- Wells Fargo Damage Control Attempt – FL Attorney General Reaches Agreement with Wells Fargo Providing More Than $388 Million in Mortgage Relief to Florida Homeowners
- Brown Reaches Settlement With Wells Fargo Worth More Than $2 Billion to Californians With Risky Adjustable-Rate Mortgages
- SEC Charges Wachovia (Wells Fargo) With Fraudulent Bid Rigging in Municipal Bond Proceeds, Settles for $148 Million
Maryland AG Gansler | Wells Fargo Settles for $1 Million Over “Pick-a-Payment” Mortgages
SEC Charges Wachovia (Wells Fargo) With Fraudulent Bid Rigging in Municipal Bond Proceeds, Settles for $148 Million
- SEC Charges UBS with Fraudulent Bidding Practices Involving Investment of Municipal Bond Proceeds
- OCC Assesses Civil Money Penalty of $20 Million Against Wells Fargo, Requires Restitution of $14.5 Million to Municipalities Harmed by Bid-Rigging on Financial Products
- FL Attorney General Announces $67 Million National Settlement with Bank of America over Bid-Rigging Scheme
LIES | So Obama Said “What Wall Street did was immoral, but it wasn’t illegal”
- Obama | “One of the biggest problems” of the financial crisis is that “a lot of that stuff wasn’t necessarily illegal; it was just immoral or inappropriate or reckless.”
- The Rule of Law and Wall Street by U.S. Senator Ted Kaufman
- Justice Dept Memo | The Case for Using Predator Drone Strikes Against Wall Street Executives
Pennies on the Dollar | Wells Fargo Picks to Pay
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.
New Fed Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin Gives Me Reason to Hope
On October 4, 2010, President Barack Obama appointed Sarah Bloom Raskin to be a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
Raskin has a B.A. in Economics from Amherst College, her undergraduate thesis was on monetary policy, a J.D. from Harvard Law, and prior to accepting the president’s appointment she served as Maryland’s Commissioner of Financial Regulation, and is said to have played an early role in her state’s response to the financial crisis, including reform of the foreclosure process, combating foreclosure rescue and loan modification scams, and the elevation of licensing and lending standards.
She also previously chaired the state’s Consumer Financial Products Agency Task Force, was a member of the State Liaison Committee for the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, served as the Banking Counsel for the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, and earlier in her career, worked at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and for the Joint Economic Committee of the Congress.
I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that the woman is wicked smart, and one of the few people who, as you’ll see assuming you read what follows, understands and is willing to state publicly that the foreclosure crisis is what continues to prevent our nation’s economic recovery, and that the impediment to preventing unnecessary foreclosures is the mortgage servicing industry.
On February 11, 2011, Sarah Bloom Raskin was one of the featured speakers at the 2011 Midwinter Housing Finance Conference, held in Park City, Utah, “an annual event geared to the top executives in the mortgage finance industry, along with key regulators, economists, and those that serve the business,” according to the conference Website.
I read her speech yesterday evening; parts actually gave me chills, and parts left me with a hopeful tear in my eye. She says almost exactly what I’ve written in my articles on at least dozens and at this point perhaps even hundreds of occasions, and it sure felt good to hear that message coming from the mouth of one of the Federal Reserve Governors. Will the banking industry listen to her message? Will it lead to meaningful change? I don’t know, but I think it offers reason to hope, and with the Obama Administration otherwise essentially silent on this issue, I need reason to hope wherever I can find it.
I urge you to take the 10 minutes or so it will take you to read Raskin’s speech, which I’ve included in its entirety just below. But for those that want the highlights, or struggle with some of the more technical sections, I’ve blued out the points that should not be missed… so please… don’t miss them.
And with that, I give you… Sarah Bloom Raskin speaking to the mortgage servicing industry leaders in Park City this past week…
~~~
A Speech Delivered by Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin
At the 2011 Midwinter Housing Finance Conference, Park City, Utah
February 11, 2011
Putting the Low Road Behind Us
Good evening. I would like to thank the sponsors of the Midwinter Housing Finance Conference for kindly inviting me to join you. Tonight, I’m going to share with you some thoughts about the powerful impact the housing and mortgage markets have on the nation’s economic recovery, present some ideas to effect positive change in the mortgage servicing industry, and finally impart a guiding principle that should help us find our way through the current struggles and drive the way our industry operates in the future.
Speaking strictly in an economic sense, the recession that emerged in 2008 is over. But I know that the millions of Americans still looking for work, living in cars or motels, or trying to keep their businesses out of bankruptcy would beg to disagree. Our economy is growing, but the pace of recovery is agonizingly slow, well behind the pace of recovery in prior recessions. There are several causes for this lethargy, but, in my view, the critically important drag on the economy is the absence of any substantial recovery in the housing sector. Traditionally, housing is the first sector to recover after a recession, buoyed by low interest rates and pent-up demand. The increase in housing sales and construction usually is followed by a robust increase in consumer expenditures on durable goods, like furniture and appliances, which magnifies and multiplies the effect of the housing recovery.
