Foreclosure Hearings Show Homeowners Who in Washington Cares

Richard Zombeck, Huffington Post

I know that even as I write this, no amount of proof or testimony from experts will stop seemingly sanctimonious, self-righteous ignoramuses from making comments about deadbeat homeowners who caused the entire economic meltdown because they simply didn’t want to pay their bills.

I recently wrote a piece calling attention to articles written by Matt Taibbi from Rolling Stone and William Black, former Senior Regulator during the S&L debacle, making very clear points that this crisis was not caused by homeowners, yet there were still comments from people who insisted homeowners caused the meltdown.

Aside from being ignorant and baseless, the problem with those comments is that they rely on the rest of us assuming one of two things: 1.) That somehow millions of people woke up one morning and collectively decided to commit fraud using the most complex and intricate financial instruments invented, and 2.) Everyone woke up stupid.

While the second assumption could be successfully argued to a point, given that a shocking percentage of people in this country don’t know that the GOP regained control of Congress, it’s hardly an argument for mortgage fraud, nor does it justify having your home taken.

In short, these comments most likely come from the industry itself, people who suffer from a lack of basic reading comprehension skills, are selectively ignorant, simply don’t care, or a convoluted combination of the mix.

Mark Rodgers, Director of Public Affairs for Citi Group, left a comment on one of my posts, back in July touting Citi’s supposed, albeit fabricated, efforts in the foreclosure mess and offered a report (written by Citi Group) proving his claims of his company’s transparency. Two weeks later Citi ended up shelling out $75 million to the SEC for having lied to investors about high-risk mortgages and last week the company admitted having a paperwork problem after months of vehemently denying it.

That’s not to say that the other side doesn’t have its fair share of fakes and phonies. Steve Dibert of MFI-Miami has an interesting expose of who he identifies as key offenders posing as activists who lean more towards histrionics and wildly inflated and convoluted claims, rather than providing homeowners with accurate and useful information.

“These guys not only won’t post comments from people who correct them, they don’t even post comments that enhance their claims with more info. It’s like they have to be the authority on everything,” one angry reader wrote to me in a recent e-mail.

It’s surprising and disturbing that in an era of unlimited information there are those who simply choose to get it wrong.

During the past couple of months a wealth of information has flooded the media about robo-signers and mortgage fraud on the part of banks and servicers. Attorneys general, law firms, and investigators have begun looking into the nefarious and suspect practices that can best be described as financial terrorism. This led to impressive action and inquiry in the form of congressional hearings.

Having spent the better part of two days watching three hearings ripe with questions, statements, and testimony relating to mortgage, foreclosures, and the HAMP program (the administration’s miserable attempt at a mortgage relief plan) I was left with an unfamiliar, yet not entirely unpleasant feeling of hope. While the result of these hearings remains to be seen, there’s a sense that a handful of government officials get it and seem to be looking out for the rest of us. I would suggest that anyone involved, affected, or generally tweaked by the fiasco that has consumed the country, Congress, and millions of families take a few hours, sit back, and watch the show.

I’ve listed the three different hearings and highlighted particularly interesting, but not unique statements below.

Let’s start with the Congressional Oversight Panel Hearing.

Congressional Oversight Panel on TARP Foreclosure Mitigation Programs – October 27th

Watch it here: Congressional Oversight Panel Hearing

Damon Silver, director of policy and Special Counsel for the AFL-CIO and a member of the panel, blasted Treasury about their inability to see what was right in front of them. In an exchange with Treasury Department’s representative, Phyllis Caldwell, who seemed to show more concern for the banks than for homeowners, Silvers says:

While banks and mortgage servicers are bracing for a wave of lawsuits over flawed paperwork, Ms. Caldwell said the government believed the overall risks to the financial system were slim.

“We’re very closely monitoring any litigation risk to see if there is any systemic threat, but at this point, there’s no indication that there is,” she testified.

I’m concerned about Treasury making representations categorically that you don’t see a systemic risk,” Silvers told Treasury’s chief homeownership officer. “And let me walk you through exactly why.”

“That letter asks for $47 billion of mortgages — of mortgage- backed securities to be repurchased at par,” Silvers went on. “Do you know what those mortgages are currently carried at … the market value of those bonds today?”

