The Mortgage Settlement Expires in 2015. What Else Have We Not Been Told?

Banks Battling To Keep Reforms From Becoming Permanent

Ben Hallman, Huffington Post

The promises made by five of the nation’s largest banks under the much-ballyhooed $25 billion mortgage settlement have a surprisingly short shelf life.

Under the deal struck in February, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Ally Financial pledged to stop the illegal practices that sparked false documentation and “robo-signing,” which helped push many homeowners into foreclosure and caused endless headaches for millions of other borrowers.

But the legal agreements among the banks, and the states and federal government hold for only three-and-a-half years; the pledge runs out in 2015. Now many of these banks are battling California Attorney General Kamala Harris over her push to make permanent some of the settlement’s most important “servicing standard” reforms by writing them into state law.

“The success of the national mortgage settlement in terms of reforms is laudable, but it only lasts for three years,” Harris said. “We need to make the fixes permanent.”

Banks do not seem to agree. The California Bankers Association, along with four of the five banks that settled the abuse investigation by federal and state governments in March — Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, and Wells Fargo — spent about $500,000 on lobbying efforts in California during the first three months of 2012, according to state disclosure records. It is not possible to tell from disclosure forms how much of that money was spent to influence the pending mortgage legislation, but state officials who support the legislation said lobbyists for all the settling banks except for Ally, which is much smaller than the rest, have spoken out against the proposed laws.

The California legislation is known as the “Homeowner Bill of Rights.” If enacted, all banks and servicers in the state — not just the biggest — would be required to adopt the settlement reforms. One measure, for example, would restrict “dual-tracking,” in which banks pursue foreclosure proceedings against homeowners who are pursuing a trial loan modification at the same time. Another would require financial institutions to establish a single point of contact for troubled borrowers — a response to widespread complaints from homeowners that when they called for help, they never could speak to the same person twice.

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DeMarco Defers Decision On Principal Write-Downs

Fannie, Freddie leader’s mortgage-cutting dilemma

Kathleen Pender, San Francisco Chronicle

Ed DeMarco, the man who oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is still mulling whether to allow permanent principal reductions on mortgages owned or guaranteed by the taxpayer-supported entities.

DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, said he would have a decision by the end of April, but on Friday his spokeswoman said the decision “is being deferred” while the agency “continues to work on its principal forgiveness analysis.”

Fannie and Freddie allow temporary reductions – known as principal forbearance – on some underwater loans.

But DeMarco is under intense pressure to let Fannie and Freddie permanently forgive principal for some borrowers.

The pressure is coming from troubled homeowners and their advocates, the Obama administration and some legislators (mostly Democrats) and economists. They say DeMarco is taking his job – preserving Fannie and Freddie assets – too zealously and is single-handedly blocking a recovery in the housing market.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-San Jose, has called DeMarco an idiot for not reducing principal. “The private sector is doing more principal reductions than the brain-dead government,” she says.

Peter Goodman, business editor at the Huffington Post, labeled him “America’s most dangerous man.”

Van Jones, co-founder of Rebuild the Dream, called DeMarco an “ideologue” in an interview on KQED radio this month.

There are at least 11 million borrowers who owe more than their homes are worth. Jones and others would like to see lenders reduce all of these underwater loans to market value.

Many not theirs

But only about 4.5 million of those are owned or guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie, and only a subset of them would be eligible for partial principal forgiveness if DeMarco allows it.

“This particular fight is about adding one more option to the modification menu for about 700,000 loans,” says Jed Kolko, chief economist with Trulia.

It would affect only homeowners with a Fannie or Freddie loan on their primary residence who are underwater and behind on their payments and qualify for the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program.
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U.S. adds muscle to financial fraud investigations

Aruna Viswanatha, Reuters

An Obama administration task force probing misconduct that fueled the financial crisis is increasing its ranks, adding five financial analysts and 10 new federal prosecutors spread across the country, according to a senior Justice Department official.

The increased staffing reflects a new push by the administration to aggressively pursue cases against firms and individuals who contributed to the 2007-2009 financial crisis, especially ahead of the November election.

The U.S. Justice Department has so far brought few cases against high-profile targets since the crash.

The department closed criminal investigations without bringing charges against firms whose names are closely tied to the 2008 crash, including AIG and Countrywide.

Individual Wall Street players have largely escaped prosecution, after the Justice Department lost its first criminal case against two former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers in 2009.

U.S. enforcement authorities have asked for patience, saying financial crisis cases are complex and though the behavior may look bad, it doesn’t always amount to outright fraud.

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Ally says it may put ResCap in bankruptcy

David Henry and Rick Rothacker, Reuters

Ally Financial Inc, the U.S. government-owned lender, said its mortgage unit could file for bankruptcy, in the company’s most direct statement so far about its plans for the struggling business.

Ally Chief Executive Michael Carpenter said its Residential Capital LLC unit has been examining options that range from “staying the course” to bankruptcy.

“We think that the single most important thing that we can do to preserve and enhance shareholder value is to distance Ally from the mortgage business,” Carpenter said on a conference call with investors after the company posted quarterly earnings.

Sources have told Reuters that bankruptcy was an option for ResCap, possibly as early as mid-May, but the company had previously only hinted at the possibility. An executive said Ally failed a recent test from regulators for soundness in distressed economic situations, known as the Federal Reserve’s “stress test,” in large part because of liabilities linked to the mortgage business.

Ally, which was originally the lending arm of General Motors, said it learned on Wednesday that Chrysler Group LLC was not renewing a preferred lending agreement that will now expire next year, but executives downplayed the importance of that loss on the call.

Ally is 73.8 percent owned by the U.S. Treasury after a series of bailouts spurred by its ballooning mortgage losses. The lender hoped to repay taxpayers through an initial public stock offering, but last year it shelved those plans as problems mounted at ResCap and market conditions deteriorated during the European debt crisis.

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