Yet today, demand for housing is weighted down by the enormous losses in income and net worth that households suffered in the recession. In addition, the persistent high rate of unemployment is further depressing housing demand, creating uncertainty about housing prices, and impeding that robust recovery in the housing sector that we generally see. With a pipeline full of distressed properties, the unfortunate consensus is that we should expect even more downward pressure on house prices. Potential buyers seem inclined to wait and see if they can get a better buy in the future. Builders, too, are deterred by the additional competition lurking in this reservoir of vacant and distressed properties.
Significantly, uncertainty about house prices destabilizes expectations outside of the housing sector. When banks have troubled mortgages on their books, they may be required to increase their loss provisioning and implement troubled debt restructuring, which in turn reduces the amount of funds they have to lend. Uncertainty about house prices also clearly undermines consumer confidence and undercuts consumers’ willingness to spend.
According to the Census Bureau, homeownership rates have fallen so significantly in recent years that they have more than wiped out the increase in homeownership that had taken place between 2000 and 2007. When I think about this statistic, I see not only the drag on the nation’s already-tepid recovery, but the millions of American families who have lost their homes and their hopes.
When people lose their homes, the impact is felt not only by the homeowners, but by the broader community: the bonds of community are weakened, business investment is undermined, homelessness increases, children are uprooted, unemployment deepens, and even health problems multiply.
I emphasize all this bad news not to dampen the dinner mood here tonight, but to underscore the importance of the work that you do and to reiterate what we already know: The recovery of the housing sector is critical to the robust and sustainable recovery of the American economy. To see the kind of economic recovery we want, we need to revive our housing sector and restore the communities that were shaken by its collapse.
So what needs to happen now? To begin with, we should start at the ground level and work with troubled borrowers to prevent additional foreclosures that will further weaken the market. We need to make certain that foreclosures take place only when there is no option available that would be preferable to both the borrower and the investor. It is critical for servicers to review all options on any given delinquent loan before deciding that foreclosure is the best course of action.
Certainly foreclosure cannot be avoided in every case. However, servicers must identify those instances where both the borrower and the investor would be better off modifying the loan than foreclosing on it. Some distressed borrowers should be able to qualify for a modification through Treasury’s Home Affordable Mortgage Program (HAMP). If the HAMP evaluation has been properly done and the borrower still does not qualify, the servicer should consider all other reasonable alternatives, ranging from proprietary modifications to short sales to deeds-in-lieu-of-foreclosure, before filing for foreclosure. And, for homeowners whose financial distress is the result of job loss, something as simple as payment forbearance while the homeowner is unemployed could prevent the loan from going to foreclosure.
Servicing shops need to be diligent in pursuing these options, and investors need to be supportive of efforts to find net-positive alternatives to foreclosure. These actions will have a far-reaching positive impact: A lower inventory of distressed properties for sale results in higher house prices, which leads to a healthier pace of recovery in the housing market and the broader economy. I can’t emphasize enough how important it is that servicers be willing and diligent in offering assistance to troubled homeowners: It is key to the pace of economic recovery.
For those in the housing and mortgage fields, making needed changes will not be easy. In particular, for those in the mortgage servicing industry, it means difficult changes and significant investments to rectify broken systems. For those servicers who are subsidiaries or affiliates of a broader parent financial institution, the responsibility for change and further investment absolutely extends up to that parent company, many of which have enjoyed substantial profits while their servicing arms have been run on the cheap.
In November, I spoke about the problems in residential mortgage servicing operations that were undermining the performance of this industry. These problems existed before November and as far as I can tell they remain unaddressed. How do I know this? Late last year, the federal banking agencies began a targeted review of loan servicing practices at large financial institutions that had significant market concentrations in mortgage servicing. The preliminary results from this review indicate that widespread weaknesses exist in the servicing industry. The agencies intend to report more specific findings to the public soon, but I can tell you that these deficiencies pose significant risk to mortgage servicing and foreclosure processes, impair the functioning of mortgage markets, and diminish overall accountability to homeowners.
I’m sure this has been said, but I’ll say it again because I have seen little to no evidence of improvement in the operational performance of servicers since the onset of the crisis in 2007: Until these operational problems are addressed once and for all, the foreclosure crisis will continue and the housing sector will languish.
