday Feb 8th 4closureFraud.org Will Film the Seizure of a Banks Property for Non Payment of Legal … Read more Related posts:
  1. Open Letter to Louis Ranieri, Father of Mortgage Backed Securities – Solving America’s Foreclosure Crisis
  2. Pot, Meet Kettle | Bank of America Sues HOA’s, Trustees and Collection Agencies Over Foreclosure Fees
  3. Deadbeat Bank | Tuesday Feb 8th 4closureFraud.org Will Film the Seizure of a Banks Property for Non Payment of Legal Fees
Nov
21

WSJ | NY, Delaware AGs Allowed To Intervene In $8.5B Bank of America Settlement

Delaware AGs Allowed To Intervene In $8.5B Bank of America Settlement NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–The federal judge presiding over the landmark $8.5 billion settlement between Bank of America Corp. (BAC) and major investors in mortgage-backed securities has allowed the state attorneys general of New York and Delaware to intervene in the case. In a ruling … Read more Related posts:
  1. Fraudclosure | Beau Biden, Delaware AG, Moves To Join Bank Of America Mortgage Deal, Signaling Concerns
  2. BAM! | US Judge Takes $8.5 Bln BofA Deal from State Court in Bank of New York Mellon vs Walnut Place
  3. Homeowners Seek to Block Bank of America $8.5 Billion Settlement
Nov
02

The World of the Investor with Attorney Talcott Franklin – A Mandelman Matters Podcast

WHAT’S THE DEAL WITH INVESTORS?  WHO ARE THEY?
ARE THEY LOSING MONEY ON FORECLOSURES?

What do the investors think about all these foreclosures?

What’s the relationship like between investors and servicers?

Do investors want to modify loans?

Do investors ever stop servicers from approving loan modifications?

Why don’t investors get more involved in this mess?

IF YOU’VE ASKED THESE QUESTIONS, HERE’S YOUR CHANCE TO GET ANSWERS!

Attorney Talcott Franklin knows mortgage-backed securities inside and out.  He should… his firm, Talcott Franklin P.C. whose main offices are in Dallas, in dollar terms represents more than half of all the investors in mortgage-backed securities on the planet.  Tal’s the co-author of the “Mortgage and Asset-backed Securities Litigation Handbook,” and he’s a very experienced and highly sophisticated litigator.

What makes Tal a pleasure to talk to, however, is that he makes a very complex subject very easy to understand… in fact, every time I talk to him, I feel like come away smarter.  Actually, the very first time Tal and I spoke, it was very clear that we couldn’t be more in-sync as to our views on the economy… where it’s headed and why.

Tal sees the foreclosure crisis essentially the same way I do, which I found interesting right from the start because he represents the other side of the foreclosure coin… the investor side.  And because of his knowledge and perspective you’re going to find listening to what he has to say absolutely fascinating.

You know how servicers are always saying “the investor says no,” when they want to deny a loan modification… well, Tal explains why that simply isn’t true.  And he walks us through the securitization process in a way that you’re likely to remember forever.  And you’ll learn all sorts of other things you did not know.  I’m telling you, you’re going to love spending an hour with Talcott Franklin on this, A Mandelman Matters Podcast.

The podcast is available in two versions… MP4 and MP3.  The MP4 version includes a couple of slides that show diagrams of the basic securitization process, but the MP4 format may not play on some computers.  The MP3 version is audio only, and should play on most any computer.  Most listeners will have no trouble following along either way.

So, turn up the volume on your speakers, and click the MP4 or MP3 version.  I loved recoding this podcast.  If you want to know more about the foreclosure crisis, you’re about to learn from an expert on the other side of the foreclosures, the investor side… it doesn’t get any better than this!

CLICK HERE TO PLAY THE ENHANCED MP4 VERSION

… INCLUDES SLIDES ON SECURITIZATION

OR

CLICK HERE TO PLAY THE MP3 VERSION

Mandelman out.

Oct
20

California, AG Harris, Reportedly Subpoenas BofA Over Toxic Securities

California reportedly subpoenas BofA over toxic securities Investigators with the state attorney general’s office have subpoenaed Bank of America Corp. in connection with the sale and marketing of troubled mortgage-backed securities to California investors, according to a person familiar with the probe. The state is trying to determine whether the bank and its Countrywide Financial … Read more Related posts:
  1. Kamala Harris | California Breaks from 50-State Probe into Mortgage Fraudclosures
  2. KABOOM | Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Subpoenas Lender Processing Services (LPS) in Wide-Ranging Probe of Mortgage and Fraudclosure Practices
  3. Foreclosuregate – SEC Sends More Subpoenas in Mortgage Probe
Oct
20

BAM! | US Judge Takes $8.5 Bln BofA Deal from State Court in Bank of New York Mellon vs Walnut Place

US judge takes $8.5 bln BofA deal from state court * Consummation of proposed deal could be lengthened * Stake high for Bank of America’s potential liability NEW YORK, Oct 19 (Reuters) – A judge on Wednesday decided to keep a proposed $8.5 billion settlement over Bank of America Corp’s mortgage-backed securities in federal court, … Read more Related posts:
  1. New York Attorney General Accuses Bank Of New York Mellon Of Fraud, Moves To Block Bank Of America’s Mortgage Deal
  2. Article 77 | Grais Fights to Keep $8.5 Billion BofA / Walnut Place Case in Federal Court
  3. New York AG Schneiderman Comes out Swinging at BofA, BoNY
Oct
19

Citigroup to Pay a Mere $285 Million to Settle SEC Charges for Misleading Investors About CDO Tied to Housing Market

Notice how the above graphic does not include a section for PROSECUTIONS stemming from the financial crisis. ~ Citigroup to Pay $285 Million to Settle SEC Charges for Misleading Investors About CDO Tied to Housing Market Former Citigroup Employee Separately Charged for His Role in Structuring Transaction FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 2011-214 Washington, D.C., Oct. 19, … Read more Related posts:
  1. Yawn | J.P. Morgan to Pay $153.6 Million to Settle SEC Charges of Misleading Investors in CDO Tied to U.S. Housing Market
  2. SEC Charges Goldman Sachs With Fraud in Structuring and Marketing of CDO Tied to Subprime Mortgages
  3. Morgan Keegan to Pay $200 Million to Settle Fraud Charges Related to Subprime Mortgage-Backed Securities
Oct
17

#OWS Occupy Wall Street Sign on Mortgage Backed Securities MBS

~ 4closureFraud.org Tweet Related posts:Lee Camp | “Wall Street Is Dirtier Than Occupy Wall Street” Why Mortgage-Backed Securities Aren’t (Backed by Securities): How MERS Toasted the Banks Anonymous Occupy Wall Street Call to Action #OccupyWallStreet Related posts:
  1. Lee Camp | “Wall Street Is Dirtier Than Occupy Wall Street”
  2. Why Mortgage-Backed Securities Aren’t (Backed by Securities): How MERS Toasted the Banks
  3. Anonymous Occupy Wall Street Call to Action #OccupyWallStreet
Oct
07

Bankster Lawyer | “I would look forward to kicking their ass (Attorneys General) if they do”

Let’s put aside securities fraud claims the states may have for troubled mortgage-backed securities, since those have nothing to do with the robosigning revelations… and The state AGs could also claim that the behavior of mortgage servicers in the foreclosure process amounts to systemic fraud or racketeering. “I’m sure they could come up with a … Read more Related posts:
  1. 50 State Attorneys General, Beware, It’s a Trap | NY Post Probe Finds “Problems” in 92% of Bank Foreclosure Filings
  2. Senators Urge OCC to Work with State Attorneys General, DOJ, and HUD to Hold Mortgage Servicers Accountable and Prevent Future Abuse
  3. Matt Taibbi | Attorneys General Settlement: The Next Big Bank Bailout?
Sep
16

Article 77 | Grais Fights to Keep $8.5 Billion BofA / Walnut Place Case in Federal Court

Grais fights to keep $8.5 billion BofA case in fed. court On Wednesday night, Grais & Ellsworth filed a 29-page brief laying out its arguments for why Bank of America’s proposed $8.5 billion settlement with Countrywide mortgage-backed securities investors belongs in federal court, not in New York state court, where Bank of New York Mellon, … Read more
Sep
14

Banks May Fight Banks as Mortgage Investors Pursue Class Status

Banks May Fight Banks as Mortgage Investors Pursue Class Status Bank of America Corp. (BAC), JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and other banks may pay more to resolve claims over their alleged roles in the collapse of a $2.3 trillion mortgage- backed securities market if sophisticated investors are allowed to sue as a group along … Read more
Sep
07

GUEST POST: Prove Fannie & Freddie Innocent Before Suing the Banks – And Here Is How

GUEST POST…

By Jim Boswell, Executive Director and CEO of Quanta Analytics


Last Friday the U.S. regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which has the oversight responsibility of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, sued 17 large banks and financial institutions relating to losses on approximately $200 billion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac subprime bonds.

Now, let me be clear right from the start.  I am no apologist for the banks.  And historically my tendency has been to support better financial regulation and even the Democratic Party through my voting preference.

However, enough is enough.  At this point in time the Government and the FHFA have no right to sue the banking industry on behalf of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  That is a joke.  When it comes to the financial crisis, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were Players (Big Players)—not naïve, innocent victims who were bedazzled by the banks.  Not only were the GSE’s as bad as the banks leading up to the crisis, in more ways than not, they were ahead of the banks (and the regulators) in finding ways to add to their coffers while ignoring the risk they placed on the people of the United States of America.

For twelve years during and after the Savings & Loan crisis (1988-2000), I led the group of business analysts at PricewaterhouseCoopers that was responsible for monitoring Ginnie Mae’s $600 billion portfolio of mortgage-backed securities.  During that period, I learned all about the power Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac arrogantly flayed upon the mortgage-backed securities industry.  I also learned during that period how totally ignorant and incompetent the oversight of the GSEs was.

And from last Friday’s action by the FHFA, it looks like nothing has changed.

Now with this article I am proposing a sound analytical methodology that would validate or invalidate the FHFA’s suit against the banks and go a very long way in proving or disproving Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s relative involvement in the factors leading up to our current financial crisis.

In fact, in this period of supposedly new enlightened Government transparency, I believe it is imperative that the FHFA use my methodology to prove Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s innocence or guilt one way or the other.  And before the banks cave into the Government’s suit, I believe they should demand that the FHFA prove what I am about to say is not the case.

First, let us begin with the fact that Fannie and Freddie not only sold mortgage-backed securities to the world, they also purchased a good portion of the mortgage-backed securities they processed.

Secondly, it is important to acknowledge the fact that Fannie and Freddie had much more information relating to the loans associated with their mortgage-backed securities than what they provided to the outside world.

I don’t know about most readers, but just this alone makes me think that this should raise an eyebrow or two somewhere in the FHFA?  Especially, considering that Fannie and Freddie’s primary focus for the last thirty years was more towards bottom-line profits than loan risk.  Or has the FHFA conveniently forgotten already that prior to their recent downfall that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were both Fortune 100 companies, more directly concerned about their stockholders than they were to the people of the United States of America?

I say it is time for the FHFA to wake up and quit looking for excuses to exonerate the criminals.  Doesn’t the FHFA know that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had their own money making machines?  And don’t they know that the GSEs knew how to use and abuse those machines to the detriment of the world’s economy?  The beloved GSEs of the FHFA were not ignorant and new to the mortgage-backed securities game.  Far from it—Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were the ones in fact who designed and developed the game.

Oh well, moving forward.  Here is the proposed methodology that the FHFA needs to perform before continuing forward with its lawsuits against the evil banks.

The FHFA needs to compare the performance characteristics of Fannie and Freddie’s portfolio of self-purchased mortgage-backed securities against the performance characteristics of the portfolio of mortgage-backed securities they sold to the world.

The way to do this is to break the above two portfolio views down into smaller group samples by year-month of security origination.  This will establish several comparable smaller portfolios, all still of decent size, to look for unexpected patterns using sound statistical analysis.  For example, one of the first performance characteristics that the FHFA should look at within the above described monthly portfolios is to see if there is a different pattern in how the monthly GSE portfolios paid down over time versus the same monthly portfolios they sold to the world.  My bet is they will find that the GSE portfolios paid down slower than those sold in the world marketplace..

Although it might be rather esoteric to the newbies at the FHFA, it really should not be—if you really want to make money in the mortgage-backed securities world in a period when mortgage rates are falling and refinancing is the name of the game (somewhat like the last 25-year period when the GSEs had as much to say about the direction of mortgage rates than any other player, including the Federal Reserve), it is much more profitable to own mortgage-backed securities that pay down slower than to own securities that pay down faster.

I have been told personally from an inside source that each month Fannie Mae ran analytical jobs prior to deciding what securities they wanted to purchase and sell.  Now the FHFA may think that I am being overly skeptical of the GSEs, but in running those analytical jobs, I believe the GSEs were using loan level information only available to the GSEs (and not available to the rest of the investing public) to stack the bets in their favor—purchasing the securities backed with loans that the GSEs felt were likely to pay down slower before offering up the remainder of their new monthly security issues to the rest of unsuspecting world investors.

And while the FHFA runs the above analysis they should try to find out who was the driving force behind the “first real mortgage-backed security derivative product” that dealt with differing pay down rates, the REMIC?  And who first began buying and selling that product to an unsuspecting public?  Now I hate to give anything away, but I believe the FHFA would find out that it was the GSEs.  REMICs have been around since the late 1980s—and somewhat coincidentally, since right after the first refinancing boom in 1986.

