Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Foreclosures Are Often In Lenders' Best Interest 20090728

DefaultForeclosures Are Often In Lenders' Best Interest-WashPost


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...l?hpid=topnews

Foreclosures Are Often In Lenders' Best Interest
Numbers Work Against Government Efforts To Help Homeowners

By Renae Merle
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009


Government initiatives to stem the country's mounting foreclosures are hampered because banks and other lenders in many cases have more financial incentive to let borrowers lose their homes than to work out settlements, some economists have concluded.

Policymakers often say it's a good deal for lenders to cut borrowers a break on mortgage payments to keep them in their homes. But, according to researchers and industry experts, foreclosing can be more profitable.

The problem is that modifying mortgages is profitable to banks for only one set of distressed borrowers, while lenders are actually dealing with three very different types. Modification makes economic sense for a bank or other lender only if the borrower can't sustain payments without it yet will be able to keep up with new, more modest terms.

A second set are those who are likely to fall behind on their payments again even after receiving a modified loan and are likely to lose their homes one way or another. Lenders don't want to help these borrowers because waiting to foreclose can be costly.

Finally, there are those delinquent borrowers who can somehow, even at great sacrifice, catch up without a modification. Lenders have little financial incentive to help them.

These financial calculations on the part of lenders pose a difficult challenge for President Obama's ambitious efforts to address the mortgage crisis, which remains at the heart of the country's economic troubles and continues to upend millions of lives. Senior officials at the Treasury Department and the Department of Housing and Urban Development have summoned industry executives to a meeting Tuesday to discuss how to step up the pace of loan relief. The administration is seeking to influence lenders' calculus in part by offering them billions of dollars in incentives to modify home loans.

Still, foreclosed homes continue to flood the market, forcing down home prices. That contributed to the unexpectedly large jump in new-home sales in June, reported yesterday by the Commerce Department.

"There has been this policy push to use modifications as the tool of choice," said Michael Fratantoni, vice president of single-family-home research at the Mortgage Bankers Association. But "there is going to be this narrow slice of borrowers for which modifications is the right answer." The size of that slice is tough to discern, he said. "The industry and policymakers have been grappling with that."

The effort to understand the dynamics of the mortgage business comes as the administration is prodding lenders to do more to help borrowers under its Making Home Affordable plan, which gives lenders subsidies to lower the payments for distressed borrowers. About 200,000 homeowners have received modified loans since the program launched in March, while more than 1.5 million borrowers were subject during the first half of the year to some form of foreclosure filings, from default notices to completed foreclosure sales, according to RealtyTrac.

No doubt part of the explanation is that lenders are overwhelmed by the volume of borrowers seeking to modify their mortgages. Rising unemployment and falling home prices have added to the problem.

But a study released last month by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston was downbeat on the prospects for widespread modifications. The analysis, which looked at the performance of loans in 2007 and 2008, found that lenders lowered the monthly payments of only 3 percent of delinquent borrowers, those who had missed at least two payments. Lenders tried to avoid modifying the loans of borrowers who could "self-cure," or catch up on their payments without help, and those who would fall behind again even after receiving help, the study found.

"If the presence of self-cure risk and redefault risk do make renegotiation less appealing to investors, the number of easily 'preventable' foreclosures may be far smaller than many commentators believe," the report said.

Nearly a third of the borrowers who miss two payments are able to self-cure without help from their lender, according to the Boston Fed study. Separately, Moody's Economy.com, a research firm, estimated that about a fifth of those who miss three payments will self-cure.

When Adrian Jones fell behind on the mortgage payments for her Dallas home earlier this year, her lender asked her to cut other expenses. Jones said she eliminated movies and coffee breaks. She turned to family members for loans. When that failed to raise enough, she sold her second car.

"It hurt, but it also made sense. The debt was my responsibility," Jones said.

But six months later, after catching up on the mortgage, Jones is again feeling pinched after her hours as an office assistant at an architecture firm were cut. This time, she's not sure she can fix the problem herself.

"I am going to try, obviously," she said. "But it is getting harder and harder."

Like Jones, those who are most determined to meet their obligations are often unlikely candidates for loan modifications.

"These are the people who will get a second job, borrow from their family to keep up," explained Paul S. Willen, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and an author of its report. ". . . From a cold-blooded profit-maximizing standpoint, these are the people the banks will help the least."

Lenders also worry that borrowers may re-default even after receiving a loan modification. This only delays foreclosure, which can be costly to the lender because housing prices are falling throughout the country and the home's condition may deteriorate if the owner isn't maintaining it. In some cases, lenders lose twice as much foreclosing on a home as they did two years ago, said Laurie Goodman, senior managing director at Amherst Securities.