What is needed is strong corporate governance procedures for servicers that are established, monitored, and enforced enterprise-wide in order to prevent process breakdowns. Servicers need sound policies and procedures that outline the rules, laws, standards, and processes by which internal operations are assessed. Senior executives need to emphasize compliance and qualitative measures over short-run cost efficiency, and need to articulate the presence of adequate quality controls and audit processes to identify risks and take timely, corrective actions where needed. Corporate leadership needs to communicate performance expectations that hold all business lines accountable to strong procedural controls.
If errors occur or internal processes become challenged, servicers must act swiftly and responsibly to contain the damage to consumers and markets. Going forward, the servicing industry must foster an operational environment that reflects safe and sound banking principles and compliance with applicable state and federal law. This is a primary responsibility of the servicing industry, but regulators now have to be prepared to monitor servicing functions on an ongoing basis to ensure confidence is restored and take enforcement actions, when necessary, to address significant failures.
I’m not going to outline for you the consequences of these failures. You know them all too well. Suffice it to say that when servicers misapply payments, lose paperwork, file incorrect foreclosure affidavits, or simply do not answer the phone or make available knowledgeable staffpersons, there are consequences to the consumer. With few adequate remedies to provide meaningful recourse in the event errors occur–after all, it’s not as if consumers have a choice regarding who does their servicing–many consumers find themselves captive to practices that have emphasized speed and aggressive timeframes over responsiveness, accuracy, and completeness.
So something is wrong. Here we are in 2011, looking at high levels of foreclosures on the horizon, looking at significant failures in process, and nothing much has changed since 2007. I always thought this dysfunction was going on for too long–but I’m someone who thought the successive waves of foreclosures in 2007 amounted to a virtual tsunami. In my mind, massive foreclosures were always a sign of an equally massive market failure. Well, now it seems to me we have reached a point where this sign of failure is hindering our economy’s ability to rebound.
In addition to improvements that individual servicers need to make, we also have to find a way to fix broader problems in the industry and make it functional.
In my November remarks, I began the conversation about a flawed business model that creates misaligned incentives in ways that are more difficult for any one company to change on its own. So let’s talk now a little bit about how a better-functioning servicing industry would be structured.
One step the industry could take that would have an enormous payoff for consumers and market participants would be to change its pricing model. The economic incentives and pressure points of the current servicing model cause problems at multiple levels.
In addition to float income and ancillary fees, servicers earn money through an annual fee on each loan. This annual servicing fee is an important income source that has to cover some wildly varying costs. On a performing loan for which costs to servicers are minimal, the revenue stream from ancillary fees and float may itself be nearly enough to fairly compensate servicers.
But when a loan becomes non-performing, costs start climbing. Costs associated with collections, loss mitigation, foreclosure, the maintenance and disposition of real-estate owned properties, and so on, are lumpy and can be high. The current model is structured with the hope that, over a given period of time, there are enough of the low-touch performing loans to cross-subsidize the high-touch non-performing ones, so that the overall pool of servicing fee revenue is sufficient to cover expenses and return a reasonable profit. But if that doesn’t happen, servicers are either being paid too much for their efforts or not enough.
The current model also rests on the expectation that, in good times, servicers are using some of the residual income to build out systems and procedures to handle the pressures that come with worse times. Unfortunately, as we have seen, this has not happened.
A better business model–one that might attract more entrants and increase competition–would more closely tie expenses with compensation and reduce many of the principal-agent problems that currently exist.
Rather than rolling most of the compensation into one annual fee that covers performing and delinquent loans alike, servicers could be compensated quite modestly for the routine processing of payments involved with performing assets. They would be required to have either significant capacity for loss mitigation and the other work involved with non-performing loans, or business relationships with third parties, such as specialty servicers, that do. Contracts could spell out a structure wherein the investor would pay significantly higher and more direct compensation for the more labor-intensive work involved in delinquent loans, though they would need to be careful not to create perverse incentives to encourage such delinquencies.
There would also need to be much more clarity and specificity about loss mitigation standards and systems for auditing internal procedures. Such a system could more appropriately compensate servicers and sub-servicers for the level of work involved in servicing very different types of loans. Specialists could emerge who focus primarily on the routine performing loans or the more involved non-performing ones. If the non-performing specialist was a third party, the existing servicer could either transfer the servicing rights once a loan hits a certain delinquency trigger, or simply have the loans subserviced–of course with high levels of accountability–on a fee-for-services basis until the delinquency is resolved. One structure along these general lines has recently been proposed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. While many details would need to be worked out and possible implications thought through, I believe it is a promising start.