Caldwell says nothing.

Silvers continues:

“OK, fine. Let me tell you what the Fed says they’re worth. The Fed tells us they’re worth 50 cents on the dollar. So if the Fed’s request to Bank of America is honored, right, Bank of America, assuming they are carrying these bonds, assuming when they buy them back they mark them to market, Bank of America will take a $23 billion loss.

“The Federal Reserve further informs us that there is nothing particularly unique about that particular set of mortgage-backed securities — meaning they have not been chosen…because they’re particularly bad. They believe they are of a common quality with the rest of Bank of America’s underwritten mortgage-backed securities. There are $2 trillion [worth] of Bank of America’s underwritten mortgage-backed securities.

“Five such deals — five such requests, if honored to Bank of America…will amount to more than the current market capitalization of Bank of America, which is $115 billion.

“Now do you wish to retract your statement that there is no systemic risk in this situation? And the word is ‘risk’ — not ‘certainty’ — but ‘risk’? And I would urge you to do so, because these things can be embarrassing later.”

Shahien Nasiripour, of The Huffington Post, has the exchange here, and you can watch the hearing in its entirety here.

During that same hearing, J. Mark McWatters, also a member of the panel described how, as a corporate lawyer, he’s seen commercial property debt be worked out when properties are seriously underwater.

“In a commercial setting, what you would do is to write the loan down,” McWaters says. He goes on to explain how this negotiation works for all parties concerned in very simple terms. The segment is well worth watching and can be found at the 171:00 mark of the video.

Last week the panel released a report on the mortgage documentation mess. According to a New York Times articles by Gretchen Morgenson, “It argued that, yes, in fact, these paperwork problems may have significant implications for banks, investors and the stability of the financial system.”

The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs – November 16th

Watch it here: Problems in Mortgage Servicing From Modification to Foreclosure

On November 16th The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs conducted a hearing on “Problems in Mortgage Servicing From Modification to Foreclosure“. Diane E. Thompson of the National Consumer Law Center, a longtime advocate for homeowners and no stranger to congressional hearings laid out the systemic fraud on the part of loan servicers in her written statement:

What robo-signing reveals is the contempt that servicers have long exhibited for rules, whether the rules of court procedure flouted in the robo-signing scandal or the contract rules breached in the common misapplication of payments or the rules for HAMP modifications, honored more often in the breach than in reality. Servicers do not believe that the rules that apply to everyone else apply to them. This lawless attitude, supported by financial incentives and too-often tolerated by regulators, is the root cause of the robo-signing scandal, the failure of HAMP, and the wrongful foreclosure of countless American families.

The falsification of judicial foreclosure documents is closely and directly tied to widespread errors and maladministration of HAMP and non-HAMP modification programs, and the forcedplaced insurance and escrow issues. Homeowners for decades have complained about servicer abuses that pushed them into foreclosure without cause, stripped equity, and resulted, all too often, in wrongful foreclosure.

During the hearing both Barbara Desoer, President Bank of America Home Loans and David Lowman, CEO of Chase Home Lending, looked particularly puny, unprepared, and visibly rattled throughout their testimony and questioning. Both of these executives gave the same tired excuses of this being the homeowners fault and that no one who is being foreclosed on is undeserving of the action. They both also continue to contend that their obligation and contract with investors is what is holding up and preventing them from modifying mortgages.  “Many investors limit Bank of America’s discretion to take certain actions,” Desoer says in her statement. A statement, according to a Propublica report, that is simply not true. In fact, a study by UCDavis School of Law found that only eight percent of contracts covering subprime deals prohibited modification. In fact, almost two-thirds of the contracts explicitly gave servicers the authority to make modifications, particularly for homeowners who had defaulted or were facing imminent default. The rest of the contracts did not address modifications at all.

For either of these executives to claim, under oath, that they are doing everything they can to help homeowners and deny that they aren’t stalling, purposely pushing homeowners to the brink of collapse, and unfairly taking homes for no other reason than to cover up a mess that they caused constitutes perjury. I would suggest they read any of the hundreds of stories, submitted by homeowners every day – in their own words at www.shamethebanks.org to see precisely what homeowners think of what Desoer and Lowman consider help.