American Home Mortgage Services, based in Texas, was willing to modify Edward Partain's mortgage on his Tennessee home last April after business at his beauty salon slowed and a divorce stretched his budget. But after months of negotiating with his lender, Partain said he was surprised to learn that it would only lower his payments by $90 a month, instead of the $250 decrease he expected.

"At $250, I would have had a chance, but after they added in late fees and payments, I couldn't do it," he said.

Partain soon fell behind on his payments again and went back to American Home Mortgage Services seeking a more affordable payment. Partain said he was told that he was ineligible for another modification because it had been less than a year since his last. A foreclosure sale was scheduled for late July.

After American Home Mortgage Services was contacted by The Washington Post about the case, the company said Partain would be considered for the federal foreclosure-prevention program and it delayed the sale by three months. Partain is relieved but anxious about the details.

"You want to wait and see what figures they come up with," he said.

Administration officials have not said publicly how many borrowers they expect to re-default under Obama's program.

But the experience of a separate program run by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. could be instructive. After taking over the failed bank IndyMac last year, the FDIC began modifying troubled mortgages held or serviced by the company. Richard Brown, the FDIC's chief economist, said the agency expects up to 40 percent of those borrowers to re-default.

Even at that rate, he said, the modification program is more profitable than doing nothing. "The idea that 30 to 40 percent re-default is a failure to a program is false," Brown said.

The administration has estimated that its foreclosure-prevention program would help 3 million to 4 million borrowers by 2012. But lenders' reluctance could limit the impact to less than half that, said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com. Coupled with re-defaults, this would mean that the number of people losing their homes to foreclosure could reach nearly 5 million by 2011, he said.

Mark A. Calabria, director of financial-regulation studies at the Cato Institute, warned that political rhetoric is driving the policy discussion. "What we really need to do is have an honest debate about what are the magnitudes of people we really can help," he said. But administration officials defended their program's progress, reporting that it has surpassed an initial goal of offering 20,000 modifications a week. These officials said they have taken into account the re-default risk and possibility for self-cure in designing the effort.

Michael S. Barr, assistant Treasury secretary for financial institutions, noted that the report by the Boston Fed does not cover the period since the administration launched its initiative. "We will continue to refine the program as new data becomes available," he said. "We are committed to studying the effectiveness and efficiency of the program, and we welcome outside analysis."

Willen, of the Boston Fed, said the government program could boost several-fold the number of seriously delinquent borrowers receiving modifications. But so few people had been getting their loans modified that even a dramatic increase in the percentage would still touch only a small fraction of troubled borrowers, he said.

"We're still not talking about a program that will stop a large number of foreclosures," he said. "We're talking about a program that, at the margins, will assist more people. It is unlikely we will see a sea change."

Dispute over parked car may lead to the streets for a mother of eight by Andre Coleman Pasadena Weekly 20090723

http://pasadenaweekly.com/cms/story/detail/mom_s_mustang_melee/7519/

Mom's Mustang melee

Dispute over parked car may lead to the streets for a mother of eight

By André Coleman 07/23/2009

Where does a family of 10 go after it's been kicked out of its home of 20 years?

"If I get evicted," said Margarita Holloman, an unemployed mother of eight kids ranging in age from 1 to 20, of her four-bedroom, two-story, federally subsidized apartment on Mayflower Avenue in Monrovia, "we would have to go from couches to cars and sleep wherever we can. That's all I can do. I don't have any place to go."

In May, Holloman was due in court to face an unlawful detainer — the last of several such eviction notices served on her over the past few years by managers of the Mayflower Apartments — for allegedly being a nuisance. But the 39-year-old, who was pregnant at the time, suffered a miscarriage that forced her to stay in the hospital for five days and miss that hearing before a judge, who ultimately ruled against her.

The only thing now keeping a roof over the heads of Holloman, her children and her boyfriend is action by Pasadena attorney Philip Koebel, who was denied a rehearing on Holloman's behalf, then helped Holloman file for bankruptcy protection, which brought a temporary halt to the eviction proceedings. A federal judge will decide on Aug. 3 if Holloman and her family can stay in the apartment or must leave.

"They have been trying for a long time to get her out," said Koebel. "Yet, she defeated all the unlawful detainers. What has astonished me is they haven't offered an alternative to her. We have offered to settle the case in many different ways."

Holloman insists that she has always paid her portion of rent — the $125 not covered by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development — on time. She also says there have been no complaints filed against her by other tenants. But landlord Samuel Yen, Holloman said, has unfairly deemed her a nuisance.

Yen referred all comment to his supervisor, Evan Escobar, who called Holloman's allegations "very untrue" before referring questions to attorney Richard Daggenhurst, who also refused to comment.

"She was in the hospital and still they are trying to put us out," said Holloman's boyfriend, Quaran Lauderdale, who also lives in the apartment and is the father of three of Holloman's children. "It's like these people don't have a heart."