Another structural change that would help would be a limit on the extent to which servicers have to advance principal and interest on non-performing loans. In times of high delinquency, this can put considerable financial strain on servicers, which can lead to negative consequences for consumers trying to work with those stressed servicers. This could be addressed by changing secondary market standards so that servicers only have to advance mortgage principal and interest up to, say, 60 or 90 days beyond delinquency. Alternatively, they could advance principal and interest payments only as they come in–a so-called “actual/actual” schedule. Either change would affect the payment streams to investors, but I would imagine that participants in the secondary markets would be able to model with some confidence how this would affect the value of securities and adjust pricing accordingly.
This means that future pooling and servicing agreements will need to look different than those of the past. They will need to be much more detailed and provide clarity about what the servicer can and cannot do. They should explicitly allow for loan modifications and other non-foreclosure workout actions when they are determined to lead to a smaller loss to the investor than would a foreclosure. There also needs to be clarity that the servicer is expected to work in the aggregate best interests of the investor, regardless of tranche. And we need to find ways to deal with the problems that arise from the conflicting interests of senior and junior lien interests that can hold up workable alternatives to foreclosure.
Too many of the practices in the mortgage servicing industry have been developed and defended solely on the basis of “standard industry practice,” but many practices were not only standard but shoddy. This has proven true, I might add, on the underwriting and secondary market sides of the house, and we are now seeing courts reject some of those practices. More explicit rules and procedures need to replace standard practices. And these rules and procedures need to be incorporated into the deals with investors, who will factor them in to the value they see in the securities.
These are some initial thoughts on how to rebuild an important but currently dysfunctional sector of the housing market. Surely details need to be worked out, costs accounted for, and potential unintended consequences thought through. This isn’t easy, and time is of the essence because the drag on our recovery is palpable. We need the incentives that permit us to reengineer this sector of the market and build a business model that actually works. That model will need to provide adequate and appropriate compensation for servicers, protect consumers, give investors what they need, and be sufficiently transparent to all parties and the public. It needs to be transparent and accountable–one that better aligns the interests and incentives of homeowners, investors, and servicers. And servicers need to understand that the homeowner is an important constituent, if for no other reason than that it is the homeowner who is critical to the revitalization of the housing sector.
In the process of rebuilding, we all have a significant and urgent role to play. The Federal Reserve Board has acted to provide unprecedented levels of liquidity to the market since the crisis began through the development of an accommodative monetary policy and the establishment and implementation of back-stop facilities and last-resort lending. We clearly need to continue thinking about obstacles that exist in the realm of strong mortgage lending. There is always more that the Federal Reserve can consider in terms of reforms that are needed for housing finance, mortgage lending, and mortgage service providers.
But the government can only do so much, and relevant private sector actors need to think beyond their bottom line and focus on how their firms’ actions are or are not contributing to the economic recovery. I am convinced that, in order for our economic reconstruction to come about, it will be essential for each of us to commit to furthering the good of our nation, our neighborhoods, and our fellow citizens.
I do not want to revisit all of the sordid events that brought us to economic crisis in 2008 but, suffice it to say that, in the housing sector, we traveled a very low road that had nothing to do with looking out for the greater good. On the contrary, there were too many people in all of the functional component parts–mortgage brokers, loan originators, loan securitizers, sub-prime lenders, Wall Street investment bankers, and rating agencies–who were interested only in making their own fast profits and were indifferent to the consequences of their actions for homeowners and communities, much less the nation as a whole. This selfish free-for-all ultimately led to an economic slide the effects of which are still visible in the boarded-up houses and sheriffs’ foreclosure notices posted all over America.
We pulled back from the brink of depression only through a massive and unprecedented infusion of public dollars in the banking system, and in other systemically important firms, to prevent collapse. In other words, the public was forced into a position where it had to put a lot on the line to save the financial system from its own follies and from total ruin. And many were bitter about having to do so.
Now, it is time to pay back the American citizenry in full, and not just in the literal sense, but in the sense that there must be reciprocity and mutuality in our structuring of economic policy so that we do not travel this low road again. Bluntly stated, the government reluctantly provided the taxpayer funds necessary to unfreeze the financial markets and get our financial institutions on their feet again, with the expectation that the benefits would be directly meaningful to those taxpayers in their households and communities.
The financial institutions that have been bolstered directly and indirectly by government subsidy and aid must now seek to support those who have been buffeted and injured by the housing crisis.
This must go beyond the corrective actions that need to be taken to rectify current deficiencies. It means that financial institutions need to understand the effects their actions will have on consumers and the country as a whole, and factor those considerations in to their business decisions. This is the high road–a moral and economic imperative that must be the driving purpose that unifies and animates our efforts. Indeed, the high road demands that we become effective institutional innovators for positive changes in our communities and for housing practices that promote community well-being. When we traveled the low road, the only question was: Will this practice make me rich? Taking the high road means we continually ask: Do our financial and legal arrangements contribute to the public welfare and the common good?