Now if the FHFA would in fact run the above analysis, which by the way should be easily doable (both Fannie and Freddie stores and maintains track of the “monthly” loan performance of the securities they both purchase and sell), I believe they would begin to appreciate Fannie and Freddie for what they really were—and see them as less than innocent by-standers..

But looking at pay down rates is only the starting point. Using the same form of analysis, the FHFA should look at more contemporary times (e.g., 2002-2008) to see if statistically different patterns between GSE-purchased and GSE-sold portfolios can be discovered in other relatively significant performance and loan characteristic areas (e.g., FICO score distribution, loan delinquency and foreclosure rates, even to see whether loans from certain loan originating banks like Countrywide fell more in purchased or sold portfolios, etc.).

Based upon my own personal experience and knowledge, I have come to mistrust anything that I hear from the GSEs and their oversight bodies.  So considering the Government’s seemingly new initiative for greater transparency and real financial reform, I believe it is imperative that the FHFA perform the type of analysis described above in such a way that it is transparent and independently verifiable, so that once and for all the entire world’s financial community can actually determine how innocent of a role the GSEs played in the present world financial crisis.

# # #

Jim Boswell is the Executive Director and CEO of Quanta Analytics

Contact E-mail:quanta.analytics@gmx.com

Jim Boswell (MBA, MPA, BA) is the Executive Director and CEO of Quanta Analytics–a “think tank” and “consulting” firm.  Visit Quanta Analytics at quanta-analytics.com.   Jim is a veteran (ex-junior nuclear submarine officer) and the recipient of a Vice-Presidential Hammer Award (1995) for his work involving risk management.  He earned his M.B.A. from The Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania) and his M.P.A. from The School of Public and Environmental Affairs (Indiana University).  His undergraduate degree is in mathematics.

Sep
03

Upcoming Max Gardner Seminar: UCC’s Impact on Securitization and Foreclosure Defense

Attention Foreclosure Defense Attorneys… It’s time to take it up a notch or two…

MAX GARDNER PRESENTS…

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE UCC FOR FORECLOSURE DEFENSE

For attorneys engaged in foreclosure defense today, Max Gardner’s seminars are always important and extremely valuable… invaluable, in my opinion.  But the two upcoming highly specialized sessions, one to be held in Ontario, California and the other in New York City, promise to deliver value on an entirely new level.

Why do I say that?

Well, because Max, along with his faculty of expert guest speakers, will be delivering two specially designed in-depth sessions each one laser focused on the topic of the UCC’s impact on mortgage securitization – and each of the seminars is specifically tailored for California and New York state law respectively.

Why is this topic so important?

Watch this video from Bloomberg… an interview with banking industry and securities expert, Christopher Whalen and it’ll become very clear, very quickly.


When you attend either of the upcoming seminars, you’ll learn about such topics as…

  • Fannie & Freddie’s Securitization Model & Master Trust Agreements
  • The Ginnie Mae Securitization Model
  • Master Servicers, Primary Servicers, Back-Up Servicers, Default Servicers, Speciality Servicers and Sub-Servicers
  • The REMIC Tax Act of 1986 and REMIC Tax Opinions
  • Role of Pooling & Servicing Agreements & Section 1-302 of the UCC and PSA
  • New York and Delaware Trust Law
  • Custodians and the Custodial Guide & Agreements
  • The Mortgage Electronic Registration System – MERS as Original Mortgage , MERS as Assignee, the Agency Theory of MERS, MERS and Delaware Corporate Law
  • What is a Negotiable Note Under Article 3 of the UCC?
  • Section 2.01 of the PSA and Non-Negotiability
  • Article 9 of the UCC and Mortgage Notes
  • Mortgage Loan Sale Agreements, Mortgage Schedules as Defined by the PSA and the Mortgage Custodial File as Required by the PSA

And not only is there much more on the agenda… but that’s only the beginning of what is sure to make these events invaluable to your practice.  Just wait until you see whose speaking at each event.

The first one is…

September 17 & 18, 2011
Ontario, California
At the University of La Verne College of Law



Speakers at the California seminar include:

Richard Shepherd – Former Vice-President and General Counsel for Saxon Mortgage (now Morgan Stanley).

Margery Golant – Former Assistant General Counsel at Ocwen Financial Corporation and Department Manager of a major plaintiffʼs foreclosure firm.

Jay Patterson – A leading Certified Fraud Examiner and Forensic Accountant.

Eric Clark – A leading consumer bankruptcy attorney in California He has been a panelist at the National Conference of Bankruptcy Judges, the Annual Convention of the National Association of Chapter Thirteen Trustees as well as the Annual NACBA Convention.

Michael G. Doan – He practices on the cutting edge of bankruptcy law, being the first attorney in the entire Southern District of California to file the very first Chapter 7 Bankruptcy and very first Chapter 13 Bankruptcy under the new Bankruptcy Laws which went into effect on October 17, 2005.

David Springer – With over 25 years experience in traditional and mortgage banking, Mr. Springer has served as employee, officer and consultant to some of America’s largest mortgage lenders. His direct experience in subprime loan securitization gives him a revealing eyewitness perspective to this important chapter in American financial history. Mr. Springer discusses in detail the processes, entities, and the management of documents in the lending and securitization process.

The cost to attend is only $1799, and if you’ve previously attended a Max Gardner training seminar you’ll receive a $400 discount!

~~~

And the second is…

September 24 & 25, 2011
New York City

New York Law School


Speakers at the New York City seminar include:

Judge Arthur Schack – New York Supreme Court Justice who has gained notoriety for taking the unusual stance “If you are going to take away someoneʼs house, everything should be legal and correct.”

Hon. Samuel L. Bufford – a former United States Bankruptcy Judge in the Central District of California, where he served for twenty-five years and presided over nearly 100,000 cases. Widely regarded as one of the foremost scholars of U.S. and comparative insolvency law, his teaching interests include bankruptcy, international and comparative insolvency law, commercial transactions, and international business transactions.”

Tara Twomey – Of Counsel to the National Consumer Law Center and the Amicus Project Director for the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys. She is currently a Lecturer in Law at Stanford, and has previously lectured at Harvard and Boston College Law Schools.

Thomas Cox – The attorney responsible for setting off the temporary freeze against foreclosures.

Richard Shepherd – Former Vice-President and General Counsel for Saxon Mortgage (now Morgan Stanley)

Margery Golant – Former Assistant General Counsel at Ocwen Financial Corporation and Department Manager of a major plaintiffʼs foreclosure firm

Jay Patterson – A leading Certified Fraud Examiner and Forensic Accountant.

The cost to attend is only $1999, and if you’ve previously attended a Max Gardner training seminar you’ll receive a $400 discount!

~~~

(I’ll be at both the California and New York events, by the way.  Oh, and although it doesn’t happen often, speakers are subject to change without notice.)

That’s Max above… he’s my hero.

HERE’S THE BOTTOM-LINE…

You must attack the secured status of the Trustee of residential mortgage backed securitized trusts and you must challenge the mortgage servicer’s standing to foreclose.

In order to make these types of challenges in court, you must have a thorough understanding of how securitization is supposed to work and then determine whether the proper procedures were followed for your client’s mortgage.

To understand how securitization is supposed to work, you must have a thorough understanding of UCC Articles 3, 9 and 1-302. This session will present the most comprehensive look at the UCC and its impact on foreclosure defense available.

In order for a residential mortgage to be properly securitized within a trust, the note needs to have been properly assigned by ALL parties to the transaction.

By now it should be clear to all involved that, in reality, this rarely occurred during the last decade and Max refers to this as the “Alphabet Problem.”

According to Max and countless others with experience litigating these cases, you will rarely, if ever find that the parties, A, B, C, D etc. made the proper assignments of the mortgage or deed of trust or transfers of the note. What typically happens, however, is that the foreclosing party will “magically” find the “missing” assignment at the last minute before a trial claiming improper assignment from party A to D.

The Role of the UCC

Various Articles of the Uniform Commercial Code cover aspects of how a residential mortgage note in a securitized transaction should be transferred.  If you are going to attack the secured status of the Trustee of residential mortgage backed securitized trusts, you must be fluent in “UCC” or as Max might say in the “ABC’s”.

Max is of the opinion that a residential mortgage note is NOT a negotiable instrument under Article 3 of the UCC and that Pooling and Servicing Agreements actually constitute “otherwise agreed” mandatory methods of perfection as permitted by Article 1-302 of the UCC.

According to one of Max’s recent articles…

“A review of all of the recent “standing” and “real party in interest” cases decided by the bankruptcy courts and the state courts in judicial foreclosure states all arise out of the inability of the mortgage servicer or the Trust to “prove up” an unbroken chain of “assignments and transfers” of the mortgage notes and the mortgages from the originators to the sponsors to the depositors to the trust and to the master document custodian for the trust.

As is likely stated in the PSA, however, the parties have represented and warranted that there is “a complete chain of endorsements from the originator to the last endorsee” for the note. And, the Master Document Custodian must file verified reports that it in fact holds such documents with all “intervening” documents that confirm true sales at each link in the chain.”

If you’re serious about winning the battle against foreclosure fraud for your clients don’t miss this opportunity to learn from the some of the top legal minds in the country how to drill down into the details of securitization and the impact of the UCC…

… with each seminar specifically adapted to California and New York state law respectively.

Can you really afford not to attend?

Did you miss Max Gardner when he was in Las Vegas last year with Operation Strike Back?  Well, even if you did, you can still get the education by purchasing the event on video.  It’s the next best thing to being there.

Oh, and by the way… when you purchase any of Max’s training products here, Mandelman Matters, a California non-profit corporation by the way, will receive  10% of the sale, which will be used to cover production costs of the documentary on the foreclosure crisis we are currently producing for release at the end of this year.  So please… if you’re think of buying the Las Vegas Videos, or anything else that Max has to offer, buy it here.  Thank you.


Aug
08

Abigail Field | Schneiderman Sues BNY; Homeowners Validated; Will Deutsche Bank Be Next?

Schneiderman Sues BNY; Homeowners Validated; Will Deutsche Bank Be Next? With one court filing, Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has transformed the mortgage backed securities liability landscape. By intervening and opposing the Bank of America/BNY global settlement of mortgage backed securities claims, Schneiderman served notice to the big banks that they will not be able to … Read more
Aug
08

NY Times | A.I.G. to Sue Bank of America Over Mortgage Bonds

A.I.G. to Sue Bank of America Over Mortgage Bonds The American International Group is planning to sue Bank of America over hundreds of mortgage-backed securities, adding to the surge of investors seeking compensation for the troubled mortgages that led to the financial crisis. The suit seeks to recover more than $10 billion in losses on … Read more
Jun
08

Dear Banking & Government People Who Are Reading This…

This was originally posted on May 30th, 2010, and I plan to repost it every year in the hopes that it matters.

Okay, so there’s this online thing called Google Analytics. And it shows someone who has a blog or website from where traffic to his or her site is coming. Now, it’s not always easy to tell where someone is from because some of the domains just say “verizon.net,” or whatever.

But other times I can tell where my readers are, because their domain says “freddiemac.com,” or “wellsfargo.com,” stuff like that. So, if it was just once or twice, then I would just figure that someone bumped into my blog by accident, but just between April 28th and May 29th, for example, people at FreddieMac.com came onto my blog 172 times.

Wellsfargo.com folks showed up 170 times.  JPmchase.com 94 times. Bank of America’s 64 times. usbank.com 26 times. IndyMac Bank 26 times, fanniemae.com 20 times. wachovia 19 times. fdic.gov 17 times. ca.gov 16 times. hud.gov 14 times. va.gov 14 times. mellon.com 12 times. You get the idea.

I also know that many of you spend a whole lot of time on Mandelman Matters. Like, quite a few of you have visited hundreds of pages, give or take, on my site, so obviously you’re reading it pretty carefully.

So, banking and government people… what’s up? How are you? Are you reading me because you hate what I’m saying? Or, because you hate what you’re doing? Something in the middle?

I have heard from a few of you. How come not more? Do you feel I’m being unfair about anything? Or, am I pretty much nailing it? I’m not talking about my facts, I know my facts are right. But what about my opinions? Am I out of line? You can tell me if you think so, you know. I don’t get upset because someone has a different view than my own, but it should be a well thought out view. I don’t really do stupid.

Here’s the real question: Can I do more to help homeowners in some way that you know about, but I don’t. I mean, maybe your bank or government agency is actually trying to do good, but somehow struggling for legitimate reasons and maybe I could help in some way.

I don’t really know what I’m thinking about when I say that, but I’m certainly open to the possibilities. And I wanted you all to know that I’m very easy to reach and very easy to talk to.

If you want your identity kept secret, no problem. I won’t say a word about who you are. You can reach out to me and know that I’m only interested in helping homeowners get through this mess, and I’m only trying to do that because few others seem to be.

This crisis is complex and difficult to understand for most people and I’m kind of good at explaining complicated things in a simple way, and people say I’m funny, so I think I have to try to help. Because when the people of this country catch up with what’s gone on here, and then realize that it’s going to be going on for a long time, well… a number of them are going to be quite upset.

I know that a number of banking and government people think that the way home is through our banking system, and that the average homeowner is somehow at fault and therefore somehow undeserving of help, but it’s not true. Without addressing the needs of American citizens, something we have not done well thus far, we are all in trouble.