If the bankruptcy judge rules against her, it's unclear what might happen to Holloman's kids. Her two oldest boys — Kenneth, 20, and Kendall, 19, who were both formerly standout athletes at Monrovia High School — may be forced to skip college in order to help their mother. Holloman also has children ages 1, 3, 5, 9, 7 and 11 years old.

Holloman's latest problems began after her son Kenneth parked his beat-up 2000 Ford Mustang in his mother's parking space before heading off to Utah Valley College, where he is majoring in criminal justice. The car had bald tires, no bumpers and looked like it had been abandoned.

Holloman said she spent the next several weeks moving the vehicle to several different parking spaces in order to demonstrate that the vehicle ran and could be moved. Unfortunately, that didn't help. Police were called and the vehicle was towed. This enraged Holloman, who confronted Yen and called him several derogatory terms, including "fat' and a "pervert."

"It was an ugly car, but it was registered and it ran, but he had it towed anyway," Holloman said of Yen. "I called him some names, but I never threatened him."

Several days later, Holloman received a notice evicting her for breach of her lease, alleging she was a nuisance. Koebel requested a mediation hearing by phone, but the two sides were unable to come to an agreement. At the end of that call, Koebel requested formal mediation, but Daggenhurst declined.

Koebel said he had expected the opposing attorney to serve him with any papers pertaining to Holloman, but that never happened. Instead, Daggenhurst had Holloman served with an eviction notice at her home. Several days later, Holloman suffered a miscarriage. She did not speak to Koebel about the unlawful detainer and missed the deadline to file a motion to stop the eviction.

Under California law, a landlord can serve a tenant notice to vacate within 30 days. "The landlord does not have to provide any reason for the eviction, unless a rent control ordinance requires just cause," Koebel explained. "If the tenant does not leave within 30 days of the notice, the landlord can file a suit for the eviction."

According to Holloman, she never had a problem at the apartments until Yen took over as landlord in 2000. After Lauderdale moved in four years later, Yen allegedly tried to have Holloman evicted for having an unauthorized occupant, but a judge ruled against him.
A short time later, Yen allegedly began taking pictures of family members when they were in the courtyard. The police were also called on Holloman's sons Kenneth and Kendall, who were searched by police several times, but never arrested.

Kendall is scheduled to leave for Weaver State in Pennsylvania next year, where he plans to major in criminal justice. But now, Kendall said, "I'm not sure if I should go anymore. We need a different place to stay so we can have some peace."

"That makes me mad," Holloman said. "I want them to focus on their education. I want them to go and make something out of themselves and this is distracting them. It is hurting my family."

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Defending Against “Foreclosure Defense” Lawsuits

 
Spring 2009
Defending Against "Foreclosure Defense" Lawsuits
by Julia M. Wei, Esq, The Law Office of Peter N. Brewer

As foreclosure rates rise and the legislative bodies nationwide rush to address this, plaintiffs lawyers are also cashing in with "Foreclosure Defense" lawsuits.

Borrowers pay a fee to the "Foreclosure Defense" attorney to provide a so-called forensic audit of their loan documents.  The attorney will often send a demand letter (Qualified Written Request under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, codified as Title 12 section 2605(e) of the United States Code / Truth In Lending Act 15 U.S.C. section 1601) to obtain the loan documents and then file a cookie-cutter complaint shortly thereafter.

The foreclosure defense lawsuits come in three flavors:
(1) TILA rescission;
(2) Lost Promissory Note; and
(3) Everything But the Kitchen Sink (TILA, RESPA, HOEPA, FCRA, RICO, etc.)

The Truth-in-Lending-Act does indeed provide for rescission of the loan in certain circumstances, but of all the claims above, it is the least beneficial for borrowers as rescission actually requires the borrowers to pay back the loan proceeds.  (However, there is some caselaw out there that indicating the Act does not actually specify that the borrower must pay the loan back before the Lender rescinds the loan and reconveys the deed of trust.) 

The "Lost Promissory Note" lawsuit is reaching high levels of popularity, especially in the present backlash against mortgage-backed securities.  The Foreclosure Defense gurus reason that the original note is long gone as it has been sold, or assigned or securitized in a stream of transactions.  They further reason that without the original Note, the deed of trust is a "nullity" and there is no proof the borrower ever incurred the debt. 

Under the Uniform Commercial Code, adopted in California as Commercial Code Section 3-309, the lender can still enforce the lost instrument if three prerequisites are satisfied:
(1) the person was in possession of the instrument and entitled to enforce it when loss of possession occurred;
(2) the loss of possession was not the result of a transfer by the person or a lawful seizure; and
(3) the person cannot reasonably obtain possession of the instrument because the instrument was destroyed, its whereabouts cannot be determined, or it is in the wrongful possession of an unknown person or a person who cannot be found or is not amenable to service of process

The most recent case discussing this code section actually addresses lost checks, and in that circumstance, the Court found it could allow the recipient of the lost check to enforce it so long as the payor (or bank) was adequately protected against a 2nd party who finds the check also seeking to cash it. [Crystaplex Plastics, Ltd. v. Redevelopment Agency, (2000) 77 Cal. App. 4th 990.]