Yes, our economy has started to rebound, but we need a strong housing market in order to ensure a complete, stable, and sustainable recovery. The meltdown in the housing sector set off our economic crisis, and the reconstruction of the housing sector will help bring it to a close. Each of you has a role to play in this mission, and I urge you to embrace this challenge and to do your part to contribute to the economic rebuilding of our country.
Thank you.
~~~
So… what did you think? Better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick, right? The woman knows what she’s talking about and isn’t afraid to say things that may offend her peers. She must be lonely there on the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors… I wonder how she and Bernanke get along.
Now, if we could team her up with Elizabeth Warren, Brooksley Born, Meredith Whitney, Janet Tavakoli, Yves Smith, Erica Payne, Nomi Prin, Anya Schiffrin, April Charney, and Sheila Bair (assuming she promises to leave Tim Geithner out of the discussion), and I would have no doubt that we would have the foreclosure crisis under control within six months and be on our way back to economic prosperity by year’s end. And tell you what… just to show you that I’m completely anti-men… Simon Johnson can come along too.
I’ve had about enough of the boys club… the fellas aren’t doing anything for me lately… it’s the women that have their arms around this issue and personally I’d like to see them get a chance to set the course going forward. The guys have been at it a bit too long and they’re obviously all tired and too rich to know what this country looks like anymore.
Bye-bye guys… the showers are on… and then it’s time for a nap.
Ladies… let’s show the world what you can do… it’s your century, I can feel it. But, hurry… we’re melting fast at this point, so there’s no time to lose… push, and push harder… the people will support you, I know it to be true.
Mandelman out.
Alright Banker-People… That’s Enough. You’re Not Making Sense and You’re Making Me Dizzy
Hey… banker-people… over here… we need to talk. And don’t try to pretend like you’re not reading this because Google Analytics says you are, and they’re not wrong.
First, roll call:
Wells Fargo people… 85 times this month. Bank of America… 73 times this month. JPMorgan Chase… only 74 times this month… I hope I didn’t upset you with my “Inside Chase and the Perfect Foreclosure” article. I’m sure you’ll get over it. Fannie Mae only 38 times this month… did we get our feelings hurt, or are you guys spending all your time searching Monster.com in the hopes of finding a solvent organization? Oh, and look… Kondaur Capital people… 22 times this month? Good for you. You must be newcomers. I don’t remember seeing you hanging around my blog before.
Indymac… 31 times… always nice to see you guys reading me, but isn’t it time to change to “One West”? And Wachovia… 18 times? Not bad, considering you guys are supposed to have been bankrupt for like two years. And FedChex… you’re the guys that put people on a black list when they bounce a check, right? And then they can never get off, and all because some bank held their deposit for 10 days waiting for the carrier pigeon to bring news from the Federal Reserve that the check had cleared.
What do we have here… the Department of Homeland Security? No kidding? On my blog, 15 times this month? Should I be scared? I’ll take waterboarding for $500, Alex. Are you guys planning some sort of extraordinary rendition? Am I going to wake up one morning to find myself tied to a chair, holed up in some Eastern Bloc prison not found in my Fodor’s guide with a German Shepherd sniffing at my testicles? Good plan, fellas… you keep working on that. Or, perhaps I should say… As-Salāmu Alaykum.
There’s the U.S. Army… for 17 times this month. But the Navy… only 16. Oh, too bad. I hate seeing the Navy lose by one. I know why you guys are here… you’re fighting for our country and some banking geek is trying to foreclose on your house. Call me, maybe I can find someone who can help.
And GMAC Mortgage? I was sort of disappointed to see you only made it over 15 times this month. Well, that’s okay… I’m sure you’ve been busy what with so many people signing their names ten million times a month.
My only question is: Where the heck is Citibank? I bank at Citibank, for God’s sake… the least they could do is stalk me. And US Bank… they’re probably just pissed cause I’m late on my mortgage… don’t worry guys… I’ll bring it current tomorrow. I just like it when you call me and ask if I want to apply for a loan modification… LOL… good times!
Okay, so now that we’re all here… you guys either have too many PR firms on retainer, or as an industry, you’re just a complete train wreck… or both… and I’m sure it’s both. You guys really should collectively just STFU… and feel free to ask your teenager to translate that for you if you need help figuring it out.
First of all, good plan! First you tried to have MERS foreclose… but since they never owned anything, were never a party to anything… and in fact have nothing to do with borrowers and their homes, it started to be slightly questionable that the electronic registry with no employees, but more signers that the entire country of Italy has Vespas, so you moved on to the computer generated signature.