You guys started it when you came out blaming “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers” as being the cause of the crisis. That was pretty stupid, you must admit, and I wrote to a bunch of you back then telling you it was a mistake. Now you’re having trouble getting the political support you need to change what needs to be changed because you told everybody it was something that it wasn’t.

You guys all now know that this thing had about as much to do with sub-prime borrowers as World War II. Unless you can point out a sub-prime borrower who was selling synthetic CDOs in Iceland, I think we’re done with that conversation, don’t you?

And how comfortable are you with what Bernanke’s got going at the Fed, with the help of Treasury, of course? I mean, you do agree that we’re blatantly circumventing the legislative process in order to pump trillions into banks without that messy congressional thing, right?

Okay, so fine. I’m willing to look the other way on all of that, but we have to meet somewhere in the middle. At this point, homeowners don’t believe anyone on your side of the table cares at all. They all think you’re evil and willing to see millions thrown out of their homes without blinking an eye. And if that’s the case, then there’s no reason for us to talk.

But that can’t be right, right? I can’t believe that either political party thinks they can possibly get reelected by continuing down that path, do they? It’s a bad idea. So far, the foreclosure crisis is affecting roughly 15% of American homeowners, but that number will exceed 20% in a year, or perhaps 18 months. And then all bets are off. There’ll be no going back then.

I guess that’s it. I just wanted to let you know that I’m here and I’m open to doing whatever might be productive and helpful. You don’t have to worry about me being in this for the money because if that were the case, I’d have some.

So… feel free to get in touch of you have anything to say. My email is mandelman@mac.com and I promise to be a lot more reasonable than I probably come across in many of my articles. Truth be told, I’ve learned that subtlety does little to advance my cause.

If not, not. Feel free to continue reading me without reaching out. At least I feel better for inviting you into the discussion. And I do hope some of you will take me up on it.

Mandelman out.

May
25

If You Think the Meltdown Was the Fault of Homeowners, Think Again…

If you’re thinking that our economic crisis was in some way the fault of homeowners who couldn’t afford their mortgages, please consider the following:

At the end of 2007, there were roughly $1.4 trillion in sub-prime mortgages in this country.

If “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers,” caused the meltdown, then $1.4 trillion would have solved the problem in its entirety, right?  Because that’s all the sub-prime loans there were.

But, between the Federal Reserve, the FDIC and the Treasury over $13 trillion has been pumped into financial institutions to fix the “housing correction,” which is what Hank Paulson was still calling our economic collapse as of November of 2008.

At the end of 2008, there were $11.9 trillion worth of mortgages in this country.  So, with $13 trillion, the government could have paid off every single one… and still had a little over a trillion dollars left over.

But there’s a lot more to the economic problem than that, explains Nomi Prins, my new favorite financial uber-genius and author of “It takes a Pillage.” Wall Street had been playing the leverage game… somewhat like they did in the 1920s, I suppose… but on mega-steroids.  Leverage means borrowing on assets, and Wall Street banks were leveraged by 30:1, commercial banks by 10:1, not including their “off-the-balance-sheet” holdings, which could make their leverage ratio significantly higher in many cases.

So… in “Pillage,” Nomi Prins explains in terms anyone can understand that factoring in the leverage at 11:1, we’re looking at a $140 TRILLION economic problem… yes, you read that correctly… that’s trillion, with a ‘T’.  Our Wall Street bankers, through the abuse of the securitization process and excessive amounts of leverage, created a potential tab of $140 TRILLION for the people of this country to pick up.

Securitization is the process of packaging loans into securities that are then be sold to investors, called Asset Backed Securities (or ABS).  Inside a given ABS, you might find 10% real loans and 90% bonds backed by those real loans.  Or there could be only 5% real loans.  The mortgage payments we all make are used to make payments that flow through the securities and to the investors who then invest by buying pieces of the ABSs.

“It takes a Pillage” is a book that’s absolutely jam packed with “Aha!” and “OMG!” moments, but one shines above the rest… What caused the financial crisis were the securities, or the “bonds”… not the loans.

We’re talking about a system that took on $140 trillion in debt on the backs of just $1.4 trillion in real loans.  And it may be much more than $140 trillion, we don’t really know because we’ve allowed the market to remain unregulated.  The $1.4 trillion is based on leverage at 11:1.  It could very well be some multiple of that amount.

Issuers of ABSs, who were Wall Street’s investment banks earned about $300 billion for packaging and selling these “assets,” packaging the CDOs we’ve all heard about paid the best.  Who bought ABSs?  European and the global banks, insurance companies, and pension plans bought a whole lot of them.  And they bought them with borrowed money.

They bought them because Wall Street told them they were safe… triple A rated… and even better they could be insured with Credit Default Swaps, too!  What was not to love?

Hundreds of trillions in “structured assets”, ABSs, MBSs, CDOs, CDOs Squared, and of course synthetic CDOs, which are entirely, made up of credit default swaps, all deriving their value based on $1.4 trillion in mortgages.  All of those structured investments, once demand for them abruptly dried up, are what we came to know as “TOXIC ASSETS.”

Prins makes it very clear that toxic assets are not the same as defaulted sub-prime loans.  The fact is, Nomi says, that every single sub-prime loan in the country could have defaulted and all of the homes attached to those loans devalued to zero… neither of which happened… and the banks in this country would not have become insolvent… not even close.

The toxic assets lost their value starting in the summer of 2007, not because sub-prime loans defaulted, but because no one wanted to buy them anymore.  After Standard & Poors and Moody’s lowered their ratings on just 1% of the MBSs outstanding on July 10, 2007, investors no longer trusted the triple A ratings.  If some bonds were improperly rated, the thinking went, what about all the others?

I’ve read just about every book on the meltdown that’s been published in the last two years.  From “Too Big to Fail,” to more recently, “Crash of the Titans,” which is about Bank of America’s acquisition of Merrill Lynch, and “It takes a Pillage” filled in so many blanks for me I couldn’t possibly count them all.  Nomi is a very down to earth person too, and it makes reading her easy like Sunday morning.  She’s snarky at certain moments, but she delivers it straight most of the time so you won’t get distracted.

I read her book and was on the phone the following morning with my friend in New York, Danny Schechter, who produced the movie, “Plunder – The Crime of Our Time,” which is all about the housing meltdown and foreclosure crisis and if you haven’t see it yet, you really should order a copy on Amazon right away.  Nomi appeared in Danny’s film a, so I knew he could put me in touch with her, and she responded to my email right away.  (She’s even agreed to an interview, so look for a podcast coming soon, I hope.)

Nomi is smart… I mean scary smart.  Like, I’ve always been considered smart too… near the top of my various classes, 1380 SAT scores about a hundred years ago, if that means anything, but Nomi is so far off the charts that I can’t even believe it.  I don’t remember anyone like her in college or graduate school.  Talking to her is like talking to a walking encyclopedia of the financial history of the United States… but one that speaks English like the rest of us.

By the summer of 2006, the housing bubble had popped.  Greenspan had raised interest rates 17 times in a row by then.  But, starting on that July day during the summer of 2007, before most people had any idea what was happening, the bond/credit markets froze solid as money stopped moving… banks started hoarding cash and soon no one would be able to get a mortgage or refinance one… and housing prices started to fall fast.

After that, anyone that had bought a home during the preceding years found himself or herself increasingly underwater.  One couple I know, with an 850 credit score by the way, lost a home to foreclosure and filed for bankruptcy.  He was a very successful dentist and she a hospital administrator.  Their crime?  They got caught buying a home… and selling one at the worst moment in US history.

So, our government pumped $13 trillion into banks, financial institutions and others in this country since the fall of 2008.  We allowed just about any business that wanted to become a “Bank Holding Company,” so they could qualify for the federal bailout programs.  (As an example, did you know that American Express Travel Services became a BHC in order to receive $4 billion in taxpayer dollars?  Why? What do they do?  Arrange vacations for rich people?  Were “they too big to fail,” too?  Nomi covers it in “Pillage.”)

And today, the only mortgage lending in this country comes from the federal government… Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHA.  So, we’ve already nationalized mortgage lending in this country.  We had no choice but to do that because if we didn’t, there would be no mortgage lending in this country.  Citibank and Bank of America have been nationalized too… I know we don’t call them “nationalized,” but they ARE both nationalized.

(Citibank, for example, has been given over $400 billion in government loans and loan guarantees.  BofA has been received over $200 billion. We still guarantee Goldman Sachs bonds… meaning we are co-signing for their debt.  Want to see the numbers in detail, visit the “Reports” tab on NomiPrins.com… you won’t believe it.)

General Motors had to come to congress for a loan at the end of 2008… why?  Well, for one thing, in 2008, they missed their forecasts by 2.4 million cars… we couldn’t finance one so we couldn’t buy one.  And the bond market was broken, so they couldn’t issue bonds as they normal would.  We lost tens of thousands of jobs when they filed bankruptcy.

Unemployment started rising as we stopped spending.  And we entered a deflationary spiral… the same one we’re in today.  There’s no double dip, it’s the same “dip.  The reason they can say that the recession ended was because of the trillions we were pumping into the system.  Among other programs, the fed bought $1.5 trillion in mortgage-backed securities between 2009 and 2010, but that’s over now, and the downturn is back in the game.

We’re just about at the end of QE2 now, and we don’t have any more stimulus money to artificially stimulate our economic situation… so things are already returning to their downward slide.  Home values nationally have fallen 57 months in a row… and they’ve fallen faster and further than during the Great Depression.

The sooner we face the reality of the situation, the sooner we can start to rebuild our economy.  All we’ve done so far is pump money into insolvent financial institutions, while we’ve let the American middle class sink into an abyss from which we will not recover in my lifetime… and I’m turning 50 on Friday of this week.

You see… all that government spending, as we like to call it… is really US… we ARE the government… it’s OUR money the government is spending.  All those trillions are coming out of OUR pockets, and the pockets of our children and their children.  And a few hundred billion has gone into the pockets of our bankers in the form of bonuses… and no one even seems to care.

And still, all that many people want to talk about is how some homeowner must have been living beyond their means and deserves to lose their home.  Don’t bail out irresponsible sub-prime homeowners, right?

Ridiculous.  We’ve been lied to.  This isn’t a question of wanting the government to take care of everything… they are ready taking care of everything, except the people, America’s middle class.  And we didn’t even ask for much… just a modified loan in order to remain in our homes.  Because millions losing homes benefits no one.

You’re already paying for bonuses at Citibank, Goldman Sachs, and American Express Travel Related Services… and if you can stomach doing that, you can find it in your heart to be in favor of your neighbor getting his loan modified, if for no other reason, so that you don’t lose your own ass in the next few years.  Because don’t kid yourself… none of us is getting out of this one unscathed.

The water is going down in the harbor, are we’re all going down with it.  And as long as we have housing prices falling and no middle class spending going on in this country, we’ll have no recovery… except maybe the recovery that they talk about on T.V. but no one can feel.  And how long do you think people are going to buy into that fairy tale being told by our politicians?

Arizona’s state senate passed a bill 28-2 that would have slowed the foreclosure and given people a chance to remain in their homes by forcing banks to follow the existing laws.  Then the banking lobby made it disappear over weekend.  Another similar amendment was to be proposed, but the banking lobby got that one too.  And last week lobbyist at a meeting of the Arizona Mortgage Lending Association bragged about his success killing the bills I refer to.  Bragged.

“It Takes a Pillage” makes it clear that we need to stop blaming our neighbors because he or she is struggling to keep the family home.  Borrowers didn’t cause this crisis, bankers caused it… but the borrowers are losing their homes while bankers get bigger and bigger bonuses?

Since when is an outcome like that what this country is all about?

There are a lot of great books I wish everyone in this country would read.  But, if you’ve already read other books about the meltdown, or even if you haven’t… whether it’s a starting place or one in a series, I can’t recommend reading “It Takes a Pillage” strongly enough.

What Nomi Prins has to tells us, needs to be heard.

I’ll go ahead and admit something.  I’ve read it once all the way through, and dozens of times in sections… then I bought it on iTunes and I listen to it most nights as I fall asleep… I know… I’m weird… but it’s that good.

(There’s a link below to NOMI’S SITE and then you can get to Amazon from there… and it’s now available in paperback, so it’s only $11.53!  For $11.53 you’ll be so much smarter about the meltdown, you’ll thank me.)

Mandelman out.

~~~

CLICK HERE TO VISIT: NomiPrins.com

AND THEN CLICK ON THE BOOK COVER TO GO TO AMAZON

AND ORDER YOUR COPY OF “IT TAKES A PILLAGE.”

~~~

IT TAKES A PILLAGE: AN EPIC TALE OF POWER, DECEIT AND UNTOLD TRILLIONS.

“No one takes Wall Street to task like Nomi Prins. But this book is far more than a pointed attack on how greed and bad regulation created a global economic meltdown-it also offers concrete prescriptions for how to prevent the next crisis. Let’s hope Washington is listening.”

James Ledbetter, Editor, The Big Money

“Nomi Prins has applied her unmatched expertise in Wall Street’s arcane methods of turning your money into their bonuses to mapping the recent crisis. In compelling, scathing prose, she shows how the key players escaped being brought to account, and kept their pet officials in power.”