The case of Huckell v. Matranga is illustrative in a circumstance where the beneficiary has lost the original promissory note.  In that case, the Court found that Bank of America as Trustee was entitled to request a surety bond before issuing the reconveyance of the Deed of Trust. [Huckell v. Matranga (1979) 99 Cal.App.3d 471.]

Accordingly, there is no requirement that the original promissory note is required in order to conduct a trustee's sale, as the beneficiary can bond around the missing note.  That said, a lawsuit on the lost promissory note can certainly slow things down and may be fairly effective in stalling institutional lenders.  Private money lenders are less likely to have hypothecated the loans to such a degree as to cause confusion over the location of the note.

The "Everything but the Kitchen Sink" type of Complaint is freely available for download on the web from various bloggers.  A wave of these complaints has swept California in both state and federal courts.  In the state courts, these complaints are usually filed in conjunction with defending against an unlawful detainer action and then consolidated to stop the eviction.  The case is then removed to federal court due to the "federal question" of the alleged violations.

Lenders, mortgage brokers, loan servicers, Realtors and appraisers are often named in these lawsuits.  Many times, not all the defendants can even be served as they are either defunct, or in bankruptcy.  Of course, as these complaints are filed merely in an effort to slow down the lender, the plaintiff's counsel rarely expends much effort to even get the complaints properly served on the defendants.   The borrowers are not paying their mortgages and they may pay their attorney a one-time flat fee simply to file the lawsuit. 

Accordingly, a vigorous and early defense is the best method to deal with these opportunistic lawsuits.   In federal court, a 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss should be brought to test the sufficiency of the complaint.  Alternatively, a Rule 11 motion for sanctions against the attorney may be the best approach.  In that circumstance, the plaintiff and plaintiff's counsel has a "safe harbor" period in which to dismiss the lawsuit.  There is also a state court equivalent, known as a C.C.P.  Section 128.7 motion for sanctions.

Beyond that, once the parties engage in discovery, there will be close scrutiny on the loan documents.  Can your documents withstand it? 

Julia is an attorney with The Law Office of Peter N. Brewer. The firm serves the legal needs of homeowners, real estate and mortgage brokers and agents, property managers, loan servicers, title companies, developers, investors, other real estate professionals and their clients. You can contact the firm at: 350 Cambridge Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94306, Ph: 650/327-2900, Fax: 650/327-5959, or on the Web at: www.brewerfirm.com.

Oh no you didn't ...

Oh no you didn't arrest Skip Gates on his own doorstep... Talk about the dumbest cop in America.

The 58-year-old professor had returned from a trip to China last Thursday afternoon and found the front door of his Cambridge, Mass., home stuck shut. Gates entered the back door, forced open the front door with help from a car service driver, and was on the phone with the Harvard leasing company when a white police sergeant arrived.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32077998/ns/us_news-race_and_ethnicity/?GT1=43001

Analysis: Scholar's arrest is racial signpost - Race & ethnicity
Analysis: Scholar's arrest is racial signpost
Case signals there's 'nothing post-racial' about U.S., colleague of Gates says
ANALYSIS
By JESSE WASHINGTON
AP National Writer
The Associated Press
updated 3:18 a.m. PT, Wed., July 22, 2009

It took less than a day for the arrest of Henry Louis Gates to become racial lore. When one of America's most prominent black intellectuals winds up in handcuffs, it's not just another episode of profiling — it's a signpost on the nation's bumpy road to equality.

The news was parsed and Tweeted, rued and debated. This was, after all Henry "Skip" Gates: Summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Yale. MacArthur "genius grant" recipient. Acclaimed historian, Harvard professor and PBS documentarian. One of Time magazine's "25 Most Influential Americans" in 1997. Holder of 50 honorary degrees.

If this man can be taken away by police officers from the porch of his own home, what does it say about the treatment that average blacks can expect in 2009?

Earl Graves Jr., CEO of the company that publishes Black Enterprise magazine, was once stopped by police during his train commute to work, dressed in a suit and tie.

"My case took place back in 1995, and here we are 14 years later dealing with the same madness," he said Tuesday. "Barack Obama being the president has meant absolutely nothing to white law enforcement officers. Zero. So I have zero confidence that (Gates' case) will lead to any change whatsoever."

The 58-year-old professor had returned from a trip to China last Thursday afternoon and found the front door of his Cambridge, Mass., home stuck shut. Gates entered the back door, forced open the front door with help from a car service driver, and was on the phone with the Harvard leasing company when a white police sergeant arrived.