Of course, it didn’t take long before a whole bunch of foreclosure defense attorneys compared notes and found the one person was able to sign their name identically like 100 times. Not to mention that when implementing such a strategy, it helps to change up the names. The same VP can’t work for Wachovia in the morning, Citibank at lunchtime, and Wells Fargo later that same afternoon. (Gee, I’ll bet modifying a few more loans is looking like a pretty good alternative now, right banker-people?)
So, what did you guys come up with to fix the problem? The “robo-signer”? Seriously? Tell the truth… did someone’s 13 year-old son come up with this plan? One person sits in an office and signs their name 10,000 times a month, needless to say without taking a moment to read anything being signed. That’s the plan. Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. Did someone prepare a PowerPoint presentation to sell this idea to senior management? You can’t imagine how much I wish I could have been there to watch this plan get the thumbs up.
And you all decided to go with the same inconceivably stupid idea? What’s going on here? Is this real life, or am I unknowingly being filmed to appear in some sort of Don Knotts revival picture… a remake of The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, perhaps? Or maybe it’s a musical, like: “How to Succeed in Banking Without Really Lying.” Is that it?
And yes… I feel like breaking into another show tune… it’s been a while, so just go with it. Here’s the original, performed by Robert Morse. And wouldn’t you know it… alternate lyrics follow.
Now, you may join the Elks, my friend,
And I may join the Shriners;
But those that work in banks these days
We call them “Robo-Signers”.
~~~~~
They sign their names 10,000 times,
Their ethics need alignment;
For under oath they’re swearing,
That the bank lost the assignment.
~~~~~
There is a Brotherhood at Banks,
A malevolent Brotherhood at Banks,
It takes some giant balls,
To defraud justice’s halls,
But that’s the Brotherhood at Banks.
~~~~~
You’re implementing a, dumb plan,
To keep a-takin’ every house, you can.
I hope you’ll one day be,
Held under lock and key,
The great big Brotherhood at Banks.
~~~~~
So, before you start claiming that your dog ate all the mortgages, consider this:
One man may be incompetent,
Ten clowns could be a fluke,
But you guys have so many liars,
It’s enough to make me puke.
~~~~~
You clearly have no leadership,
At the top you’re lacking creed.
The things you have in abundance,
Are avarice and greed.
~~~~~
‘Cause it’s the Brotherhood at Banks,
You broke the world this time, so thanks.
If you got bailed out big,
Then bonused like a pig,
You’re in that Brotherhood at Banks.
~~~~~
(Woman’s Voice)
You, you blow bubbles,
Us, we got troubles!
~~~~~
(Woman’s Voice)
The economy is sinking,
While Crystal champagne you’re drinking,
There’s something really stinking,
Oh Bankster!
~~~~~
(Woman’s Voice)
You, you’d sell Mama;
All I’ve got is Obama!
~~~~~
You own our government, we see.
Break laws and get away, Scott-free.
And billions you’ll still make,
Don’t worry, we’ll eat cake,
While we watch the Brotherhood at Banks!
~~~~~~
Okay, now let’s get back to business, no pun intended…
Of course, you guys in the banking world are so delusional that you seem to actually believe that what you’re doing by having someone sign their name 10,000 times to sworn affidavits and the like, is merely fixing a technicality… ooopsie… you forgot to cross a ‘t’. You can’t be serious…
Let’s get something straight here. I don’t know what our government is going to do about what you’ve done, but it’s no technicality, okay? If any other normal non-banker American citizen did what you’ve done, and are still trying to do, we’d be charged with fraud, very likely thrown in jail, after we we’re sued civilly for everything we had. Got it?
You don’t think so? Then tell me what you think would happen if I walked into a courtroom and handed the judge a fraudulent set of documents requesting that he ignore procedures designed to protect property rights in this country, and foreclose on someone’s property, evict them and and give it to me to sell?
Or, how about if I were to go around selling bonds rated triple A, that were actually junk? Or what if I was selling mortgage-backed securities without the mortgage-backed part? Or selling investments to investors while betting they would fail? You think I’d be handed a big fat hundred million dollar bonus check and told to have a safe flight in my helicopter on the way to my mansion in the Hamptons?
You want to know what happens once you turn yourself in for committing fraud on a scale never before contemplated and cost the world tens of billions of dollars. Ask Bernie Madoff. Admittedly, we don’t do a whole lot to catch you before that, but once you come clean, then we lower the boom. (Okay, so maybe that’s not the best example, but my point’s the same, damn it.)
The blog Daily Finance, had an excellent article yesterday about this topic, and since I couldn’t say it any better, here’s what Charles Hugh Smith had to say:
Many commentators have already dismantled the bank/mortgage servicers’ claims that the legal issues are all just trivial technicalities. It’s hardly trivial that documents filed in court are the foundation of our legal system. A signed affidavit is legally equivalent to providing live testimony in court. If an affidavit is untrue, that’s the same as lying in court, which is a crime called perjury.