John Dizard, The Financial Times

~~~

Some of Nomi’s Bio…

Before becoming a journalist, Nomi worked on Wall Street as a managing director at Goldman Sachs, and running the international analytics group at Bear Stearns in London.

Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, Fortune, Newsday, Mother Jones, The Daily Beast, Newsweek, Slate.com, The Guardian UK, The Nation, The American Prospect, Alternet, LaVanguardia,  and other publications.

Nomi has appeared on numerous TV programs; internationally on BBC World, BBC and Russian TV,  and nationally on CNN, CNBC, MSNBC, ABC, CSPAN, Democracy Now, Fox and PBS. She has been featured on hundreds of radio shows globally including for CNNRadio, Marketplace, Air America, NPR, regional Pacifica stations, New Zealand, BBC, and Canadian Programming.

Apr
27

Florida’s Retirement System- Burned Badly By Foreclosure Troubles

The following was shared with me by a reader
We know that investors all over the world got burned purchasing Mortgage Backed Securities.  Florida Retirement System (FRS) is no exception. These securities were often misrepresented, overrated and possibly not even “mortgage backed.”

FL Rep Workman (Brevard) has a solution; take an additional 3% from the paychecks of all public employees to pick up the slack.
I guess that’s much easier than going back to the purveyor of these toxic securities and getting them to reimburse FRS like other investors, pension and retirement funds have done.

p. 28  Bank of America                            -316,327,012.67
p. 28  Bank of New York Mellon                   -2,434,291.60
p. 29  Barclays                                         -19,997,665.40
p. 30  BB&T                                               -6,569,393.34
p. 35  BNP Paribas                                     -9,066,142.18
p. 54  Citigroup                                      -279,818,109.26
p. 57  Comerica                                         -2,278,503.78
p. 57  Commerzbank AG                             -6,822,118.11
p. 62  Credit Suisse                                  -18,329,819.84
p. 68  Deutsche Bank                                  -9,714,840.03
p. 85  Fifth Third                                      -10,408,342.63
p. 86  First Horizon                                     -5,467,194.12
p. 97  Goldman Sachs                        +26,938,736.08 (crime pays)
p. 111  HSBC                                           -17,738,931.24
p. 127 JPMorgan Chase                     +81,243,480.18 (counterfeit notes anyone?)
p. 131  KeyCorp                                       -11,463,736.62
p. 142  Lloyds Banking                              -29,960,919.23
p. 148  Marshall & Ilsley                             -9,304,517.53
p. 156  Mitsubishi UFJ                               -44,427,571.00
p. 156  Mizuho Financial                           -16,939,349.47
p. 157  Morgan Stanley                            -28,447,723.45
p. 161  National Bank of Greece                  -9,867,787.03
p. 183  PNC Financial                                -6,615,206.45
p. 184  Popular Inc (Banco Popular)            -8,749,458.66
p. 192  Regions Financial                         -26,949,789.25
p. 196  Royal Bank of Scotland                 -36,487,662.12
p. 205  Shakespeare Acquisition LLC         -75,041,843.23
*Wow – Shakespeare Acquisition sure lost a ton of money, did they not have any collateral?
**I wonder what kind of things they acquired?
p. 212  SLM Corp                                    -16,749,909.42
p. 213  Societe Generale                           -6,461.618.08
p. 218  State Street Corp                          -2,971,628.24
p. 221  Suntrust Banks                            -15,027,002.97
p. 224  Synovus Financial                         -4,759,832.76
p. 241  UBS AG                                      -36,008,160.39
p. 242  Unicredit                                    -44,097,685.52
p. 252  Wells Fargo                                -72,717,515.80
p. 254  Wilmington Trust                          -3,887,941.84
p. 260  Zions Bancorporation                    -3,864,265.08

Research shows that (by and large) mortgage assignments “into” these trusts never took place.  Transfer of the original mortgage and note is stipulated in just about every Pooling & Servicing agreement I’ve read.  The custodian or trustee is supposed to have possession of the original note and mortgage and assignment of mortgages are to be recorded conveying the security instrument.  But its awful hard to get away with counterfeiting notes and selling them into multiple pools and insuring them with multiple sets of credit default swaps if they were to play by the rules.

So the investors who put up money get burned. The borrower who puts up money gets burned too. But the middle-men who structured the ponzi scheme collect from the Federal Reserve, Credit Default Swaps at 30x value (AIG), TARP, AMBAC, MGIC,  Creditors Rights policies on Title Insurance (which title insurers have wisely stopped issuing) & have likely gone back to the originators and collected money from them for selling them bad/defective loans while stiff-arming investors for their losses.

Collecting 3 or 4 times over AND confiscating houses for free, just to cover up the faulty title work… Priceless!!!

If the securities were legit, we would see no “lost note” counts, no fake “robo-signed” assignment of mortgages and the “original” notes that were surrendered to the courts would look their age – not arrive on brand new paper with bright blue ink that looks like it just rolled off the shelf at Office Depot.

*********************************************************************

“In a way, the MBS fraud is not unlike the Mel Brooks movie “The Producers” in which the producers intentionally choose what they think is a terrible script, “Springtime for Hitler”, which they hope will close the first night.

The producers then sell 1000% of the show to unwary investors. 100% is spent producing the show, with the other 900% to be pocketed after the show fails and the investors, unaware of the extra shares in the show, accept their losses and leave.

But like the fraud behind “The Producers”, the MBS scheme only works if the investment is caused to fail, ending demands for repayment by investors. That means foreclosing the over-sold mortgages to erase the criminal trail. Where foreclosure does not work, the fraudulent Mortgage-Backed Securities must be bought back. That is what TARP did.

Congress, many of them personally invested in the financial companies that bought the fraudulent mortgage-backed securities, voted through TARP against overwhelming public opposition. The phrase “Toxic assets” is Congress-speak for the bad paper Wall Street has been selling since 2006; paper to be redeemed at taxpayer expense to keep the bankers out of jail!”

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Scridb filter
Apr
25

THEY ONCE WERE LENDERS – Understanding government’s failure to stop bankers OR scammers from destroying homeowners.

Preface…

Sit down and relax… you’re going to need a comfortable chair.  But, I promise you… it’ll be worth it.

In the fall of 2008, news stories about “scammers” taking advantage of homeowners at risk of foreclosure started appearing frequently in the media.  I remember watching a prime-time national news magazine type program, I think it was 20/20, that was airing a story that featured a sleazy looking middle-age man in Denver, hurriedly walking from a small, strip mall store front to his car, his hand covering his face, as a reporter tried to ask him questions that he obviously did not plan to answer.

The story involved a company that had charged a handful of homeowners several thousand dollars up front to help them negotiate with their banks to get their mortgages modified.  The core issue being raised by the show’s host was that the homeowners had been victims of a scam because, as a couple of the homeowners interviewed were saying, their loans had not yet been modified.

I remember wondering, to begin with, how in the world such a story had become the subject of a national news magazine television program.  I mean, “Three homeowners get ripped off by small business in Denver,” is not usually the sort of event that makes national headlines.  The implication being made was that this case was emblematic of a more widespread problem, but nothing further was offered in the way of proof… no statistics, no additional facts… just statements about how homeowners should NEVER pay anyone up front to help them negotiate with their bank over a loan modification because they were “scammers.”

Around the same time, I also remember quite clearly reading a newspaper story that appeared on the front page of a major mid-western paper… it might have been the Minneapolis Star, but I can’t be certain.  The large photo on page one was of a young couple with a baby in arms and maybe a four year-old standing at Dad’s hip… there was a white picket fence in the background… and a for sale sign in the yard.  I can easily sum up the story in a single sentence: About eight months ago the couple had paid a law firm $1,000 to help them get their loan modified… and that’s the reason why they were now losing their $300,000 home.

And I remember thinking how ridiculous that sounded.  I remembered the time that my wife and I paid a contractor $2500 and he never came back to even start the work on our deck.  We were plenty angry, all right, but we didn’t even come close to losing our home because of it.

Now, you have to understand that, at the time, I was devoting my weekends to driving around Southern California conducting on-camera interviews with homeowners who either had already saved their homes from foreclosure, or were in the process of trying to get their loans modified, and the reoccurring theme was coming across loud and clear: “We tried contacting our bank on our own for a year and got nowhere, so we hired a law firm or mortgage expert company for $3,000, give or take, to help us and they saved our home from foreclosure.”

In addition, I had visited with several mortgage experts and lawyers back then, and they had let me sit by their side as they contacted banks on behalf of their clients… with their client’s permission, of course… so I knew that calling one’s bank to apply for a loan modification was not an easy thing to do.  I remember once sitting waiting on hold for just under two hours only to hear the phone go dead.

And once, while I sat with a lawyer while he called a well-known bank on behalf of a client… with that client on the 3-way call… and the first thing the woman from the bank said upon hearing that the homeowner had hired an attorney was: “You know… you don’t have to pay him.”

I was taken aback, and since we were on speaker phone, I just couldn’t help but say something, so I interrupted the conversation, introduced myself as a writer, and asked the question: “How do you know she’s paying him, I mean, maybe her lawyer is her son-in-law or a friend of the family… how do you know whether he’s even being paid?  Are you instructed by the bank to say that to anyone that hires someone to help them?  Do they tell you to do that as part of your training?”

The line went dead.  I remember saying: “She did not just hang up on me, did she?  Call her back.”  The lawyer explained that we’d never get her back on the phone, but he dialed the number anyway and a full 60 minutes later… it was still ringing.  “Okay, I think I’ve got the picture,” I said.  I thanked him for everything and left.

I can’t tell you the name of the bank in question, except to say that when they’re a “bank,” and their name starts with “IndyMac”.  You’ll have to put it together yourself from there.

Within a month or two, the number of stories appearing in the media warning homeowners about “scammers” who offered to help prevent foreclosure, increased to the point that one might have easily started to believe that tens or even hundreds of thousands of “scammers” had mobilized to overrun the country.

I found it very hard to believe that there were large numbers of such “scammers.”  I mean, how many people would be willing to take advantage of working class homeowners, many of whom had lost jobs and now were at risk of foreclosure?  What would be next, mugging the blind?

Many of those I spoke with back then told me that I was naïve, but I just couldn’t believe that all of a sudden there were that many people willing to steal three grand from a middle or working class family at risk of losing their home.  It was like hearing about an epidemic of criminals stealing food stamps from octogenarians on fixed incomes.  Really?

I’m not saying that such aberrations never happen in this country, but it’s at least somewhat rare.  Our society simply doesn’t produce that many people willing to commit such despicable acts.  You might find thousands willing to rip off rich people, or big companies… but working class families losing homes?  How many would sign on for a job doing that?

Well, apparently… quite a few.

After two and a half years spent covering the financial and foreclosure crises, I have come to realize that there are a whole lot more people in this country willing to take advantage of homeowners at risk of foreclosure than I would have ever thought possible.  In fact, I’d have to say that if you throw a dart at the front page of Google when looking for advice related to preventing foreclosure, the odds of being scammed are absolutely excellent.  It’s shocking to me that this is the case, but it unquestionably is.

Look, I grew up in Pittsburgh… born in Brooklyn, hung out in places like Philadelphia, Chicago, Los Angeles… and I’ve traveled all over the world… but I’ve never heard about large numbers ripping-off working class people suffering the trauma of losing their homes.  To say nothing of the risk involved… I mean, aren’t most people in this country still afraid of going to jail?

A change in our cultural norms…

Consider that in the mid-1990s, headline crimes in New York City started including descriptions of mob hits that shocked even members of the Italian mob and NYPD, including: “Arms hacked off with an ax.”  “Victim castrated with crescent-shaped knife.”  “Man was gutted like sheep.”  “Victim buried to the neck in gravel.”  What kind of person that grows up in our society does these types of things?

But, it was after the fall of the Soviet Union, and the murders were being committed by a new group of gangsters that had only recently arrived in this country, and they had very different ideas about violence than our home grown gangs.  They quickly became known as the “Russian mob.”

You see, the Russian gangsters that appeared on the scene after the fall of communism didn’t exactly grow up in New Rochelle watching Leave it to Beaver and drinking Tang… in fact, many grew up in the gulags of Siberia… places where right and wrong have very different definitions than they do in our country.  One member of the Russian mob vocalized his contempt to the NYPD saying: “I did time on the Arctic Circle. Do you think anything you’re going to do is going to bother me?”

The fact is… before the current financial and foreclosure crises, I don’t remember there being nearly as many scammers looking to con anyone, anytime, anywhere.  Where did the incredible numbers of scammers willing to defraud anyone without giving it a second thought come from, that is to say, what were they doing five or ten years ago?  Did someone put something in the water since then?  Could alien spaceships have dropped them off in 2007?  Is it possible that the Internet just brings out the worst in people?

It seemed to me unlikely… nothing I could think of would change societal norms to the degree seen today over such a short period of time.  I set out to analyze the situation more closely and I began by profiling a sample of those individuals that had been shutdown by authorities for scamming homeowners, and those that I’ve come across quite willing to continue operating even though they are not operating legally.

The construct of my focus group sample…

Had they all come from faraway lands, as in the Russian mob example, I would have looked at cultural differences as being the root cause of their apparent willingness to scam anyone at anytime, but the group was not predominately from anywhere, and the majority could be described as being “average Americans.”

The most common factor was their chosen profession prior to the financial meltdown of 2008… almost all had come from the mortgage industry.  In fact, depending on whether I looked at a sample of 25, 50, or 100 individuals… the number of ex-mortgage people was always above 80%.

I realize that should not be surprising when you consider the target for these scammers is homeowners at risk of foreclosure, a group well-known to those that worked in the mortgage industry, but I also know many that came from the mortgage industry that would be no more likely to scam a homeowner in distress than I would.

