Community | April 13, 2011 | 11 comments

Alert Monsters are Real !! FORCLOSURE-GATE 5.0 : Banks Win !? Again?!

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figgdimension
Wow, the Obama administration has openly negotiated against itself on behalf of the banks. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything so craven heretofore.
As readers may recall, we weren’t terribly impressed with the so-called mortgage settlement talks. It started out as a 50 state action in the wake of the robosigning scandal, and was problematic from the outset. Some state AGs who were philosophically opposed to the entire exercise joined at the last minute, presumably to undermine it. Not that they needed to expend much effort in that direction, since plenty of Quislings have signed up for the job.
The supposed leader of the effort, Tom MIller of Iowa, promised criminal prosecutions, then promptly reneged. His next move was to get cozy with the Treasury, presumably out of his interest in heading the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Federal regulators, such as the OCC and the Fed, who do not like being upstaged by states, were similarly keen to exert “leadership”, which really meant “lead a hasty retreat from anything that might inconvenience the banks.” So Miller, who was supposed to be representing the interests of the states, was instead working with the Treasury et al. to beat the state AGs into line (and separately, since the state and Federal legal issues are very different, the idea of having a joint effort was questionable from the outset). Not only have some Republicans (predictably) rebelled, but so to have the more aggressive Democrats, such as Eric Schneiderman of New York, Lisa Madigan of Illinois, and Catherine Masto of Nevada.
The first sighting of what this group might come up with was a bizarre 27 page proposal. It was bizarre because it represented an incomplete set of demands. You never do that in a negotiating context, you make a complete offer and see what other side’s counter.
The proposal was incomplete because it failed to describe the sort of release the banks would get (would they be released from claims by the state AGs on robosigning, or broader areas of liability?) and there was no section for penalties, despite press rumors and Congressional tooth gnashing about $20 billion and up sanctions. We dissed it not only for those reasons but also because it was largely a recitation of existing law, with only two new provisions: one was the end of dual track (in which servicers keep the foreclosure process moving ahead even as mod evaluation and approvals are also in progress) and single point of contact, in which the borrower has a dedicated person to deal with on his case. We deemed single point of contact to be undoable and unnecessary (as in if servicers straightened out their procedures and trained their staff adequately, they wouldn’t have the screw-ups that led to demands for single point of contact). Yet despite the obvious shortcomings of this deal, the bank lobbyist masquerading as a bank regulator known as the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has absented itself from this effort in an apparent show of pique.
Given how underwhelming the 27 page leaked proposal was, it was predictable that the banks’ counteroffer verged on being a joke. As we noted last week:

It should really be no surprise that the banksters have the temerity to take a weak mortgage fraud settlement proposal, advanced by the 50 state attorneys general and various Federal agencies, and water it down to drivel. Since March 2009, when the Obama administration cast its lot with them, major financial firms have become increasingly intransigent. And this has proven to be a winning strategy, since Obama’s pattern over his entire political career has been to offer proposals that don’t live up to their billing, then eagerly trade away what little substance was there in the interest of having bragging rights for yet another “achievement”….
What’s striking is the utter lack of any teeth or any procedural requirements. The banks’ position is that they are to be trusted after having demonstrated again and again that they’ll take anything that is not nailed down. It is drafted wherever possible to make current practices fall within the “settlement”, which means the “settlement” is a total whitewash.

We then had wild card enter the picture. American Banker reported that “federal regulators” were about to issue cease and desist orders to force the servicers to take the negotiations seriously. Normally, that would be a potent threat. But the leaked version that American Banker posted didn’t even qualify as a slap on the wrist. As Adam Levitin explained:

The C&D order basically tells banks to set up lots of internal procedures and controls within the next few months and then to tell their regulators what they have done…. The result, I suspect, is that in a few months the bank regulators will declare that everything is fine.
(Even if the regulators think the internal controls are inadequate, it’s not clear what the consequence would be. My guess is that it just results in the bank regulator telling the bank to revise and resubmit.)…
(I was struck in some places by the linguistic similarities between the proposed C&D order and the banks’ counterproposal to the AGs. It’s impossible to know who was cribbing from whom, but the similar language is revealing.)
So here’s what’s going down. The bank regulators are going to provide cover for the banks by pretending to discipline them very hard, but not really doing anything. The public will see a stern C&D order, but there won’t be any action beyond that. It’s as if the regulators are saying so all the neighbors can hear, “Banky, you’ve been a bad boy! Come inside the house right now because I’m going to give you a spanking!” And then once the door to the house closes, the instead of a spanking, there’s a snuggle. But the neighbors are none the wiser. The result will be to make it look like the real cops (the AGs and CFPB) are engaged in an overzealous vendetta if they pursue further action.