At around the 161:00 mark in the video Senator Jon Tester (MT) runs through the letters his office has received from homeowners getting the run around from banks. He cites examples from the letters of homeowners who have paid their bills and have been paying their bills, “getting hammered”.

“These are not isolated incidents,” Tester says. “I don’t know how many people who didn’t come to me that are out on the street [as a result].”

Mortgage Services and Foreclosure Practices, Financial Regulators Panel – November 18th

Watch it here: Mortgage Services and Foreclosure Practices, Financial Regulators Panel

One of the more enjoyable exchanges in the month-long hearing-paluza came from Representative Maxine Waters, California. You may remember her as being one of the few members of Congress to take up the cause of homeowners when this mess started to unravel, going so far as to call servicers on behalf of her constintuents. During the November 18th Mortgage Services and Foreclosure Practices, Financial Regulators Panel, Waters visibly loses patience with Phyllis Caldwell, chief of Treasury’s Homeownership Preservation Office during an exchange in which Waters repeatedly asked Caldwell if she had “levied any penalties or sanctions.” Watch the exchange here. You can also watch the entire hearing on C-Span’s Video Library.

Idiotic statements are not rare at these hearings and for the most part, in all three of these hearings they come from the banks, servicers, and their representatives, not the panelists. As David Dayen writes on FireDogLake:

One of the more amusing moments of yesterday’s House Financial Services Committee hearings on foreclosure fraud was when the representatives for the loan servicers were asked why they were subsidiaries of the large financial institutions. The link between the servicers and the big banks, mainly caused by a series of mergers, leads to all kinds of conflicts of interest, because it inevitably pairs them up with the originator or trustee of the loan. The servicers had no real answer to this question. Finally, the Wells Fargo representative claimed that it was for “customer convenience,” because some customers had their mortgage and their checking accounts at the same bank.

Everyone’s jaw dropped in the hearing room.

Dayen had a conversation with Rep. Brad Miller,  who wrote a letter to the Financial Stability Oversight Committee, Secretary Geithner and the Chairman of the FSOC. The letter signed by all the top leaders of the House Financial Services Committee, “seriously ratchets up the demands on the Financial Stability Oversight Council. Among other things, it asks the FSOC to use its authority under Dodd-Frank to force the large financial institutions to divest from the loan servicers,” according to Dayen.

Read the conversation in “Rep. Brad Miller: “Protecting bank solvency has been a goal of Treasury that I do not share“. Be sure to read Miller’s letter, in which he writes:

First, we urge that the members of the Council examine a representative sample of collateral loan files of each major servicer to determine if the files contain all the documents required by contract or by law, including the note; mortgage, deed of trust or equivalent document; and all documents evidencing or constituting the necessary assignment, delivery and recording of those documents.

This is precisely what homeowner activists have been demanding for years. I made a similar statement to Diana Farrell, Deputy Director of the National Economic Council when I was at Treasury in April. If there was ever a time for the “chicken little” activists to have a call to action it would be over this letter.

I would urge anyone going through this to watch these hearings and educate yourselves as best you can. I recently received an e-mail from a homeowner expressing that same sentiment.

Dear Mr. Zombeck:

I have been reading your work on mortgage fraud for the past year.  My husband and I have spent the past year defending our foreclosure pro se and just this week our case was dismissed.   We filed for a HAMP modification in March 2009.  We waited ten months for an answer.  Because of your articles and shamethebanks.org we began to understand and piece together exactly what the bank was doing to us.  I have sent copies of your articles to our bank and even included “Extend and Pretend” as an exhibit in our trial brief.

I would offer this same advice to those people who chose to see homeowners as the cause of this fiasco. Watch these hearings, listen to the testimonies, and decide for yourselves.

Bethaney McLean, author of “The Smartest Guys in the Room”, in which she exposed the corrupt business practices of Enron officials, teamed up with Joe Nocera on the recently published “All the Devils Are Here” addressing the mortgage debacle and its role in the meltdown. In an interview on PBS News Hour McLean describes how her own preconceived notions of this being the fault of deadbeat borrowers changed once she started investigating all the players in the game.

I — I started this book with a bias toward personal responsibility, and, if consumers got in over their head on their mortgage, that was their fault.