Racial profiling?
Gates and the sergeant gave differing accounts of what happened next. But for many people, that doesn't matter.

They don't care that Gates was charged not with breaking and entering, but with disorderly conduct after repeatedly demanding the sergeant's name and badge number. It doesn't matter whether Gates was yelling, or accused Sgt. James Crowley of being racist, or that all charges were dropped Tuesday.

All they see is pure, naked racial profiling.

"Under any account ... all of it is totally uncalled for," said Graves.

"It never would have happened — imagine a white professor, a distinguished white professor at Harvard, walking around with a cane, going into his own house, being harassed or stopped by the police. It would never happen."

Racial profiling became a national issue in the 1990s, when highway police on major drug delivery routes were accused of stopping drivers simply for being black. Lawsuits were filed, studies were commissioned, data was analyzed. "It is wrong, and we will end it in America," President George W. Bush said in 2001.

Yet for every study that concluded police disproportionately stop, search and arrest minorities, another expert came to a different conclusion. "That's always going to be the case," Greg Ridgeway, who has a Ph.D in statistics and studies racial profiling for the RAND research group, said on Monday. "You're never going to be able to (statistically) prove racial profiling. ... There's always a plausible explanation."

Federal legislation to ban racial profiling has languished since being introduced in 2007 by a dozen Democratic senators, including then-Sen. Barack Obama.

U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, D-Ill., said that was partly because "when you look at statistics, and you're trying to prove the extent, the information comes back that there's not nearly as much (profiling) as we continue to experience."

But Davis has no doubt that profiling is real: He says he was stopped while driving in Chicago in 2007 for no reason other than the fact he is black. Police gave him a ticket for swerving over the center line; a judge said the ticket didn't make sense and dismissed it.

"Trying to reach this balance of equity, equal treatment, equal protection under the law, equal understanding, equal opportunity, is something that we will always be confronted with. We may as well be prepared for it," he said.

'Tumultuous' behavior
Amid the indignation over Gates' case, a few people pointed out that he may have violated the cardinal rule of avoiding arrest: Do not antagonize the cops.

The police report said that Gates yelled at the officer, refused to calm down and behaved in a "tumultuous" manner. Gates said he simply asked for the officer's identification, followed him into his porch when the information was not forthcoming, and was arrested for no reason. But something about being asked to prove that you live in your own home clearly struck a nerve — both for Gates and his defenders.

"You feel violated, embarrassed, not sure what is taking place, especially when you haven't done anything," said Graves of his own experience, when police made him face the wall and frisked him in Grand Central Station in New York City. "You feel shocked, then you realize what's happening, and then you feel it's a violation of everything you stand for."

And that this should happen to "Skip" Gates — the unblemished embodiment of President Obama's recent admonition to black America not to search for handouts or favors, but to "seize our own future, each and every day" — shook many people to the core.

Wrote Lawrence Bobo, Gates' Harvard colleague, who picked his friend up from jail: "Ain't nothing post-racial about the United States of America."

Jesse Washington covers race and ethnicity for The Associated Press.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32077998/ns/us_news-race_and_ethnicity/?GT1=43001


© 2009 MSNBC.com

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Hoffman v. Lloyd (9th Cir. 2009) California’s Home Equity Sales Contract Act 20090720

-Bankruptcy-
Debtor's right under California's Home Equity Sales Contract Act to rescind the sale of his foreclosed home never expired where the sale did not comply with HESCA provision regarding notification of revocation right, debtor's agreement with purchaser did not expressly release HESCA rights, and buyer did not come forward with any evidence suggesting debtor actually knew of his HESCA rights at the time of signing the agreement.
Hoffman v. Lloyd - filed July 20, 2009
Cite as 08-15814
Full text http://www.metnews.com/sos.cgi?0709%2F08-15814

Monday, July 20, 2009

President Obama Signs the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act and the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act 20090520

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/reforms-for-american-homeowners-and-consumers-president-obama-signs-the-helping-families-save-their-homes-act-and-the-fraud-enforcement-and-recovery-act/

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 20, 2009

REFORMS FOR AMERICAN HOMEOWNERS AND CONSUMERS
President Obama Signs the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act and the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act


WASHINGTON – Today, President Obama will sign the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act and the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act into law.

"These landmark pieces of legislation will protect hardworking Americans, crack down on those who seek to take advantage of them, and ensure that the problems that led us into this crisis never happen again," said President Obama.

The Helping Families Save Their Homes Act is an important step towards stabilizing and reforming our nation's financial and housing markets – helping American homeowners and increasing the flow of credit during these difficult economic times. This legislation will strengthen our nation's housing sector and facilitate the goals of the Administration's Making Home Affordable Program by helping millions of American homeowners stay in their homes.

The Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act will protect the American people by giving the federal government new tools and resources to prevent fraud. This reform bill will help the federal government keep markets free and fair, so that American consumers can thrive.

Fact sheets on both pieces of legislation are below.

The Helping Families Save Their Homes Act

Expanding Reach of Making Home Affordable to Help More Homeowners
The deep contraction in the economy and in the housing market has created devastating consequences for homeowners and communities throughout the country. Since January, the Administration has made significant progress in developing and implementing a comprehensive plan for stabilizing our housing market, the centerpiece of which is the Making Home Affordable Program (MHA). By reducing foreclosures around the country, the average homeowner could see their house price bolstered by as much as $6,000 as a result of this plan, and as many as 9 million homeowners may increase the affordability of their mortgages and avoid preventable foreclosures.

Our progress in implementing MHA to date has been substantial. We have introduced detailed guidelines for loan modifications which will establish a new standard practice for affordable modifications in the industry. Servicers covering more than 75 percent of loans in the country have now begun modifications and refinancings under the Administration's MHA Program. We have also launched MakingHomeAffordable.gov, a consumer website for the program, which has had more than 17 million page views in less than 2 months, announced details of our Second Lien Program, Home Price Decline Protection Incentives and Foreclosure Alternatives Program, strengthened Hope for Homeowners as a part of the MHA program, and expanded the efforts of the federal government to combat mortgage rescue fraud.

  • Improvements to Hope for Homeowners The legislative improvements to Hope for Homeowners included in S.896 should significantly improve the ability of borrowers to benefit from the opportunities provided by Hope for Homeowners in the context of the Administration's housing plan. On April 28th we announced new details describing how Hope for Homeowners will be strengthened as a part of the Administration's Making Home Affordable Program. Incentive payments will be available for successful Hope for Homeowners refinances and servicers will be required to evaluate all applicants for eligibility for Hope for Homeowners as well as the Home Affordable Modification Program.

    Hope for Homeowners targets help to underwater borrowers, who often face heightened risks of foreclosure, by requiring principal writedowns to help homeowners increase the equity they own in their homes. The legislative modifications to the Hope for Homeowners program included in S.896 will ease restrictions on eligibility and enable refinancing of underwater mortgages for a greater number of borrowers.

  • Modifications to FHA and federally guaranteed farm loans Legislative changes to FHA and federally guaranteed farm loans will facilitate cost-neutral loan modifications for federally guaranteed rural housing loans and FHA loans. These changes will improve the Administration's ability to provide assistance to responsible borrowers with federally guaranteed rural housing loans and FHA loans as part of the Making Home Affordable Program.


Increasing Flow of Credit by Expanding FDIC and NCUA Capabilities
The Helping Families Save Their Homes Act of 2009 contains provisions that will help to restore and support the flow of credit in the US economy. The act authorizes new important tools to assist in stabilizing the financial system during the current economic downturn. Together these provisions, described below, should provide additional support for increasing the flow of credit in the US economy.

  • Extension of temporary increase in deposit insurance Extending the temporary increase in deposit insurance will provide added confidence to depositors. This will provide depository institutions with a more stable source of funding and enhanced ability to continue making credit available across our economy.

  • Increase in borrowing authority of the FDIC
    Increasing the borrowing authority for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to $100 billion will allow the FDIC to spread out premium increases over time. This will reduce near-term costs for banks and thrifts, which will enhance their ability to continue making credit available. As a further tool to protect the financial system, the legislation also includes a process to allow the FDIC to borrow additional amounts through December 31, 2010.

  • Increase in NCUA borrowing authority and creation of a stabilization fund The legislation will increase the borrowing authority for the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) to $6 billion and create a Stabilization Fund to address problems in the corporate credit union sector. This will reduce near-term costs for credit unions, which will enhance their ability to continue making credit available. As a further tool to protect the financial system, the legislation also includes a process to allow the NCUA to borrow additional amounts through December 31, 2010.


Increasing Consumer Protections Related to Housing

  • Establishes protections for renters living in foreclosed homes One of the often overlooked problems in the foreclosure crisis has been the eviction of renters in good standing, through no fault of their own, from properties in foreclosure. To address the problem of these tenants being forced out of their homes with little or no notice, this legislation will require that in the event of foreclosure, existing leases for renters are honored, except in the case of month-to-month leases or owner occupants foreclosing in which cases a minimum of 90 days notice will be required. Parallel protections are put in place for Section 8 tenants.

  • Establishes right of a homeowner to know who owns their mortgage
    Often mortgage loans are sold and transferred a number of times. Borrowers often have difficulty determining who owns their loan, and who to contact with questions, problems or complaints about their loan. This legislation requires that borrowers be informed whenever their loan is sold or transferred, so that they will always know who owns their loan.


