Did Barry Ritholtz get Diana Olick to see the light?

I received an interesting email this morning after being out of the office yesterday celebrating Columbus Day at an Indian Casino.  Someone sent me an interesting video clip from Larry Kudlow’s CNBC show on Monday.  Kudlow hosted a discussion about the foreclosure mess with CNBC’s Diana Olick and The Big Picture’s Barry Ritholtz.  It was pretty ho-hum until the last 3 minutes when the two began to spar when Diana Olick tried to down play the crisis by saying the banks have legitimate reasons to foreclose in the vast majority of these cases and downplaying the number of illegal trespassing claims committed by “Home Preservation” companies.  See below:

I admit I like Diana Olick and I have held back any public comments when I thought she missed the mark.  She had been very kind to MFI-Miami during it’s infancy, she’s interviewed me several times and has said positive things about my websites on her blog and when she did an appearance on Suze Orman’s show last year.  The exposure she gave MFI-Miami lead to me being interviewed by various international media outlets and lead to major law firms becoming clients.  Matter of fact, one of my first victories against a major bank was because a judge in Miami saw an interview I did with her three day prior to this particular hearing.  That interview gave my client’s attorney and me enough credibility to convince him to keep an elderly immigrant family from being tossed out onto the street.

Unfortunately, this sparring with Barry Ritholtz kind of pissed me off because it gave an impression she really didn’t know what the hell was going on.  I began to think maybe Richard Zombeck from the Huffington Post was right when he once referred to her as an apologist for the banking industry.

Originally this article was going to about debunking every one of her comments over the past two weeks.  Then something kind of cool happened today.  She wrote an awesome piece on her blog actually agreeing with everything Barry Ritholz, myself, Richard Zombeck, Martin Andelman and other bloggers have been saying for the past 24 months.

Hallelujah! She’s seen the light.  I think it’s one of her best blogs since last time she wrote about me.  LOL  Seriously, it is a great piece!  See it below:

Foreclosure Fraud: It’s Worse Than You Think

http://www.cnbc.com/id/39634568

There has been plenty of pontificating over the ramifications of foreclosure freezes on troubled borrowers, foreclosure buyers and the larger housing market, not to mention lawsuits, investor losses and bank write downs. There has been precious little talk of what the real legal issues are behind the robosigning scandal. Yes, you can’t/shouldn’t sign documents you never read, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. The real issue is ownership of these loans and who has the right to foreclose. By the way, despite various comments from the Obama administration, foreclosures are governed by state law. There is no real federal jurisdiction.

A source of mine pointed me to a recent conference call Citigroup [C  4.24  0.06  (+1.44%)   ] had with investors/clients.  It featured Adam Levitin, a Georgetown University Law professor who specializes in, among many other financial regulatory issues, mortgage finance. Levitin says the documentation problems involved in the mortgage mess have the potential “to cloud title on not just foreclosed mortgages but on performing mortgages.”

The issues are securitization, modernization and a whole lot of cut corners. Real estate law requires real paper transfer of documents and titles, and a lot of the system went electronic without much regard to that persnickety rule. Mortgages and property titles are transferred several times in the process of a home purchase from originators to securitization sponsors to depositors to trusts. Trustees hold the note (which is the IOU on the mortgage), the mortgage (the security that says the house is collateral) and the assignment of the note and security instrument.

The issue is in that final stage getting to the trust. The law demands that when the papers get moved around they are “wet ink,” that is, real signatures on real paper. But Prof. Levin tells me that’s not the worst of it. Affidavits assigned to the notes and security instruments are supposed to be endorsed over to the trust at the time of sale, but in many foreclosure scenarios the affidavits have been backdated illegally.

So with the chain of documentation now in question, and trustee ownership in question, here is one legal scenario, according to Prof. Levitin:

The mortgage is still owed, but there’s going to be a problem figuring out who actually holds the mortgage, and they would be the ones bringing the foreclosure. You have a trust that has been getting payments from borrowers for years that it has no right to receive. So you might see borrowers suing the trusts saying give me my money back, you’re stealing my money. You’re going to then have trusts that don’t have any assets that have been issuing securities that say they’re backed by a whole bunch of assets, and you’re going to have investors suing the trustees for failing to inspect the collateral files, which the trustees say they’re going to do, and you’re going to have trustees suing the securitization sponsors for violating their representations and warrantees about what they were transferring.