The other commonality that I found to be present was their age… most were relatively young.  Depending on the sample group I looked at, three-quarters were under 40… and more than half were under 35.  It was difficult to be precise but I think it’s safe to say than fewer than 20% were over 45.

Education was the third commonality I was able to identify, and I estimate that 80% of the group never earned a college degree, although more than half reported that they had attended some number of college classes after high school.  Almost all said they never finished college because the mortgage business paid so well.

I also found it interesting that a large percentage, perhaps just over half, reported having lost a home or homes as a result of the economic meltdown, and my sense was that a very low number saw the meltdown coming, fully understood its causes, or recognize the permanent or long-term nature of the changes to the mortgage industry.

In terms of the U.S. economy, they are a very optimistic group.  I would say that 80% believe that worst case, the housing market will bottom out in the next 2-3 years, and many think that some areas have already hit bottom, and a similarly large percentage think that what they’re doing today is temporary… and at some point they will return to careers in mortgage lending.  The longest timeframe for our country’s economy to recover that I heard from 90% of the group was 5-7 years.

The absolute ineffectiveness of the government’s response…

Over the last year, there have been a flurry of new state and federal laws ostensibly created to protect distressed homeowners from scammers, and one would have to assume that awareness among distressed homeowners about the potential for being scammed is certainly higher than ever.

However, there is absolutely no evidence that any of this legislation has reduced the number of scams, and in fact, my research strongly indicates that the number of scams targeting distressed homeowners has continued to increase.  But the effect of the new laws has also caused scammers to diversify their illicit offerings and therefore will now be more difficult for regulators to address and law enforcement to police.

The latest count, as listed on California’s Office of the Attorney General Website dedicated to loan modification fraud as of April 23, 2011, lists 55 individuals and 32 companies, against which the AG has taken legal action related to fraudulent loan modification, forensic loan audit, and related foreclosure-related services, to-date.  Considering the size of the State of California, the numbers are essentially zero.

The California State Bar is reporting the same numbers of consumers filing complaints this year as last, although the number of disciplinary actions taken by the bar hasn’t changed in any meaningful way, indicating that they are having a difficult time both investigating and prosecuting lawyers accused of being “scammers”.

This article seeks to explain where today’s proliferation of scammers came from, who they are… why they are the way they are…

… And why their presence is all but certain to continue to impact our society for a generation unless we come to understand that the same people that caused of the crisis, also created the scammers.

They Once Were Lenders…

Being a lender of money… the phrase itself congers up images of stature and great wealth.  Investors funding loans providing the capital that drives our economy, building industries, creating prosperity… to be a lender of money has always meant having power and prestige… to be the person with the gold that makes the rules.

To be the provider of funds is to have a seat at the proverbial table.  In our society, such a person is to be respected, their opinions are sought out… when they talk… others listen.  And although in the past, being a lender meant being a “banker,” over the last thirty-odd years, the advent of securitization and financial innovation, supported by ongoing legislation favorable to the finance industry, a series of disastrous attempts at deregulation, and the growth in equities markets, all combined to broaden the types of lending and increase the need for “lenders.”

The type of lending that grew the fastest over the last three decades was “sub-prime.”

Sub-prime lending began its meteoric rise in the late 1970s, but the lowering of interest rates in the early part of the 1980s was the fuel it needed to explode.  And from the start, sub-prime lending attracted individuals with very a very different set of ethics than were found among the traditional bankers and financiers of Wall Street.  Many, in fact, came from failed Savings & Loans.

You see, the 1970s, with the decade’s spiraling interest rates were very difficult for the Savings & Loan industry ironically because of over-regulation.

S&Ls were originally a very important component of the government’s response to the financial disaster that caused the Great Depression, because they made it possible for people to buy homes at a time when our nation’s bankers were reluctant or incapable of lending.

S&Ls were required to pay a regulated amount of interest on short-term deposits that were insured up to $40,000 by the FSLIC, and then invest those deposits in 30-year fixed rate mortgages on residential real estate within a 50-mile radius of the S&L’s home office.  In the 1970s, an S&L might pay 5.25% to 5.5% on deposits, and because long-term interest rates were generally higher than short-term rates, the owner of a Savings & Loan could make a fairly nice, if somewhat boring living.

Of course, that was fine during the decades of relative stability that followed WWII… before the inflation of the 1970s appeared on the scene thus causing interest rates to rise.

Higher rates caused homeowners to keep their homes longer, first-time buyers were forced to delay becoming first time homeowners, and rising unemployment all combined to significantly reduce the demand for housing.

Those that did buy homes more frequently took advantage of the “assumable” clause in mortgages that allowed them to take over the mortgage at the existing interest rate.  The typical S&L’s mortgage portfolio, that had traditionally turned over every 5-7 years, stagnated during the latter part of the 1970s… and S&L earnings followed suit.

At the same time, S&Ls were finding it increasingly difficult to attract depositors as well.  The five percent interest rates they were permitted to pay out started to look pretty silly with inflation at 12% a year… and climbing.  Depositors flocked to Money Market mutual funds that pooled deposits in order to purchase large Certificates of Deposit from banks and S&Ls, and on which there were no interest rate controls.

S&Ls were now stuck between the rock of the rising costs of funds, and the hard place of stagnant incomes, and with only 30-year fixed rate mortgages to provide returns on invested capital, the S&L industry was doomed even before deregulation and other legislation would start it on a rollercoaster ride that would end in its demise.

When the pendulum swings too far…

First, Congress and the Carter administration gave us the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980, which abolished state usury laws that limited how much interest could be charged on primary mortgages, began a six-year phase out of deposit interest rate ceilings, and raised the deposit insurance provided by the FSLIC from $40,000 to $100,000.

Then, a couple of years later, the Gain-St Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, expanded what S&Ls were allowed to invest in, permitting investment in short-term consumer loans, credit cards, and commercial real estate, among others.

The idea was simple… allow S&Ls to diversify their portfolios in order to increase their short-term earnings and it would help shield them from economic instability in the future.

But, it’s not hard to imagine that many owners of S&Ls were a less-than-happy group back in 1980.  Many S&L owners were second-generation owners… in other words… they were the sons of founders.  For the last decade they had watched their institution’s capital erode as the housing market had essentially slowed to a standstill… and their customers started saving in Money Market mutual funds.

In other words, spending the 1970s running the S&L your Dad founded was no fun whatsoever, and by many wanted out badly enough that they weren’t all that picky about the price, so when deregulation of the S&L industry soon created buyers for S&Ls that saw nothing but opportunity ahead, many were more than ready to sell.

Most were initially under-capitalized, however, but the new owners found that they could get their hands on almost unlimited funds simply by raising the interest rates they offered on deposits, and since such deposits were insured by the federal government, the financial health of the S&L didn’t much matter to anyone.  The new owners raised rates and money flooded in.

Deregulation also meant that there were now plenty of investment opportunities available to S&Ls for the first time, in much riskier commercial real estate developments, for example, and the S&Ls could compete with the banks by making loans based on more relaxed credit standards, such as home loans that required no down payments.

These new S&L owners, however, were poor managers and as many S&Ls failed, the deposit premiums paid by those that remained went steadily higher.  And because there was no distinction between well-capitalized S&Ls, and the ones that were taking on too much risk, the well-capitalized and more conservative institutions found themselves forced to match the competing interest rates offered by their problem competitors, causing their costs of funds to increase.

It was a recipe for the disaster stew that was about to boil over… and yet, Congress kept its collective head firmly planted in the sands of short-term thinking.  (It’s nice to know that some things never change.)

Had the federal government empowered the regulators to take a tougher stand on S&Ls in 1982, it’s likely that the whole mess could have been avoided, but notwithstanding the extreme pain felt during the Great Depression, regulating financial institutions has never been our government’s strong suit.  Back then, because virtually every congressional representative had at least one “good friend” that owned an S&L in his or her district none was in any hurry to cause immediate problems for their important constituents, even to ensure their longer-term financial health.

If we hit the jackpot, what have we won?

As described by Michael Hudson in his fabulously detailed if terribly disturbing book about sub-prime lenders, titled “The Monster,” when President Ronald Reagan signed an S&L deregulation bill in 1982, he is said to have quipped: “All in all, I think we’ve hit the jackpot.”

State governments, Hudson explains, immediately started competing for S&Ls by offering the lowest barriers to entry and the most lenient oversight.  And one didn’t need much start-up capital to open an S&L, in fact, you could list “non-cash” assets to establish that you could operate in a stable manner.  As in, “gosh… I don’t have any cash right now, but I do own a 4-plex in Poughkeepsie, a ’67 Mustang that’s totally cherry, and I suppose I could throw in my baseball card collection from the 60s.”

The State of California was among the most aggressive in terms of marketing to the S&Ls, in fact in Hudson’s book, he recalls seminars being held all over the state that promised to teach attendees how to start their own Savings and Loan, including one in particular titled: “Why Does It Seem Everyone is Buying or Starting a California S&L?”

At the end of the decade, when the Bush administration and congress were finally forced to deal with the failed industry’s problems, all S&Ls were tarred with the same broad brush.  The Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989, didn’t distinguish between well-run S&Ls and insolvent institutions, it took away from the entire industry, most of the investment freedoms granted at the beginning of the 1980s.

An Industry About to be Born…

It seems to me that two key pieces of legislation, the previously mentioned Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 (“DIDMCA”), and the Alternative Mortgage Transactions Parity Act of 1982 (“AMTPA”), worked like sperm and egg to give birth to sub-prime lending, with securitization being the incubator.

The AMPTA, which was intended to provide “parity” to non-bank lenders, preempted many state laws that had precluded lenders from offering anything but conventional fixed-rate mortgages, and in practice, allowed for the obfuscation of a loan’s total costs.  This was the legislation that led to the creation of a variety of new types of mortgages, including the different flavors of adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs), interest only mortgages, and those offering balloon payments.

Because of AMPTA, consumers could now be titillated by teaser rates for the first few years, only to be slammed when the adjustments caused payments to be reset.  And even worse were the loans that gave the borrower the ability to decide how much they would underpay during the first few years, with the amount of the underpayment being tacked onto the loan’s balance.  Now your mortgage balance could actually increase from $300,000 to $350,000 in the first few years, destroying any equity a homeowner had in his or her home when they bought it.

Of course, many would argue that it’s not the loans themselves that were the problem, rather it was the people that chose these loans that caused their own future grief.  These are the same people that continue to oppose anything even remotely resembling a bailout for homeowners, and according to Fannie Mae’s most recent survey, it remains a sizable group, roughly 53% of their survey’s respondents, which is why even after three years of watching the foreclosure crisis drag our economy straight down, our government lacks the political will to address the problem and stop the carnage.

(Sidebar: In case anyone is interested, my initial motivation for writing my blog, Mandelman Matters, was to combat the rhetoric of the banking industry following the meltdown that began in 2007, which was starting to place blame for the emerging crisis on “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers,” a group that could never have caused Wall Street’s demise, let alone the global meltdown that followed.

During the fall of 2007, then Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and Fed Chair Ben Bernanke… the crazy guy with the beard who just keeps printing money to no avail… both blamed “sub-prime borrowers” during the fall of 2007, and the bankers saw their opportunity and the industry’s P.R. machine echoed the message throughout the media.

So, in a letter I wrote in November of 2007, which I sent to my representative in Congress, my two state senators, Hillary Clinton, and others… the problem with allowing the public to erroneously place the blame for the meltdown on “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers,” was that when the government finally came to understand the real cause of the crisis, they would lack the political will to do what’s needed to fix the problem… because by then, too many voters would strongly oppose bailing out “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers.”

My letters were, of course, ignored, and Mandelman Matters was born.  And yet, here we are 450 articles and countless trillions in taxpayer funded bank bailouts later, and the same core issue continues to prevent our elected officials from doing what’s required to fix the problem.  Hank Paulson, however, in his book about his last two years as Treasury Secretary, titled “On the Brink,” admits this pivotal mistake, saying that when he looks back at statements he made about sub-prime loans back in the fall of ’07, it makes him “cringe.“

“We just plain got it wrong,” he says in his book as he talks candidly about this very subject.  And when I read his admission while sitting up in bed one night about a year ago, I’ll admit that I started to cry.)

The truth is, that under normal circumstances, I might even agree, at least in part, with those that place blame on borrowers for signing up for toxic mortgage products.  But, because our financial crisis and economic meltdown have not been the result of a housing bubble popping, but rather they are the byproduct of Wall Street’s actions that caused the total destruction of the credit markets in the summer of 2007 when triple A rated bonds were downgraded and the demand for mortgage-backed securities dried up overnight, the circumstances surrounding obtaining a mortgage in this country, or being able to refinance it, or even selling a home that became unaffordable, have been anything but normal.

Easy to be Hard for Minorities…

A common practice employed by lenders in the past was called “red lining,” and it commonly meant that they wouldn’t lend in minority neighborhoods, regardless of an individual’s credit score.