Yet the current system is filled with “robo-signers” who electronically signed up to 10,000 foreclosure filing a month, making a legal claim of their accuracy. Furthermore, though attorneys are prohibited from making a material misrepresentation to the court, it’s clear that such misrepresentations of fact (such as who actually owns the mortgage) are widespread in foreclosure proceedings.
See full article from DailyFinance: http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/investing/foreclosure-crisis-eroding-trust-ending-recovery/19667666/?a_dgi=aolshare_email&icid=sphere_copyright
Next topic… I think I’ve disposed of that one, wouldn’t you say?
Now, on top of everything else you bankers have done, you’re now confusing the heck out of me. You don’t seem to be able to keep your stories straight from one month to the next.
Last month, Treasury Secretary Geithner and numerous other anonymous Treasury Department officials invited a cadre of bloggers to Washington to listen while they espoused some unbelievably heinous drivel about how HAMP was a success because… even though it may have caused some discomfort… and that’s pretty close to quoting verbatim what was said… HAMP slowed down the foreclosures, thus allowing homeowners to remain in their homes a few months longer that would otherwise have been the case, and simultaneously helped the banks take back the homes at a safer and less costly pace.
Never mind the fact that people were lied to and tortured by our nation’s financial institutions and mortgage servicers, something that was obviously condoned by Treasury and presumably by the Obama Administration, the fact is that the Treasury officials said that HAMP was a success because it slowed down foreclosures, if nothing else.
But, now… now that it’s come out that the banks are forging documents, illegally foreclosing, and therefore defrauding homeowners, investors, our government, the IRS, and the taxpayers, to say nothing of the investors around the globe who I have to believe are loading up an entire fleet of 747s with lawyers to come sue the bankers into oblivion yea as we speak… now that that sort of writing is all over the wall… now the bankers are saying we have to ignore our laws protecting property rights in this country, because anything that slows down foreclosures WILL KILL THE ECONOMY?
So, wait… which is it? Geithner says HAMP slowing them down was good, but now that it’s the bank’s criminal behavior that threatens to cause such a the slowdown, it’s going to cause the end of the world as we know it?
My favorite blog of late, Naked Capitalism, which is written largely by the ultra-smart Yves Smith… “Yves here,” posted this from Politico writer Ben Smith, who had written the following in a newsletter that’s read by policy types in D.C.
WALL STREET WARNS WASHINGTON ON MORTGAGES – The financial services industry is growing increasingly concerned as more politicians get behind the idea of a broad moratorium on home foreclosures, which banks and many outside analysts say could be good short-term politics but terrible long-term policy.
One senior Wall Street executive told Morning Money over the weekend: ‘President Obama should be very cautious about aligning himself with Congressional leaders who are playing politics with the foreclosure issue. With foreclosed properties comprising one in every four homes sold in the United States, the spreading moratorium could disrupt real estate deals in progress, slow down the process of clearing the backlog of troubled home loans and [endanger] the economic recovery.’
Alright banker-people… that’s enough. I think I can speak for quite a few Americans… like at least a dozen… when I say that at this point you’d be better off shutting up and stopping the empty threats about “endangering the recovery” that you continually draw like a gun every time something threatens to limit your ability to do whatever you want, whenever you want to do it.
To begin with, there is no economic recovery, never has been, so stop kidding yourselves, assuming that’s what you’re doing. There’s no lending, and there won’t be any… outside of the government lending programs, of course… for a long, long time. The next time investors around the world trust our country’s bankers and more over, our regulatory agencies, will be decades from now.
It might be helpful if I remind you that in 1929 the stock market had a bit of a market correction. It crashed, wiping out the fortunes of tens of thousands of investors, large and small. On the blackest of days back in 1929, the NYSE traded 16 million shares. The next time it would do that would be 40 YEARS LATER, in 1969. I think a little Wikipedia is in order:
“The October 1929 crash came during a period of declining real estate values in the United States (which peaked in 1925) near the beginning of a chain of events that led to the Great Depression, a period of economic decline in the industrialized nations.”
Now, why does that sound so damn familiar to me. Nope, can’t place it. Oh well… let’s move on.
Oh no, wait… one more:
“Anyone who bought stocks in mid-1929 and held onto them saw most of his or her adult life pass by before getting back to even.”
Richard Salsman, American Economist & Lecturer
So, stop with the “endangering the recovery” blather, you sound like idiots and liars, and we were just getting used to you just being liars. We can’t handle both at once. Besides, the biggest thing stopping our recovery is you guys that engineered its demise.
Stopping foreclosures while we wait for you bankers to figure out how to fix things, assuming such a thing is possible, because when you guys break the world you do one heck of a job, isn’t going to harm anything.