Josh Rosner, of Graham-Fisher, put the following out in a note today, claiming violations of pooling and servicing agreements on mortgages could dwarf the Lehman weekend:

Nearly all Pooling and Servicing Agreements require that “On the Closing Date, the Purchaser will assign to the Trustee pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement all of its right, title and interest in and to the Mortgage Loans and its rights under this Agreement (to the extent set forth in Section 15), and the Trustee shall succeed to such right, title and interest in and to the Mortgage Loans and the Purchaser’s rights under this Agreement (to the extent set forth in Section 15)”. Also, an Assignment of Mortgage must accompany each note and this almost never happens.

We believe nearly every single loan transferred was transferred to the Trust in “blank” name. That is to say the actual loans were apparently not, as of either the cut-off or closing dates, assigned to the Trust as required by the PSA.

Rather than continue to fight for the “put-back” of individual loans the investors may be able to sue for and argue that the “true sale” was never achieved.

Quite the can of worms. Anyone who says that the banks will fix all this in a few months is seriously delusional.

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I was quoted in an awesome piece in Der Spiegel about Deutsche Bank

If Deutsche Bank didn’t know who I was, they sure do now.

America’s Foreclosure King:

How the United States Became a PR Disaster for Deutsche Bank

Christoph Pauly and Thomas Schulz, Der Spiegel

Deutsche Bank is deeply involved in the American real estate crisis. After initially profiting from subprime mortgages, it is now arranging to have many of these homes sold at foreclosure auctions. The damage to the bank’s image in the United States is growing.

The small city of New Haven, on the Atlantic coast and home to elite Yale University, is only two hours northeast of New York City. It is a particularly beautiful place in the fall, during the warm days of Indian summer.

But this idyllic image has turned cloudy of late, with a growing number of houses in New Haven looking like the one at 130 Peck Street: vacant for months, the doors nailed shut, the yard derelict and overgrown and the last residents ejected after having lost the house in a foreclosure auction. And like 130 Peck Street, many of these homes are owned by Germany’s Deutsche Bank.

“In the last few years, Deutsche Bank has been responsible for far and away the most foreclosures here,” says Eva Heintzelman. She is the director of the ROOF Project, which addresses the consequences of the foreclosure crisis in New Haven in collaboration with the city administration. According to Heintzelman, Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank plays such a significant role in New Haven that the city’s mayor requested a meeting with bank officials last spring.

The bank complied with his request, to some degree, when, in April 2009, a Deutsche Bank executive flew to New Haven for a question-and-answer session with politicians and aid organizations. But the executive, David Co, came from California, not from Germany. Co manages the Frankfurt bank’s US real estate business at a relatively unknown branch of a relatively unknown subsidiary in Santa Ana.

How many houses was he responsible for, Co was asked? “Two thousand,” he replied. But then he corrected himself, saying that 2,000 wasn’t the number of individual properties, but the number of securities packages being managed by Deutsche Bank. Each package contains hundreds of mortgages. So how many houses are there, all told, he was asked again? Co could only guess. “Millions,” he said.

Deutsche Bank Is Considered ‘America’s Foreclosure King’

Deutsche Bank’s tracks lead through the entire American real estate market. In Chicago, the bank foreclosed upon close to 600 large apartment buildings in 2009, more than any other bank in the city. In Cleveland, almost 5,000 houses foreclosed upon by Deutsche Bank were reported to authorities between 2002 and 2006. In many US cities, the complaints are beginning to pile up from homeowners who lost their properties as a result of a foreclosure action filed by Deutsche Bank. The German bank is berated on the Internet as “America’s Foreclosure King.”

American homeowners are among the main casualties of the financial crisis that began with the collapse of the US real estate market. For years, banks issued mortgages to homebuyers without paying much attention to whether they could even afford the loans. Then they packaged the mortgage loans into complicated financial products, earning billions in the process — that is, until the bubble burst and the government had to bail out the banks.

Deutsche Bank has always acted as if it had had very little to do with the whole affair. It survived the crisis relatively unharmed and without government help. Its experts recognized early on that things could not continue as they had been going. This prompted the bank to get out of many deals in time, so that in the end it was not faced with nearly as much toxic debt as other lenders.

But it is now becoming clear just how deeply involved the institution is in the US real estate market and in the subprime mortgage business. It is quite possible that the bank will not suffer any significant financial losses, but the damage to its image is growing by the day.

‘Deutsche Bank Is Now in the Process of Destroying Milwaukee’

According to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), Deutsche Bank now holds loans for American single-family and multi-family houses worth about $3.7 billion (€3.1 billion). The bank, however, claims that much of this debt consists of loans to wealthy private customers.