Tonight, a story in the New York Times lends credence to the American Banker account:

The nation’s top mortgage servicers are expected to sign legal agreements by the end of this week compelling them to change their foreclosure procedures, regulatory officials said Tuesday.
The servicers, which violated state and local laws and regulations governing foreclosures, are agreeing to improve their methods in numerous ways. They will be required to have more layers of oversight and proper training of their foreclosure staff. The oversight will extend to third party groups, including the law firms that do much of the actual work of eviction.

The New York Times, however, seems to be buying bank/Adminisration PR hook, line and sinker. For instance:

Under the new rules, every homeowner in default will have a single point of contact with the servicer.

“Single point of contact” does NOT mean a dedicated person. A phone number with a live person answering it would do. This is basically the same level of service as provided with credit cards, minus the prompts to, say, get to the “lost or stolen card” person versus the “balance transfer” person. So it’s better than what servicers provide now, but it is an Orwellian defining down of what “single point of contact” originally meant.
Another Times misconstruction:

One of the most significant measures in the consent agreement will require servicers to hire an independent consultant to review foreclosures done over the last two years. If owners were improperly foreclosed on or paid excessive fees, they will be compensated.

If you read the consent decree the review is NOT comprehensive, as the Times erroneously implies(more pepper in your wheaties at link and sources and so on and on and on tired,? sick? petrified yet?! you should be i 'm only partially thru my inbox )-figg
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11 comments // Alert Monsters are Real !! FORCLOSURE-GATE 5.0 : Banks Win !? Again?!

  • samthesixth
  • bailey78
  • Leen61
  • Mark701
    • +1
      Mark701  
    • All I can say is, keep it up. Keep screwing with the middle class and when they strike back (and they will) it won't be pretty.

    • 1 year ago
  • corderodedios
    • +1
      corderodedios  
    • Churning the housing market through foreclosure generates a lot of money for a lot of folks - excise taxes and fees to county governments, brokers, inspectors, loan execs, service providers, points to banking institutions, etc. A tsunami of foreclosures means a tsunami of rakeoff money flowing into the pockets of these parasites.

      There would be no rakeoff if existing homeowners were offered new deals on principal and interest to keep them in their homes - deals similar to those a new buyer probably gets. I've seen it first hand.

      It might otherwise be difficult for institutions to finance a foreclosure program of the magnitude of the one at hand,which has been going on for years, but thanks to the Bush/Obama bailouts, institutions were flush with resources to institute an aggressive program that continues to this day.

      And the political system needs a source of funding for the record amounts to be spent in the 2012 race. Much of this funding will come from banksters, brokers, and others in line for the rakeoff, in the spirit of tithing. Surprise!

    • 1 year ago
  • COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
    • +4
      COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM  
    • Is Obama morphing into a Robert Mugabe?

      Is this the time when ANONYMOUS enters and rewrites all mortgage holders books to show that all individual mortgages have been paid in full???

      Is this the time to storm the Bastille of corporatism?

      Where is the Bastille of corporatism? In our Nation's Capitol building?

    • 1 year ago
  • wolfess
    • +1
      wolfess  
    • COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM:

      Is this the time when ANONYMOUS enters and rewrites all mortgage holders books to show that all individual mortgages have been paid in full???

      And as soon as they finish with that, they can do the same for all those with student loans since most of the same banks hold both. After those 2 groups of loans are wiped off the books of the extortibanks THEN let's see the gov't bail out the extortionists :-)!!!!

    • 1 year ago
  • figgdimension
  • COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
  • Progresshiv
  • figgdimension
    • +3
      figgdimension  
    • are you nice and warmed up????? feeling saucy like me have a drink its ok ... you'll need it. I'm just warming up myself,.... hold on to your hat!

    • 1 year ago
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