You can’t sell a HUGE percentage of the homes you’ve been foreclosing on to-date, so what good will it do to hurry up and foreclose on some more? Many times you don’t foreclose on properties because you don’t want to have to pay the property taxes and maintenance anyway. I know several homeowners who haven’t made payments in three years, so shut up, shut up, shut up!
And memo to “senior Wall Street executive” who claims, as quoted above, that our legislators are “playing politics” when they suggest that foreclosures should be stopped until they can proceed in accordance with our country’s laws, saying:
“One senior Wall Street executive told Morning Money over the weekend: ‘President Obama should be very cautious about aligning himself with Congressional leaders who are playing politics with the foreclosure issue.”
You sir, should simply have your ass kicked. And I’d volunteer to do it, but I’m afraid that the Department of Homeland Security will come take me away and I won’t be able to see my daughter graduate from High School. But someone should… kick your ass, I mean.
But, in lieu of that, let me tell you, the bankers, and our nation’s politicians about what’s coming up in just a few weeks: the midterm elections. And that’s when WE THE PEOPLE get our chance to “PLAY POLITICS,” as you so eloquently phrased it.
And I for one simply cannot wait to PLAY. Did you notice those early ballots coming in… in numbers 50% HIGHER THAN IN 2006! Fifty percent higher? Do you think those people are voting for those that voted to bail you out, banker-people? Do you?
No, I can’t wait to play a little politics myself, come early November. Because frankly, I’ve been working far too hard these past two years since I got suckered into that whole line of “hope and change” garbage. So, I could use some playtime.
After all, all work and no play makes Mandelman an angry voter.
Mandelman out, and the incumbents as well.
Important Florida Case – one way to get a foreclosure dismissed
There is a recent decision out of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in FL (Pinellas County) that I believe warrants focus and analysis for homeowners and their attorneys. In Wachovia Mortgage v. Matacchiero, the Defendant filed a Motion to Dismiss (MTD) the case through her attorney. The basic premise of the MTD was that the Plaintiff lacked the “capacity to sue” the Defendant for foreclosure under Fla. Civ. Pro., Rule 1.120(a).
Most foreclosure attorneys are used to hearing (and arguing) the legal issue of “standing” and while standing is a very valid issue that should be questioned in every foreclosure case, the “capacity to sue” is different. ‘Capacity to sue’ is an absence or legal disability which would deprive a party of the right to come into court.” Judge Rondolino, the presiding judge who signed the order granting the Defendant’s MTD, made the distinction right in his order.
In this case, the Plaintiff was, “Wachovia Mortgage FSB, F/K/A World Savings Bank.” The argument was simply that the Plaintiff failed to properly identify itself in the pleadings (complaint) and therefore the Defendant was deprived of knowing exactly who to answer or frame her responsive pleading to.
The Defendant’s argument: “Because the Plaintiff failed to “plead or specify in what capacity the Plaintiff brings suit and by failing to define or identify in any way the nature of its legal entity the Plaintiff has not plead that it has the capacity to maintain suit before this court.”
Notice point 4 of the Judge’s order where he specifically compares capacity to standing and note the differences.
The attorney in this case did a great job really analyzing the Defendant’s case and he obviously has a firm grasp on and working knowledge of the rules of civil procedure. He successfully attacked the legal deficiencies in this case and won on the merits of his well plead argument.
The majority of foreclosure cases are fraught with legal deficiencies. The problem I see is that few are truly analyzing the complaint, pleadings and allegations made by these institutional fraudsters to find these deficiencies and use them against the Plaintiffs. You know the old saying, “the devil is in the details.”
Hopefully, you’ll read the judge’s order and dive into the rules of civil procedure in your state and really learn something as to how “we should think” about foreclosure cases. The lesson here is to learn how to “frame” our thinking regarding foreclosure cases and to learn to look at the details. Look at what these Plaintiffs are truly alleging. The words they are using are not accidental and often we will find conflicting statements, inconsistencies and the like.
Use the rules of civil procedure as the guide and attack the missteps of these institutions. The rules define how the game is played. If a party fails to follow the rules they have a problem and if you have a rogue judge who doesn’t care about ensuring the rules are followed, these things need to be identifed, recorded and quantified so that you can set a case up for an appeal. The Appellate courts are in a position where they have to hold the parties (and judges) to following the well-established rules of civil procedure.
Now, what you are waiting for? If you need legal representation in a foreclosure matter (or even think you might), call Houk Law today to speak with us about all the reasons why you should consider retaining us to represent you… and why it makes complete economic sense as well!
We can be reached at 1-877-508-4848 ext. 0