And one of the big discoveries to me in the course of reporting the book is the extent to which these loans were sold; they weren’t bought. And one of the most telling moments were these internal documents from Washington Mutual, one of the big subprime lenders, around 2003 talking about how to get consumers who really wanted safe 30-year fixed-rate mortgages to take out these dangerous option ARMs instead….

how to sell those to people, and how to confront a consumer who said, but it doesn’t feel right to me. I want to pay back my mortgage every month. This is what my parents did.

How do you get these people to take out a risky mortgage instead? You told them that home prices could only go up. And the reason Washington Mutual wanted to sell these option ARMs, instead of the 30-year fixed rate mortgages, is that Washington Mutual could turn around and sell these to Wall Street for a lot more money than it could sell the old 30-year fixed-rate loans.

There’s a good reason why homeowners are being blamed for this: It’s easy and the banks tell us to blame them. The simple fact is no one wants to understand and wrap their head around things like securitization, mortgage backed securities, credit default swaps, derivatives, collateralized debt obligations, and the rest of the mathematically complicated financial products that blew up our economy. Who would? The people that are to blame certainly don’t want to explain that to the rest of us, so they tell us it’s all about deadbeat homeowners and people dragging this country down by not paying their bills.

After all, it’s much easier to blame your neighbor, sit your sanctimonious ass down, and watch “Dancing with Stars.”

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Trying to Put a Price on Bank Errors

Gretchen Morgenson, NY Times

KUDOS to the Congressional Oversight Panel for publishing a thoughtful and thorough report last week on the mortgage documentation mess. It argued that, yes, in fact, these paperwork problems may have significant implications for banks, investors and the stability of the financial system.

Since mortgage paperwork flaws became front-page news this fall, the banks caught in the glare have characterized the problems as technicalities that are easily remedied.

Their responses sound a lot like Mike Wazowski, the assistant scarer in “Monsters, Inc.,” who is reprimanded for not turning in his daily reports. “Oh, that darn paperwork,” he tells his supervisor. “Wouldn’t it be easier if it all just … blew away?”

But the mortgage paperwork problems aren’t blowing away, and the panel report analyzes their implications in fine detail. It also questions the view, held by some overseeing the Treasury Department’sloan modification effort, that mortgage documentation errors have no impact on the program.

Phyllis Caldwell, chief of the Treasury’s Homeownership Preservation Office, articulated the Treasury’s view in her testimony before the panel, according to the report. She said false affidavits and other processing flaws weren’t problematic for the government’s modification plan, known as the Home Affordable Modification Program or HAMP.

Because loan modifications don’t require physical production of a mortgage and note, the Treasury has not been examining whether document flaws have an impact on its efforts, she said.

Ted Kaufman, the former Delaware senator who leads the panel, saw it differently on Thursday. “Financial institutions all say everything is fine, but prudence would dictate that we make sure,” he said. “Not that we don’t trust the banks, but let’s take a hard look at this thing.”

In an interview on Friday, Tim Massad, acting assistant Treasury secretary for financial stability, clarified his agency’s position. “We weren’t saying these problems aren’t serious,” he said. “They are extremely serious, they are clearly widespread, they do pose dangers and they need to be fixed. But based on the evidence today, we didn’t see a systemic risk to financial stability.”

STILL, the oversight report points out problems that arise if servicers modify mortgages under HAMP when they don’t actually have the right to do so.

First, the report said, borrowers may either be granted or denied modifications improperly. And paperwork errors may mean the government is paying modification bounties of $1,500 a mortgage to the wrong banks.

Treasury officials told the oversight panel that if ownership of the mortgage was not properly transferred, the government could claw back incentives paid to the wrong institution.

But such a solution may not be feasible, the report concluded. And even if the Treasury chased down a loan servicer to return the incentive money it received in error, the government would have essentially handed that bank an interest-free loan for the period it kept the funds.

Read more here: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/21/business/21gret.html?_r=1

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Wall Street says “Hey, Main Street we’re taking your jobs!”

One of my contacts on Wall Street sent me a copy of this email that has been floating around.  If anyone knows who this person is, let me know I want to hire them as a writer for this site.  I like their “in your face” style!