So, first it was hard money that showed up to fill the void, but soon the consumer finance companies started offering small loans in disadvantaged communities that people used to pay medical bills, or maybe to get through the holidays, but by the mid-1980s, securitization was lowering the risk associated with lending and they began offering second mortgages.

In “The Monster,” Michael Hudson provides vivid descriptions of how these companies would hook someone with a $300 loan, and then systematically barrage them with offers for additional loans in an effort to make them a “customer for life”… although a “debtor for life,” would be more accurate.  Since being deregulated, these companies would make loans at 15 to 18 percent, with as much as 10 points up front, which was still less expensive than the hard money lenders, so they could actually say… with straight faces… that they were the good guys for providing loans to underserved communities.

Ultimately, these consumer finance companies would be accused of cheating borrowers in any number of ways, setting aside many millions to settle class action lawsuits accusing them, in so many words, of robbing and cheating their customers.

As companies go, these were literal pressure cookers for sales people.  They were widely known for their abusive managers that would constantly drive salespeople to make more loans at all costs… and then make even more still.  It didn’t matter what you had to do, you just had to do more than you did the month before, or you would risk being berated by your boss in front of your peers.

An excerpt from “The Monster”…

In Arizona, a judge scolded Transamerica for trying to throw a 77 year-old widow out of the house her late husband had helped her build 42 years before.  Lennie Williams, a retired house cleaner, was getting by on $438 a month.  Her mind was failing her and she got snookered into signing up for a mortgage that obligated her to pay Transamerica $499 a month.

The loan carried 8 points in up-front charges and an interest rate of nearly 18 percent.  The mortgage salesman who put together the deal later testified he didn’t think Williams understood the loan, but he had said as little as possible about the details because he didn’t want to lose the sale.

“I didn’t want to bring up the fact that we could foreclose on your home.  People don’t want to hear this,” he explained.  “When you close a loan, you try to get through with it.  You say everything you have to say and no more.”

Consumer finance companies were the predecessors to the sub-prime lenders that would come out of the failed Savings & Loans.  After being trained in the horrific environments at Transamerica, ITT Financial, Household Finance, Beneficial and others, they were recruited by institutions like First Alliance Mortgage and Long Beach Savings & Loan, which was started by a man whose name would become synonymous with sub-prime lending, Roland E. Arnall.
Hudson paints a picture of Arnall that explains a lot… he was born in Europe during WWII and escapes with his family to come live in the U.S.  He’s a hard charging kind of kid, doing everything possible to make money at all times.  He becomes a real estate developer in the 1970s, ends up opening Long Beach Savings & Loan, and when the restrictions on S&Ls become too much for his tastes, he opens Long Beach Mortgage… which he later renames “Ameriquest.”

Long Beach recruited loan officers that had worked at Transamerica and the like, and combined with his overdriven personality, he was known for doing things like doubling sales goals moth over month and firing anyone who said they couldn’t do it.  He began to build one of the country’s largest sub-prime mortgage companies, but he would never have gotten very far alone, because fairly early in the life of Long Beach Mortgage, he was making so many loans that he simply ran out of money to loan.

He needed a new source of funds, looked to Wall Street, and wouldn’t you know it, he found Lehman Bros.

Enter the Financial Innovation of Securitization…

Wall Street’s new invention was “securitization,” and it would allow lenders like Arnall’s Long Beach Mortgage to make essentially an unlimited number of loans because they could now be immediately sold to Lehman Bros., who would then use them to create a pool of loans, which would then be sold in slices, called “tranches,” to investors.

The investments were referred to as “mortgage-backed securities,” and the investors that bought these bonds, of sorts, did so in order to receive a percentage of the cash flows generated by the mortgage payments that were paid into the pool.  As compared with other investments, they were considered very safe, and yet they paid a relatively high rate of interest… like tasting great and being less filling all at the same time… what’s not to love?

(If you’re not already up to speed on securitization and how it works, you really should consider reading my article on the subject: “Mandelman U. Presents… Securitization and Mortgage Backed Securities.”)

Now, with essentially unlimited capital at their disposal, the sub-prime lenders had enough fuel to make it to Mars and back as many times as they wanted to go.  The world was about to change for the next few years, anyway… because now anyone would be able to get a loan.  Prices would rise with the increasing demand that would be created by the flood of accessible capital, and so those loans could be refinanced over and over as the value of the collateral increased.

With no limits on the how much they could loan, all they needed now were army of loan officers…

We’re Going to Need an Army…

Roland Arnall’s Long Beach Mortgage, now with unlimited funds, would spread out across the United States bringing his high cost loans to millions of Americans, and he became immeasurably wealthy as a result, as did those that worked for him.  He was never satisfied… a billion a month in loans, only made him demand two billion.

To do so, however, he needed an army of salespeople, and he wanted them trained the Ameriquest way.

In all-important California, prior to 1996, this meant finding loan officers licensed by the California Department of Real Estate, and recruiting them to come over to Ameriquest.  It couldn’t have been easy, and he must have realized that it would be much easier to hire and train sharp, young sales people than it would be to recruit someone licensed by the California DRE who would be more established and would have to be changed to fit the Ameriquest way of selling loans.

Not just anyone would put up with working in an environment in which you could be berated to get more sales, and likewise, not just anyone could be pushed into taking advantage of little old ladies and their Social Security checks.

The types of individuals that studied and passed the DRE’s exam, did so expecting to go into business for themselves as independent contractors, and therefore were independent thinkers… clearly not the type of people companies like Ameriquest were looking to bring on board.

Wasn’t it incredibly lucky, therefore, that in 1996 the law governing the licensing of mortgage lenders in California changed when the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act and the California Finance Lender’s License (“CFL”), used when you sold only through in-house loan officers, and the broader CRMLA licenses were created, both became operational.  Now someone could become licensed to broker, originate and service mortgages without the need to pass that pain-in-the-neck test required by the state’s Department of Real Estate.  Yes, it was very lucky, indeed.

Licensed under the CRMLA/CFL are individuals, partnerships, associations, limited liability companies and corporations, including many of the largest “Fortune 500″ companies.  Those with these new licenses were required to be employees issued W-2s, which was fine for larger organizations, as opposed to their DRE licensed counterparts who worked as independent contractors.

Now large sub-prime lenders could easily recruit the personnel they needed to grow their sales without having to bother with new sales people having to receive any training or pass any tests.  Armall and others in his peer group were free to hire young salespeople in masses, put them in classes, and if they didn’t perform… toss them out on their behinds.

Hudson’s investigations of Ameriquest showed that the company’s system was designed to back borrowers directly into a corner, or if you prefer, put them up against a wall.  The company’s loan officers were trained that when a customer complained about the costs of their loans, they were to assure them that they need not worry because once they’d made their payments on-time for 12 months, the company would refinance them into the lower cost loan.

In addition, the payments on Ameriquest’s 2/28 adjustable rate mortgages ALWAYS shot up towards the end of the second year, driving the borrowers to refinance with Ameriquest or pay higher fees somewhere else.

As the second half of the 90s came and went, Ameriquest employees saw the company’s sales practices investigated by various state attorneys general, and numerous fines get paid, but at the end of the proverbial day, they also saw Armall become a billionaire as he lived out the rest of his life in opulent luxury.

He and his wife, Dawn, bought a $30 million, 12,000 square foot mansion in the Holmby Hills section of Los Angeles.  Tony Curtis had owned it in the early 1960s before selling to Sonny and Cher.  A year later, the Arnalls shelled out $46 million to buy Aspen’s Mandalay Ranch, a 650-acre property with a 15,000 square foot mansion, and a 3,500 square foot guesthouse.

Many of Ameriquest’s customers lived out very different lives than that of the Arnalls, with many borrowers, after being tricked and trapped by the company’s sales practices, and after their payments shot up with no opportunity to refinance and prices starting to fall.  A few in Hudson’s book, lost homes and found themselves living out their lives in motel rooms or as long-term guests with relatives.

Like a gaggle of raptors…

The loan officers that trained at companies like Ameriquest and had come out of places like Transamerica, would ultimately move on to places like WaMu, IndyMac, or even Wells Fargo, Bank of America or Countrywide.  And as the housing bubble began to inflate in 2003, sub-prime was going mainstream.  Wall Street firms like Lehman Bros. were buying sub-prime mortgage originators… and what had been a relatively small group of loan officers was now multiplying like a gaggle of raptors.

They had learned the business of lending in the most oppressive and unethical environments and as they moved up corporate ladders at various commercial banks and mortgage companies, they instilled their own ways of doing business, developed their own cultures, and tried to make work what worked before, cross pollenating sales techniques until the influence of places like First Alliance Mortgage and Ameriquest could be seen and felt throughout hundreds of lenders all over the country.

What had once been a respected career that involved honest dealings and careful underwriting to protect one’s financial institution and look out for the borrower’s interests, was being transformed into high pressure sales organizations only concerned with profits and at best operating on the edge of the law.

Over the years, a variety of state AGs have tried to take action against the business practices of various sub-prime lenders who were clearly abusing communities and ruining the lives of homeowners, and in limited instances have had some success.  But, the lenders on the losing side of such actions often just file for bankruptcy and the perpetrators end up opening new companies that go right back to their underhanded business as usual.

And the lending industry’s lobbying efforts have won out in all cases, essentially arguing that poor and working class neighborhoods need loan sharks.

That sinking feeling…

By the summer of 2006, the Fed had raised interest rates 17 times in a row, housing sales had slowed, prices were softening, and I had long-since started warning my own friends to get out of speculative real estate deals as the evidence of dark skies forming on horizon was now abundant. In response, they’d tell me about real estate’s safety and something about how a home’s value couldn’t go to zero, I suppose as their technology stocks did after the dot-com bubble popped in 2000.

By summer of 2006, a parade of prominent economists were already explaining to the world what was about to transpire… not that many people were listening, least of all Ben Bernanke, who proved beyond any doubt that what he knew about the housing market could not hope to fill a thimble.

Then came the tenth of July, in the year of our Lord, 2007, and at a news conference being held in London, Standard & Poors and Moody’s, the two largest bond rating agencies were about to completely botch the handling of their announcement that the ratings on 1,032 bond offerings were being downgraded.  Some would drop from AAA to AA, but others would find themselves with a BBB rating.

The bonds being downgraded represented less than one percent of the mortgage-backed securities backed by sub-prime loans, but investors saw smoke and knew there would be fire to follow, because if the ratings agencies had gotten these wrong, what was to say that they didn’t improperly rate others as well.

It’s astonishing how fast things locked up beginning on that inauspicious day.  The credit markets were frozen solid within a week or two… tops.  Demand for residential mortgage-backed securities (“RMBS”) dried up almost as fast, and derivatives such as Collateralized Debt Obligations (“CDOs”), which derived their value from the mortgage-backed bonds, went with them.

With no demand for MBS, the secondary mortgage market stopped buying mortgages almost immediately and banks and other non-bank lenders found themselves unable to sell the loans that were now stuck on their balance sheets, and capable of destroying their required ratios.  Everyone started hoarding cash… banks stopped lending even to each other… no one knew who had what on their balance sheet, who would prove overleveraged and potentially not recover.

It was roughly four weeks later, on August 8, 2007, when the Fed reversed its position of just a few weeks prior, and Bernanke started pumping liquidity into the financial system like a fire hose locked in the “On” position.  Money needed to flow through the global financial system or the system would collapse, companies wouldn’t make payrolls, all sorts of credit derivatives and transfer payments wouldn’t be made…it would be the end of the world as we knew it.

On August 10, 2011, PBS News Hour’s, Jeffrey Brown interviewed two “experts” in global finance, Laurence Meyer, a former Federal Reserve Board Governor, and Glenn Hubbard, who was at the time, Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers.  It had been two days since the Federal Reserve and EU Central Banks had pumped $326 billion into the global financial system, and PBS was asking why.

JEFFREY BROWN: All together, central banks have pumped some $326 billion into the global financial system in the past 48 hours.  Why don’t you explain what the Fed, other central bankers are doing? What does it even mean to pump extra cash into the financial system? Where does that money come from, and where does it go?

LAURENCE MEYER: Well, it creates deposits at the Federal Reserve by lending, by lending to these primary dealers, for example.

JEFFREY BROWN: Primary dealers meaning…

LAURENCE MEYER: Large banks and broker-dealers.

Doesn’t that exchange make you wonder why Lawrence Meyer didn’t just say that the $326 billion was being pumped into large banks and Wall Street broker-dealers, instead of saying “it creates deposits at the Federal Reserve by lending to primary dealers?”

JEFFREY BROWN: So that, what, so they can lend to each other? What is the problem that they’re trying to fix?

LAURENCE MEYER: So they can lend to each other, and so that they can, more generally, so that the lending can take place between banks and other institutions who lend to each other in the money market. And what happened was that that got disrupted because of a very abrupt re-pricing of risk in the economy. They became less willing to lend to each other.

You see… banks wouldn’t lend to each other because no one knew who was solvent and who had leveraged themselves across a bridge too far.  And “disrupted because of a very abrupt re-pricing of risk in the economy.” Abrupt re-pricing of risk is just another way of saying that bond ratings were lowered overnight.

JEFFREY BROWN: Mr. Hubbard, explain more about this idea risk and re-pricing of risk. I think it sounds simple, but it’s at the heart of what we keep talking about in all of this. Explain it a little more for us.