More damaging to its image are the roughly 1 million US properties that the bank says it is managing as trustee. “Some 85 to 90 percent of all outstanding mortgages in the USA are ultimately controlled by four banks, either as trustees or owners of a trust company,” says real estate expert Steve Dibert, whose company conducts nationwide investigations into cases of mortgage fraud. “Deutsche Bank is one of the four.”

Read more here: http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,699754,00.html

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WaMu Executives Knew Of Rampant Mortgage Fraud And Failed To Act

David Heath, Huffington Post

One of the central unanswered questions of the financial crisis is whether bank executives knew fraud was rampant within their mortgage loans.

A Senate committee tomorrow will present evidence that in the case of Washington Mutual Bank, the largest bank failure in history, executives knew about the fraud – and in some cases failed to take much corrective action. By doing nothing, the bank could report higher profits and employees could earn higher bonuses.

So far no criminal charges have been brought against any senior executives as a direct result of the subprime meltdown. And today Sen. Carl Levin, the Michigan Democrat who will chair the hearing, sidestepped questions about whether Washington Mutual executives broke criminal laws.

But Levin’s committee has unearthed documents that show that in 2005, WaMu’s own internal investigation of two top-producing offices making subprime loans in southern California found that fraud was out of control. At one office in Downey, Calif., 58 percent of mortgages were found to be fraudulent. At an office in Montebello, Calif., the rate was even higher: 83 percent.

Yet “no steps were taken to address the problems, and no investors who purchased loans originated by those offices were notified in 2005 of the loan problems,” Levin’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations stated in a report released in advance of the hearing. (A summary of the committee’s findings are here)

Some problems persisted two years later. A follow-up internal review of the bank’s Montebello operation, in 2007, still found a fraud rate of 62 percent.

The results of WaMu’s 2005 internal investigation were sent directly to David Schneider, president of Home Loans. A committee aide said it was also shared with Kerry Killinger, Washington Mutual’s president, chief executive officer and chairman at the time.

Read more here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/12/wamu-executives-knew-of-r_n_534800.html

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MFI was quoted in Mortgage Daily

The paraphrased information about MFI-Miami has been boldfaced by me – Steve

Recent loan modification activity

Two organizations praised improvements to modification programs for conforming and government-insured loans. Two other firms are warning about the modification process and its players, while two service providers are offering products to help make the modification process easier for servicers. RediMod was launched by Lender Processing Services Inc., a press release Wednesday said. The new modular service automates mass modifications by automating loan eligibility and best-fit determinations without having to replace or upgrade core technology infrastructure.

“The solution includes data and analytics models that assign each loan in a portfolio a default propensity and loss severity score, as well as a highly configurable rules engine that identifies the borrowers who are delinquent or at risk of defaulting,” Lender Processing stated. “These loans then are run through a process that identifies the best possible workout option based upon factors, set by the servicer.”

ServiceLink said today that it provides loan modification solutions for a range of modification types — including rate resets, payment recasts and complex loan-term adjustments. Streamlined modification services include title and closing, valuation and a guarantee that the modification instrument does not impair the existing lien.

Billionaire Wilbur L. Ross issued a statement last week in support of the streamlined modification plan for conforming loans announced by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Ross owns American Home Mortgage Servicing Inc. — the former servicing operation of failed American Home Mortgage Investment Corp.

American Home Mortgage Servicing, which serviced $85 billion as of Oct. 30, completed nearly 20,000 loan modifications from May through October out of 37,553 requested modifications, the statement said. The Irving, Texas-based company encouraged private investors, which own 90 percent of the loans it services, to support the streamlined modification plan on nonconforming loans.

HOPE NOW issued a statement today praising improvements to the HOPE for Homeowners program announced yesterday by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Among the improvements was an increase in the maximum loan-to-value to 96.5 percent from 90.0 percent. Another enhancement was the ability to pay junior lienholders at the loan closing.

“Hope for Homeowners will now be an even more valuable and useful tool,” HOPE NOW said. “It is a worthwhile [addition] to the loan modification efforts that HOPE NOW members are using.”

An alert was issued by MFI-Miami LLC about criminally run loan modification companies. MFI, a mortgage auditing firm that also provides forensic mortgage fraud investigation services, said California and Florida are among the only states to regulate loan modification firms — though published reports indicate that Colorado now requires loan modification consultants to be licensed as mortgage brokers.

Among 10 factors MFI said should be scrutinized for modification companies were whether they contract work out, have an attorney on staff or guarantee their work.

Outreach Housing LLC released a statement last week calling on delinquent borrowers to be wary of loan modifications because borrowers are required to waive their rights. The company is prodding borrowers to let it help them find Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and Truth-in-Lending Act compliance errors — which it claims to have found on 60 percent of the documents it has analyzed.

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