“We are Wall Street. It’s our job to make money. Whether it’s a commodity, stock, bond, or some hypothetical piece of fake paper, it doesn’t matter. We would trade baseball cards if it were profitable. I didn’t hear America complaining when the market was roaring to 14,000 and everyone’s 401k doubled every 3 years. Just like gambling, its not a problem until you lose. I’ve never heard of anyone going to Gamblers Anonymous because they won too much in Vegas.

Well now the market crapped out, & even though it has come back somewhat, the government and the average Joes are still looking for a scapegoat. God knows there has to be one for everything. Well, here we are.

Go ahead and continue to take us down, but you’re only going to hurt yourselves. What’s going to happen when we can’t find jobs on the Street anymore? Guess what: We’re going to take yours. We get up at 5am & work till 10pm or later. We’re used to not getting up to pee when we have a position. We don’t take an hour or more for a lunch break. We don’t demand a union. We don’t retire at 50 with a pension. We eat what we kill, and when the only thing left to eat is on your dinner plates, we’ll eat that.

For years teachers and other unionized labor have had us fooled. We were too busy working to notice. Do you really think that we are incapable of teaching 3rd graders and doing landscaping? We’re going to take your cushy jobs with tenure and 4 months off a year and whine just like you that we are so-o-o-o underpaid for building the youth of America. Say goodbye to your overtime and double time and a half. I’ll be hitting grounders to the high school baseball team for $5k extra a summer, thank you very much.

So now that we’re going to be making $85k a year without upside, Joe Mainstreet is going to have his revenge, right? Wrong! Guess what: we’re going to stop buying the new 80k car, we aren’t going to leave the 35 percent tip at our business dinners anymore. No more free rides on our backs. We’re going to landscape our own back yards, wash our cars with a garden hose in our driveways. Our money was your money. You spent it. When our money dries up, so does yours.

The difference is, you lived off of it, we rejoiced in it. The Obama administration and the Democratic National Committee might get their way and knock us off the top of the pyramid, but it’s really going to hurt like hell for them when our fat a**es land directly on the middle class of America and knock them to the bottom.

We aren’t dinosaurs. We are smarter and more vicious than that, and we are going to survive. The question is, now that Obama & his administration are making Joe Mainstreet our food supply…will he? and will they?”

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Will Republicans aid financial reform?

The political faultlines of financial reform are not breaking cleanly along party lines, as Republicans break rank to support it.

Thomas Noyes, UK Gaurdian

Will the GOP block financial reform to extract revenge for healthcare? John McCain, grumpy on a good day, was outright cranky over the passage of healthcare reform, promising “no co-operation for the rest of the year” on any legislation.

But not all Republicans agree they should be the “party of no”. The conservative author (and former George W Bush speechwriter) David Frum criticised fellow Republicans for trying to turn healthcare reform into Obama’s Waterloo instead of trying to get their ideas included in the bill. According to Frum, the result was that “when we went for all the marbles, we ended with none“. Frum’s remarks generated so much heat among conservatives that he resigned from the American Enterprise Institute before the week was out.
Emboldened by their success, Barack Obama and his allies on Capitol Hill wasted little time in placing financial reform next on the agenda. They are betting that a few Republicans will resist the temptation to go for all the marbles by simply opposing any bill.
Two Republican senators had already broken ranks to negotiate a bill with Democrat Chris Dodd, who chairs the Senate finance committee. Last week, Dodd decided to press the issue by releasing his own draft legislation, though he was careful to leave the door open for further negotiations with his Republican colleagues. Dodd’s bill, which runs 1,120 pages, would create a new consumer protection watchdog, regulate the exotic derivatives that have spiralled out of control and build a firewall between commercial banking and investment banking.

After the near-death experience of healthcare reform, one might think that Democrats in Congress would be wary of taking on another large, complex bill that expands government involvement in the private sector. But instead of making things harder, Dodd said that the recent passage of healthcare reform “strengthened our hand” on financial reform.
One Republican senator, Bob Corker of Tennessee, who has been talking with Dodd, thinks his party made a “major strategic error” by walking away from bipartisan negotiations on healthcare, giving Democrats a political advantage. Making things even more complicated for Republicans, another of their senators, Richard Shelby, has engaged in separate talks with Dodd. With the bankers being blamed for the current recession, it seems likely that several other Republican senators will be looking for ways to support financial reform rather than just dig in their heels.

Read more here: http://ow.ly/1rRr5

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