GLENN HUBBARD: Well, exactly. I think many economists believe that risks had not been accurately priced in recent times, that risk premium — that is, the spread you would get for bearing risk — were very, very low by historical standards.

What we’ve seen is a pricing where the risky assets would now require much higher rates of return. We saw this in this market for so-called subprime mortgages, but it’s really filtered throughout markets for risky debt into higher-grade mortgages and into the leveraged loan market.

Did you read that last sentence carefully?  We saw it in so-called sub-prime mortgages, but it has really filtered throughout markets into high-grade mortgages and leveraged loans?  Hmmm… I guess “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers buying homes they couldn’t afford” didn’t cause the crisis after all… what do you know about that?”

JEFFREY BROWN: And staying with you, how does this happen? How do we get in a situation where the risk factor is out of balance? How do smart people in the financial world not make the equation right so that we tip over into a kind of bubble here?

GLENN HUBBARD: Well, it can happen in a number of ways. First of all, there’s been enormous global liquidity in financial markets chasing returns, putting downward pressure on yields and on risk premia. Also, people can learn more about risk characteristics. There’s been a change in views in the past few months about how risky subprime lending is and other forms of lending. So it really is about learning over time.

Glenn has no clue how this happened.  Global liquidity pushing down yields and risk premia… premiums, for the rest of us… Hubbard has always been a real pompous ass.  A change in views over the past few months about how risky lending is?  Was “lending” something new, and we just didn’t understand it on Wall Street back then… in 2007?

So, Brown tries the same question with Meyer:

JEFFREY BROWN: How do you explain how this happens?

LAURENCE MEYER: Well, I think there are some fundamental forces that have been in play over the last 20 years. The economy is more stable; there are longer expansions, shorter contractions. So there are some fundamentals that support that credit risk spread should be narrowed.

But things go in cycles, and they get overdone. Long-term rates were very low; credit spreads were very low. People were searching for yield, looking for more exotic, going out to the fringes, and taking on more risk and becoming complacent about that risk.

I think, in some sense, it was inevitable at some point that credit spreads were going to widen. It just happened quickly, very abruptly. And sometimes when it happens so abruptly, people get worried about the riskiness of people who were there, who, you know, they’re borrowing and lending, and they pull back very sort of aggressively from that.

So, you should see clearly… if you’ve always been confused at what went on back then… it’s only because these are the kind of clowns we’ve got running our financial system and they don’t have a clue about what’s happening, so they stumble about incoherently throwing big words around.

Just remember the number of times these guys pointed out that whatever it was that happened, it had happened “VERY ABRUPTLY.”

Will the real “irresponsible borrowers,” please stand up?

Between 2004–2007, the banking lobby asked Congress to approve of our nation’s banks issuing enormous amounts of debt, investing the proceeds in mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”).  This is what the experts are referring to when they use the term “financial leverage.”  Essentially, the bankers were betting that house prices would continue rise, and that homeowners would continue to make their mortgage payments, but for those things to happen there would have to be mortgage lending… but mortgage lending had dried up “VERY ABRUBTLY” as banks hoarded cash, and now there wasn’t any mortgage lending.

No mortgage lending,,, VERY ABRUPTLY… means housing prices will fall, because can’t get a mortgage means can’t buy a home, and when demand for something goes down… anyone, anyone… price goes down… very good, class.  Refinancing loan also dried up VERY ABRUPTLY, and by the time there was any hope of refinancing most people were already underwater.

What the banks did leverage-wise is akin to a homeowner taking out a second mortgage in order to invest in the stock market.  As long as the market was rising, this leverage magnified their returns, but when prices started falling the effect was horrendous.  Lehman Bros. was leveraged by about 30:1.  WaMu, I believe was around 40:1.  Other institutions were even in worse shape.

Our bankers had assets-to-capital ratios that were way out of whack, as well.  Assets, by the way, on a bank’s balance sheet are loans, and capital is, well… capital or shareholder’s equity.  Having an assets to capital ratio of 25:1 means that the bank has $25 in loans for every $1 in capital.  It also means that if the bank’s assets fall in value by 4%… it will wipe out the bank’s capital.

It’s an oversimplification, to be sure, but it doesn’t matter… just remember that at 25:1, if the assets go down in value by 4% it leaves the bank insolvent.

Well, in the fall of 2008, Bank of America was 73.7:1, which means if the value of its assets had slipped by even one or two tenths of a percent, its capital would have been wiped out and the bank would have been insolvent.  And if you were to have included BofAs “off-balance sheet” transactions, the bank’s assets to capital ratio was a staggering 134:1. (To contrast those numbers, just consider that during the 1970s, a bank’s assets to capital ratio might have been 7:1.)

Everyone should be able to clearly see that Bank of America’s problems were not caused by anyone but Bank of America.

Let’s wrap it up, stick a bow on top, and ship it to everyone who still blames borrowers for the financial and foreclosure crisis, shall we.

So, our nation’s banks had gorged themselves on Collateralized Debt Obligations and credit derivatives, leveraged assets by 30-40 to 1, and lowered loss reserve account balances in order to pay themselves unprecedented sums.

And as if that weren’t enough to ensure insolvency, their assets to capital ratios were at levels far beyond reckless… certainly bordering on criminal in many countries, and likely punishable by death in some… and not only were these bankers not punished, not only do they all still have their jobs, but they were rewarded with multi-generational wealth to be layered on top of their unconscionable billions and encouraged to do whatever they think is right going forward.

All while they were permitted to publicly lay blame for their catastrophic outcome that has broken the economic back of the world’s wealthiest nation, on the working class American homeowners, to whom they’ve also been allowed to send the bill.

And, to add insult to injury, our government has stood by obtuse and witless as these same banks have been permitted to lie, mislead, abuse, disrespect, malign and outright torture homeowners trying to apply for a government program funded by the taxpayers themselves… only to find at the end of three years that the outcome of a regulatory investigation into the banks and servicers is that they must investigate further and self-assess what should happen as a result of their egregious behavior?

And still, when most homeowners try to turn to the courts for the possibility of some sort of relief, however remote, they find themselves chastised for having had a financial hardship, told they lack standing, and called irresponsible borrowers… by the bankers who in point of FACT are WITHOUT ANY QUESTION… the most irresponsible borrowers the world has ever seen.

It’s amazing that America’s homeowners haven’t risen up with a voice so loud to make the Tea Party sound like a dropped pin.  I understand it, however, they are in large part ashamed and don’t want anyone to know they’re struggling to make their mortgage payment, and secondly… homeowners could not have seen this coming… our country treating homeowners as though their lives or rights meant nothing.

But, that’s not all…

I guess that would be enough to say about what’s transpired these last so many years, but in addition, todays homeowners must also face the fact that they are almost literally being hunted by a group of highly trained individuals desperate for money from any source, and trained by the banking class to take whatever money they need from homeowners in distress whenever they want and using any means possible.

And yet our government’s response is collectively for the last three years continues to be… “We’re trying our best… awfully busy you know… try not to get ripped off, but if you do just dial 1-800-EAT-SH#T?”  That about cover it?

Federal regulatory agencies, such as the FTC, says it just doesn’t have the manpower to effectively police what’s going on today.

But, Memo to the Obama Administration: If you can’t adequately police Baltimore, perhaps we have to bring a few guys back from one of the foreign military posts that are still sitting on the 38th parallel in order to stop the spread of communism, a form of government certain only to bankrupt a nation were it to actually succeed in spreading.

They once were lenders…

As a group, those that hunt homeowners in distress are still relatively young in terms of their years, they have little if any formal education… they have natural sales abilities, which were honed by professionals hell bent on training them to deceive so that they would become an army of sorts… an army trained to seek only dollars regardless of their cost and irrespective of who they hurt achieving their petty objective.

Their competitiveness has been heightened as well, because that too served their bosses.  They earned, in many cases, $50,000 a month, and more… Over a decade they were shown indisputable evidence that crime pays, and pays handsomely.  They watched their bosses make incalculable sums through highly questionable means… and flat out get away with it.

Them one day, quite abruptly, the proverbial music stopped… without any warning they could discern, the whole thing was over… overnight.  The money was gone, and they were not prepared.  They lost their cars, their homes, their boats, everything, and they could no longer do for a living what they had been trained to do.  But what was it that they had been trained to do, really?  Sell free money for which everyone qualified?

But this meltdown wasn’t their doing either… they were only pawns whose lives were played with by the titans of Wall Street who cared little for any damage they might cause.

It was over too fast and they were left with no seat at tomorrow’s table.  They once were lenders, but now what?  Now, many of them were, in truth, scammers.

Loan modifications and debt settlement programs provided a soft landing for the first few years.  .  The up front fees made them feel rich again.  They rented huge offices for their loan modification and debt settlement companies… tens of thousands of square feet they weren’t even using… they took it so they could grow into it… without giving it a second thought.

It’s not clear just how many loan modification and debt settlement companies were truly deserving of the moniker “scammer,” but regardless, state and federal regulators started receiving thousands of complaints from homeowners claiming to have been scammed, and the FTC, state Attorneys General, State Bar associations, and other regulatory and law enforcement agencies have all played a role in shutting down companies that were run by those that came from the mortgage lending industry for unethical or illegal acts involving homeowners in distress.

With enforcement actions making headlines it was predictable that state legislatures would get involved and starting in the latter part of 2009, new laws protecting consumers gradually took the ability to market loan modifications and debt settlement services away from those licensed as loan officers, by making it illegal for them to charge a customer until they had obtained a loan modification for that customer.

And the FTC finally, at the end of 2010, enacted the MARS Final Rule, which is a federal rule that prohibits anyone, with the exception of attorneys from charging homeowners for loan modification services before homeowner have received and agreed to a written offer to modify their loans from their servicer.  Because no one can know how long it will take to get a servicer to agree to a loan modification, without the ability to charge a customer in advance or along the way, few were interested in offering the service as part of their business.

So, was that the end of the line for those willing to scam homeowners… certainly not, in fact, now that they couldn’t sell loan modifications or debt settlement programs anymore, they moved into areas that were more difficult for authorities to pin down… and that often delivered even less value than the loan mod or debt settlement services had in the first place.

Many started selling “forensic loan audits,” which are report that claim to identify laws that were broken by the originator of the loan.  The pitch was (and is) that armed with this proof of impropriety the homeowner could hire an attorney, sue their servicer who would be forced to modify the loan.  Homeowners bought them in the tens of thousands… it felt like a way to regain some of their power and once again feel in control of their lives.

(At this point, there are likely more American homeowners that want to sue their bank than there are that want to kill Osama Bin Laden.)

The problem, however, was that these “audits” were largely worthless, either because they failed to take into account statute of limitations issues, or they pointed out violations that offered only impractical remedies or provided for no cause of action for the homeowner whatsoever.  The homeowners were buying something for thousands of dollars that would end up being thrown into the trash.  In the most outrageous example, a company that was shut down by California’s Attorney general, and is currently being sued by the state for something like $60 million, is alleged to have charged an elderly man $53,000 for a forensic loan audit that was to put him in the driver’s seat with his mortgage servicer.

More recently, as the securitization process has been increasingly shown as being, at best, seriously flawed, and with questions surrounding chain of title and the ownership of loans prevalent in the courts, there are an increasing number of companies now offering to sell homeowners securitization audits.  Some of these are unquestionably legitimate, but homeowners will undoubtedly have a very hard time differentiating between what is real and what is just another scam.

Some unemployed loan officers found new jobs in lending selling FHA loans, which many are referring to as the “new sub-prime.”  An array of Do-it-Yourself loan modification kits hit the market starting in 2009.  And some of the emerging scams are so bizarre, that I would have a hard time describing them without sounding like I was insane.  For example, something called “an administrative process” promises homeowners that by sending a series of letters to their bank, they will end up owning their home free and clear.

The Latest Sales Pitch: Sue Your Lender

Most recently, the idea of selling homeowners participation in a “Mass Joinder” lawsuit against their servicer has taken off like wild fire nationwide.  Sue your bank today for only $5,000!  I’ve got a suit against Chase on sale for $3500!  Join our lawsuit and you’ll receive thousands in damages, or even a free and clear home.  And, when you sign up for our lawsuit, you won’t have to make your mortgage payment for years, while the bank can’t foreclose and sell your home.

Mailers that make promises such as these are NEVER TRUE, but scammers in this space have never been bothered by lying to get a check for five grand from a homeowner… desperation is heavy in the air… fear is palpable… many have become able to talk themselves into anything.  They don’t care about getting caught… nothing bad will happen to them, because crime pays, remember?

None of this is to say that some of the lawyers seeking to represent homeowners against their lenders aren’t perfectly legitimate.  And there’s no question decisions coming out of the courts around the country this year are increasingly favoring homeowners over bankers.

Prominent Los Angeles attorney, Mitchell J. Stein, who filed the very first lawsuit on behalf of multiple homeowners… and largely on a pro bono or contingent fee basis by the way… against Bank of America/Countrywide in Los Angeles Superior Court, back on March 12, 2009.  Stein’s Curriculum Vitae (that’s a resume that went to college) shows that he’s successfully represented many of the world’s largest companies in State and Federal Court over the last 25 years… but most importantly, his list includes something like 300 banks and financial institutions.

