Biden and Schneiderman Investigating Improper MBS Bundling

David McLaughlin, Bloomberg

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and Delaware’s Beau Biden are investigating banks for failing to package mortgages into bonds as advertised to investors, three months after a group of lenders struck a nationwide $25 billion settlement over foreclosure practices.

The states are pursuing allegations that some home loans weren’t correctly transferred into securitizations, undermining investors’ stakes in the mortgages, according to two people with knowledge of the probes. They’re also concerned about improper foreclosures on homeowners as result, said the people, who declined to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.

The probes prolong the fallout from the six-year housing bust that’s cost Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and other lenders more than $72 billion because of poor underwriting and shoddy foreclosures. It may also give ammunition to bondholders suing banks, said Isaac Gradman, an attorney and managing member of IMG Enterprises LLC, a mortgage-backed securities consulting firm.

“The attorneys general could create a lot of problems for the banks and for the trustees and for bondholders,” Gradman said. “I can’t imagine a better securities law claim than to say that you represented that these were mortgage-backed securities when in fact they were backed by nothing.”

Countrywide Faulted

Schneiderman said Bank of America Corp. (BAC)’s Countrywide Financial unit last year made errors in the way it packaged home loans into bonds, while investors have sued trustee banks, saying documentation lapses during mortgage securitizations can impair their ability to recover losses when homeowners default. Schneiderman didn’t sue Bank of America in connection with that criticism.

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Is Wells Fargo a Lehman in the Making?

Yves Smith, Naked Capitalism

Banking maven Chris Whalen has a must-read piece on the reckless real estate risk taking underway at Wells Fargo, the sanctimonious #4 bank. While I sometimes take issue with Chris on his readings on capital markets related businesses, he is solid on his knowledge of traditional banking and also has access to very good intelligence in that arena.

Thanks to the crisis just past, we tend to think of banks as creating danger to bystanders via their over-the-counter trading operations: securitizations, CDOs, derivatives, all that stuff that is now loosely termed as “shadow banking.” But the US crisis prior to that was the S&L and the less widely recognized LBO debt meltdown of the early 1990s, both traditional bank lending. Even though economists airily wave it away as damaging but not catastrophic, it didn’t look that way at the time. Citibank nearly failed and the entire banking sector was really wobbly. Greenspan engineered an extremely steep yield curve to help banks earn their way out of the hole faster.

Wells is in the awkward position of being a monster traditional bank, when its big retail bank competitors, Citi, Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, also have substantial capital markets businesses. Citi has long had a leading foreign exchange and money markets business, and has a corporate cash management operation which in and of itself makes it too complicated to fail. Bank of America absorbed Merrill. JP Morgan, in addition to having a large investment banking business, also has a huge derivatives/tri party repo clearing business. That means they have more diversified sources of earnings.

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Like Mr.Rourke From Fantasy Island, RBS Chief Welcomes The Public To His Garden

Inside RBS chief’s very own Versailles

Arthur Martin, Daily Mail

He has received at least £35million since joining the beleaguered Royal Bank of Scotland in 2008.

But while the taxpayer-owned bank continues to record hefty losses, Stephen Hester’s personal spending on his lavish 350-acre estate continues unabated.

And yesterday some of those taxpayers who helped bail out his bank got to see exactly how the chief executive is spending his riches.

Mr Hester invited the public to see the manicured grounds of his £7million home, which would not look out of place at the Palace of Versailles.

He has hired some of the best landscape gardeners in the country to turn Broughton Grange into ‘one of the most significant private contemporary gardens in Britain’, in the words of one expert.

In rolling hills outside Banbury in Oxfordshire, the country pile boasts an outdoor heated swimming pool, two tennis courts and two horse paddocks.

However, the real jewels of the estate are the huge variety of spectacular gardens which are tended by a team of eight landscaping experts all year round.

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Koch Brothers Go International

Fund Faux Think-Tank For Tories In Canada

Mark Gongloff, Huffington Post

Canada’s governing Conservatives have launched a campaign to go after charitable groups that engage in politics, in a fairly transparent effort to fight back opposition to the expansion of Canada’s oil industry.

The Tories and their allies have made a meme out of complaining that Canada’s environmental groups are backed by foreign money, conveniently omitting that Canada’s oil sands have themselves been built with billions in foreign money.

But if the Tories go ahead with their campaign against politically active charities, they may find themselves having to smack down some of their own preferred charitable organizations — those that back the oil sands.

In a report released earlier this month, the left-leaning U.S. Center for American Progress reported that the Koch brothers, owners of Koch Industries and a favourite target of the American left, had donated $373,721 in total to the Fraser Institute, arguably Canada’s most prominent right-wing think tank and an official charity registered with the Canada Revenue Agency.

The Vancouver Observer reported Wednesday that that number may be somewhat higher. According to their research, the Koch brothers had donated nearly $500,000 to the Fraser Institute between 2008 and 2010.

This is something you wouldn’t discover reading the Fraser Institute’s annual reports,” the Exiled blog reported. “They decline to list the names of any of their funders.”

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