Provides Comprehensive New Resources for Homeless Americans
This legislation significantly increases aid to homeless Americans, appropriating $2.2 billion dollars to help solve the crisis of homelessness, and address the enormous costs homelessness can impose on individuals, families, neighborhoods and communities. In addition, the legislation consolidates homelessness programs to improve effectiveness and streamline administration, and targets assistance to families with children – the fastest growing segment of the homeless population.

The Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act

Strengthening the Capacity to Fight, Prevent, and Deter Fraud
The legislation strengthens the capacity of federal prosecutors and regulators to hold accountable those who have committed fraud. The amendments expand the Department of Justice's authority to prosecute crimes involving mortgage fraud, commodities fraud, and fraud involving U.S. government assistance provided during the recent economic crisis.

  • Covering private mortgage brokers and other companies Over 50% of sub-prime mortgages issued as recently as 2005 involved private mortgage institutions and similar entities not currently covered under federal bank fraud criminal statutes. FERA amends the definition of a "financial institution" in the criminal code (18 U.S.C. § 20). This will extend Federal laws to private mortgage brokers and companies that are not directly regulated or insured by the Federal Government.

    • This law will expand the Department of Justice's authority to prosecute mortgage fraud involving private mortgage institutions under a variety of statutes, including 18 U.S.C. § 215 (financial institution bribery); 18 U.S.C. § 225 (continuing financial crimes enterprise); 18 U.S.C. § 1005 (false statement/entry/record for financial institution); and 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (bank/financial institution fraud).
    • The bill changes the definition of "financial institution" to include private mortgage brokers and other non-bank lenders will enhance our ability to prosecute criminals under the bank fraud statute who commit fraud involving loans from those companies.
  • Prohibiting manipulation of the mortgage lending business
    The new law changes the mortgage applications statute (18 U.S.C. § 1014) to make it a crime to make a materially false statement or to willfully overvalue a property in order to influence any action by a mortgage lending business. Currently, the offense only applies to federally-regulated institutions.

  • Protecting the Integrity of TARP and the Recovery Act
    The legislation amends the major fraud statute (18 U.S.C. § 1031) to protect funds expended under TARP and the Recovery Act.

  • Covering commodity futures and options in anti-fraud statutes
    This law amends the Federal securities statute (18 U.S.C. § 1348) to cover fraud schemes involving commodity futures and options. Currently, the statute does not reach frauds involving options or futures, which include some of the derivatives and other financial products that were part of the financial collapse.

  • Broadening the False Claims Act
    FERA modifies the False Claims Act (FCA) to eliminate the requirement that a false claim be presented to a federal official, or that it directly involve federal funds. It also amends the FCA reverse false claims provision to ensure that the knowing retention of an overpayment is a violation.


Providing the Resources to Keep Markets Free and Fair
There is no shortcut to effective fraud enforcement and prevention. FERA will also provide needed resources to help the Department investigate and prosecute those who engage in fraudulent schemes.

  • Investing in fraud prevention and enforcement
    The legislation authorizes up to $165 million in new resources for FY 2010 and 2011 to hire fraud prosecutors and investigators.

  • Strengthening the federal government's full regulatory and enforcement capacity
    The legislation authorizes $140 million for the FBI, $50 million for U.S. Attorney's Offices; $20 million for the Criminal Division, $15 million for the Civil Division, $5 million for the Tax Division, $30 million for the US Postal Inspection Service, $30 million for the Inspector General at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, $20 million for the Secret Service, and $21 million for the Securities and Exchange Commission.


Addressing the Causes and Consequences of the Crisis
This legislation creates a bipartisan Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission to investigate the financial practices that brought us to this point, so that we make sure it never happens again.
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Sunday, July 12, 2009

JPMorgan Chase & Company 20090421

http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/morgan_j_p_chase_and_company/index.html?inline=nyt-org&

JPMorgan Chase & Company

JPM: NYSE; Financials/Financial Services - Diversified

Updated: April 21, 2009

As it name suggests, JPMorgan Chase is the product of many combinations involving some of the most storied names in American banking. In a 10-year stretch beginning in 1991, four of the biggest and oldest New York financial institutions -- Chase Manhattan Bank (founded by Aaron Burr), Chemical Bank and Manufacturer Hanover Bank were joined with J.P. Morgan and Company, the venerable investment bank. Then in 2004, the combined company merged with Bank One Corp., in a $58 billion deal that remains the largest of its kind.

That deal brought JPMorgan within a whisker of catching Citigroup as the world's largest financial institution, and combined Bank One's vast branch retail network with JPMorgan's investment banking franchise. It also brought James Dimon, a former rising star at Citigroup who became chief executive of Bank One after being forced out by Citigroup's chairman, Sanford I. Weill, his former mentor. Mr. Dimon became chief executive of the combined company, and its chairman in 2006.