Mitchell Stein’s complaint in the Ronald v. Bank of America lawsuit, which is a case that after two years is proceeding in the Los Angeles court, has been used as the model for suits recently filed by attorney Phillip Kramer, and there are numerous others, many of which are likely little more than sales gimmicks in lawsuit clothing.

But, as Mr. Kramer acknowledged in his interview with me that I posted on February 23rd of this year, the numbers of Websites that popped up marketing his lawsuits has made it almost impossible for most people to figure out what is real and what isn’t. Stein says he’s been shocked at the number of people that have attempted to use his name or his firm’s identity to market their own version of his case, or even to sell a homeowner participation in his suit.

For the record, Stein says unequivocally that he has never authorized anyone to accept clients on his behalf (he has a warning on his site to this effect), and that homeowners that are interested in being represented by him should only contact his firm and speak with someone authorized to evaluate their case.  “There is no other way to do it,” he explains.  (The Law Offices of Mitchell J. Stein can be reached at 877-475-2448.)

Kramer said basically the same thing, readily agreeing that homeowners should never hire a lawyer without speaking with someone at the firm.

According to Stein, the term mass joinder doesn’t mean protection from the bank taking action to foreclose. It doesn’t mean stopping foreclosure.  It doesn’t actually mean anything.  He points out that the only protection a homeowner can get is the protection gained by having a good lawyer.  Each client Stein represents is represented individually and he spends time talking at length with every client before he agrees to represent him or her.

Stein says he considers the lawsuits he has filed against banks to be individual lawsuits with individual clients, saying “the phrase mass joinder” is really meaningless and terribly misleading.  And as far as I can tell, no bank has ever made a blanket agreement not to foreclose on homeowners just because they are plaintiffs in any lawsuit, mass joinder or otherwise.

Stopping the ongoing regulatory failures to stop scammers…

There are indeterminable thousands of individuals unleashed in our society today that were raised in a mortgage industry at its worst… taught to hunt for homeowners in distress… and shown that acts of fraud are profitable and likely to go unpunished… and now unable to make their livings making loans, and with little if any formal education, they continue to seek out ways of using their skills to target homeowners in order to line their pockets.

They look just like the rest of us… they present themselves very well… ooze with credibility when needed… lie effortlessly and entirely without conscious.  They were trained by bankers and sub-prime lenders to function as sociopaths.  They represent a clear and present danger to our society today and they aren’t going to go away anytime soon.

Passing new laws in an attempt to stop them from earning a living has not stopped a single scammer, nor will it.  When Senate Bill 94 in California was going through the legislative process, a bill that prevents those operating under a mortgage/real estate license from charging an up-front fee in conjunction with loan modification services, I tried to explain in countless articles that the bill would not stop a single scam, rather the scammers would simply find something else to sell to homeowners.

And that is precisely what has transpired.

The only way to stop the scammers who prey on homeowners in distress as a result of the foreclosure crisis, is for our government officials and legislative bodies to take action that acknowledges the need for legitimate legal representation for homeowners, along with other applicable programs and resources, and then makes access to such services readily available.

Specifically, that means taking the time to become educated as to the true nature of the situation… that is was not the borrowers, sub-prime or otherwise, that caused the financial or foreclosure crisis, and that homeowners will not find answers by following the utterly useless advice: “Call your bank directly, or call a HUD counselor.”

Consider that during prohibition of the 1930s, G-Men running around the country trying to enforce the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution by smashing stills and spilling illegal booze in the streets accomplished nothing.  The only way our government ultimately stopped bootleggers… was to put legal liquor stores on the corner.  People wanted to drink, and they were going to find a way.  The only lasting outcome of prohibition was well-funded organized crime.

The same factors apply here.  Homeowners at risk of foreclosure are going to do everything they can to save their homes, including writing a check to organized crime, if that option becomes available.  Calling a HUD counselor or your bank directly, when at risk of foreclosure is certainly not something that results in the homeowner having someone working in the homeowner’s “best interests.”  In fact, as countless thousands have learned the hard way… it’s often a waste of time that produced nothing.  That’s why homeowners start looking elsewhere.

Banks and servicers don’t do anything in the homeowner’s best interests, they are only there to protect their own interests.  And HUD non-profits… well, let’s just start admitting here that, for example, a couple of weeks ago, Bank of America presented a check for $100,000 to a HUD non-profit in Southern California for doing such a bang up job.

Homeowners who are at risk of foreclosure need to be able to find someone ON THEIR SIDE, competent legal representation that works only to protect their best interests.  Not some group funded by the banks.  And why isn’t it ever disclosed that it’s the banks who are funding the non-profits helping homeowners?  I know why, the question is rhetorical.

The banking lobby has far too much power in this country and the people are starting to notice.  Our politicians are going to pay for that in the end.

This crisis was not the fault of homeowners and they should not be treated like deadbeats because they are struggling financially… because our banks are also struggling financially, and for the very same reason.  The difference is that it’s the bankers that caused the “abrupt” changes in the financial markets back in July of ’07, not the homeowners.  And yet, they continue to be blamed by banks and eve n our government.

The anger felt by homeowners is building and their knowledge of the situation is increasing each day.  Our government’s response to the crisis has been laughable, were it not so inconceivably tragic.  And all of this while the scammers continue to come up with a new way to rip someone off who is suffering the trauma of possibly losing a home.  And things are worsening, economically speaking… unless you are one prone to believing the government’s drivel about some phantom recovery.

It’s the bankers that led us to this crisis… they trained their loan officers to scam and then abandoned them after the meltdown, as well.  Homeowners are paying the bill for both, and until our government regulators come to grips with what’s really going on here, the scams will proliferate freely, home prices will continue to fall, and our economy will deal out paid more broadly.

And all I want to know is… for what?

Mandelman out.

Apr
18

Bank of America’s “Tasmanian Devil” says we shouldn’t be thinking of our homes as “assets”.

It should be readily apparent that there are an overabundance of reasons for Bank of America’s CEO, Bryan Moynihan, to be regarded as a massive rear end in a province undeniably replete with rear ends of utterly mammoth proportion.  Even the adjectives in that last sentence don’t begin to do the nature of his posterior justice.

To begin with, let’s just acknowledge that Moynihan is a corporate lawyer.  He graduated in 1981 from Brown University… a history major that co-captained the rugby team.  He then went on to Notre Dame Law School.

In 1993 he went to work at Fleet Boston as deputy general counsel, but after Bank of America acquired Fleet in 2004 Moynihan became the bank’s president of global wealth and investment management, and from October 2007 to December 2008, he served as the bank’s president of global corporate and investment banking.  But from December 2008 to January 2009, Moynihan once again returned to his roots, serving as general counsel for Bank of America, and he became CEO of Merrill Lynch after its oh-so-well-thought-out-and-executed sale to Bank of America in September 2008.

A history major that co-captained the rugby team transformed into Bank of America’s president of global corporate and investment banking… okay, sure… why the heck not?  His predecessor, Kenny-They-Made-Me-Do-It-Lewis started his climb to the top of the largest financial institution in the country, as a credit analyst with a B.S. in Finance from Georgia State at what would soon be NationsBank before merging with and becoming today’s Bank of America.  As they say… the smartest guys in the room, no two ways about that.

Back in 2005, Bank of America was trading at around $50 a share, as was JPMorgan.  As I write this you can buy the stock at an overpriced $12.82.

Kenny was singlehandedly responsible for the bank’s spectacular decline, paying way over mini-bar prices for Countrywide and Merrill Lynch.  JPMorgan’s CEO, Jamie Dimon, meanwhile, managed to pay essentially bupkis for the assets he purchased during the crisis, and along with the Federal guarantees he was able to extort… I mean, successfully negotiate… his financial behemoth has recovered almost all the shareholder value that it lost during the meltdown.  So, very well done there, and as a taxpayer let me just say that I’m glad to have been able to help.

Kenny, by the way, after costing his shareholders roughly $150 million, retired with $83 million in cash, according to the Wall Street Journal… including a $4.2 million salary in 2009, if you can comprehend that.  I can’t, by the way, so if you can… well… you’re completely insane.

Lewis had a nickname for Bryan Moynihan, this also according to the WSJ… the Tasmanian Devil, and he used it to convince members of Bank of America’s Board of Directors that Bryan was the right man for the CEO position after his ouster.  The “Tasmanian Devil,” in case you don’t recall your Saturday morning cartoons, is the Looney Tunes character that can’t form complete sentences and creates sand storm hurricanes everywhere he goes.

Nancy Bush, a well-known independent banking analyst at NAB Research, in so many words, confirmed to Bloomberg that Moynihan’s nickname has basis, saying:

“He’s always thinking way faster than he can talk,” Bush said. “The thoughts tend to run together, and it’s been somewhat of an impediment to getting people to focus on what he’s saying, rather than the way he’s saying it.”

In his new book, Crash of the Titans, Financial Times’ writer, Greg Farrell tells the tale of how Moynihan got his job, first as General Counsel for Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and ultimately as the bank’s CEO.  Apparently, Moynihan was all set to leave Bank of America, the bank had even prepared a press release announcing his departure, when out of nowhere, Kenny decided to can the bank’s General Counsel, Tim Mayopoulos, a guy Farrell describes in his book, which is a fabulous read by the way, as an “egomaniacal wild man.”

So, then one day he was shooting at some food, and up through the ground came a bubbling crude… Bryan’s the bank’s new GC… and Kenny’s best guess for the new CEO.  One of the reasons Ken recommended Moynihan was that he actually wanted the job, which should make you throw up in your mouth a little bit, assuming you own the stock as almost everyone does in one fund or another.

Today, Bryan Moynihan is known for an uncanny ability to put a positive spin on any situation, which I find a lovely euphemism for saying he lies well, assuming such a thing is possible.  He’s driving a financial institution that required TWO federal bailouts totaling $45 BILLION in cash, to say nothing of the federal guarantees, and is today being sued by so many consumers and investors that I can’t even keep up anymore.

As of the end of 2010, more than 1.3 million of the bank’s mortgage customers were delinquent on their loans, close to 200,000 of those haven’t made a payment in at least two years, and a third of the homes facing foreclosure are now vacant, making them costly to maintain and, shall we say, a tad difficult to sell.  A report issued by Moody’s at the end of last year showed that when talking about resolving delinquent sub-prime loans, Bank of America lagged behind ALL of the other six major servicers.

Moynihan’s statements about the bank’s inability to clean up its mortgage mess include saying things like: “At the end of the day, we could have done better,” which is the kind of thing that makes me want to scratch his eyes out.  He has also pointed out that the scale of Bank of America’s modification efforts far exceed those of his competitors, and that the bank has completed 725,000 modifications since January 2008, but other numbers tell a different story.

Of the homeowners who failed to get their loans permanently modified under the federal government’s HAMP program, only 14 percent were granted in-house modifications by Bank of America, compared with 31 percent at JPMorgan Chase, 27 percent at Citibank, and 40 percent at Wells Fargo.

Stories about Bank of America customers enduring year long… and longer nightmares in order to get answers about loan modifications are so common as to be safely considered the norm. As of September 2010, of the 425,000 Bank of America mortgagees deemed eligible for HAMP, only 0.7 had begun trial modifications, according to the federal data.  It’s improved since then, but when you’re talking about millions of loans, improvements that are measured in tens of thousands just isn’t going to cause anyone to stand up and cheer.

A year ago, the bank posted a “profit” of $3.2 billion or 28 cents a share, and in mid-April 2011 the bank’s revenue declined 16% versus a year earlier, and it posted a first quarter “profit” roughly $1.2 billion under that number… at 17 cents a share.  Since he took the helm, the bank’s shares have fallen something like 20%, and with the potential losses on the bank’s $2.1 TRILLION in mortgages still to come being estimated by some at $35 BILLION, it’s little wonder that the bank’s stock, although inexplicably (Ha ha) still rated a “buy” last time I checked, is seen by investors as a significant risk.

Mr. Moynihan, however, says everything is going swimmingly.

“While still soft, the economy is healing; we see retail spending up versus the year-ago period and continued declines in bankruptcy filings and delinquency rates,” Moynihan said.  And last December he told the New York Times: “It’s been a great year and we’ve learned a lot… there’s not a better job in the world.”


Most recently, Moynihan launched a Jimmy Carter-esque type approach to fixing the bank’s woes.  Referred to as “Project New BAC,” it basically means that 44 executives and a couple of consulting firms will fan out and scour the mega-financial-mess that is Bank of America in an effort to glean ideas from the rank and file as to how expenses might be lowered, and how revenues and/or productivity might be increased.  (Are you feeling all warm and fuzzy about this initiative?  Yeppers… me too.)

Now, if all of that weren’t enough to make the case for Bryan Moynihan being this month’s REAR, here’s what really got me started on him in the first place.  Last month, at the 2011 National Association of Attorneys General conference, Moynihan actually came out publicly and said that HOME PRICES MAY NOT REBOUND LONG-TERM, in some areas anyway.  According to Moynihan, homeowners may need to look elsewhere for their long-term investment returns… and forget about their homes being worth more than they owe… like, in their lifetimes.  He blamed population growth, by the way.

According to an April 12th, 2011 story by Joe Rauch for Reuters: “It’s sobering to think, but some people shouldn’t be thinking of (their home) as an asset, they should be thinking of it as a great place to live.”

Is that right, Bryan?  A great place to live… and dramatically overpay for, I suppose.  Because we shouldn’t be thinking about our real estate holdings as “assets,” is that what you said?  You’re a real asshat, Mr. Moynihan, you know that?  Modify the predatory loans, Mr. General-Council-turned-CEO.  Stop being part of the problem, and help stop the financial and foreclosure crises that you and yours created.

Or, I’ll tell you what… we’ll stop looking at our homes as financial assets as soon as you stop looking at the garbage Collateralized Debt Obligations and mortgage-backed securities you defrauded the planet with as securities… how about that?

Mandelman out.

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