While the company was formed by acquisitions, Mr. Dimon proved to be notably cautious about further big deals. And while losses from mortgage-related securities drove profits down at the end of 2007, JPMorgan in early 2008 appeared to have avoided the worst of the battering damaging its competitors. The company was in a good position to move quickly when Bear Stearns came face to face with bankruptcy in March 2008. Known as a tough negotiator, Mr. Dimon struck a bargain that had Wall Street gasping when it was announced on March 16, buying Bear Stearns for a mere $2 a share -- a tenth of its closing price -- together with a Federal Reserve loan for $30 billion secured by Bear Stearns's shaky portfolio.

With the advent of the credit crisis in September, Washington Mutual, a giant savings and loan that had been hobbled by bad mortgages, teetered on the brink of collapse. Federal regulators called a familiar number: James Dimon's. The head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation told him the F.D.I.C. was about to seize WaMu — and then sell it to JPMorgan. JPMorgan paid $1.9 billion to the F.D.I.C. to acquire all of WaMu's assets, branches and deposits. With WaMu, JPMorgan has $905 billion in deposits and 5,400 branches nationwide, rivaling Bank of America in size and reach. But the bank was also responsible for absorbing $31 billion in losses tied to WaMu's troubled loans. WaMu shareholders and certain bondholders were wiped out, but a taxpayer funded WaMu bailout was avoided.

JPMorgan Chase reported a $2.1 billion profit in the first quarter of 2009, besting analysts' average forecasts. Revenue increased to $25 billion, up 45 percent from $16.9 billion in the period last year. Still, the results reflected continued turmoil in sectors like credit card services and private equity, businesses that reported losses or steep drops in revenue, reflecting the lingering effects of the recession on consumer spending and the credit markets.

Mr. Dimon is adamant that his company will pay back $25 billion in government bailout funds as soon as regulators allow. "Folks, it has become a scarlet letter," said Mr. Dimon, referring to the taxpayer infusion the bank received in October 2008. "We could pay it back tomorrow," he said. "We have the money."

And JPMorgan Chase did just that on June 17 when it became one of 10 banks to repay about $68 billion in bailout funds. JPMorgan's share was $25 billion; the bank allowed to do repay the money after it had passed a stress test given by government regulators.

Looking for the Lenders’ Little Helpers by Gretchen Morgenson NY Times 20090711

The following quote is from the article by Gretchen Morgenson linked below...

"One example is a suit filed in Federal District Court in Atlanta, on behalf of the borrowers, Patricia and Ricardo Jordan. The Jordans are fighting a foreclosure on their home of 25 years that they say was a result of an abusive and predatory loan made by NovaStar Mortgage Inc. A lender that had been cited by the Department of Housing and Urban Development for improprieties, like widely hiring outside contractors as loan officers, NovaStar ran out of cash in 2007 and is no longer making loans.

Also named as a defendant in the case is the initial trustee of the securitization that contained the Jordans' loan: JPMorgan Chase. In 2006, the bank transferred its trustee business to Bank of New York Mellon, which is also a defendant in the case. The Jordans are asking that all three defendants pay punitive damages.

"We contend that the trustee has direct liability on the theory that even though they were not sitting at the loan closing table, they were involved in the securitization and profited from it," said Sarah E. Bolling, a lawyer in the Home Defense Program at the Atlanta Legal Aid Society who represents the Jordans. "The prospectus had been written before the loan was closed. If this loan was not going to be assigned to a trust, it would not have been made.""


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/12/business/12gret.html

Fair Game

Looking for the Lenders' Little Helpers

Published: July 11, 2009

IT is hard not to be dismayed by the fact that two years into our economic crisis so few perpetrators of financial misdeeds have been held accountable for their actions. That so many failed mortgage lenders do not appear to face any legal liability for the role they played in almost blowing up the economy really rankles. They have simply moved on to the next "opportunity."

And what of the giant institutions that helped finance these monumentally toxic loans, or arranged the securitizations that bundled the loans and sold them to investors? So far, they have argued, fairly successfully, that they operated independently of the original lenders. Therefore, they are not responsible for any questionable loans that were made.

But this argument is growing tougher to defend. Some legal experts point to a number of cases in which plaintiffs contend that firms involved in the securitization process, like trustees hired to oversee the pools of loans backing securities, worked so closely with the lenders that they should face liability as members of a joint venture. And these experts see a rising receptiveness to this argument by some courts.

"As we are unpeeling what was happening on Wall Street, we may see that Wall Street didn't find the safety from litigation risk that it hoped to find in securitization," said Kathleen Engel, a professor at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law at Cleveland State University. "I think there is potential for liability if borrowers can engage in discovery to see exactly how much the sponsors were shaping the practices of the lenders."

One example is a suit filed in Federal District Court in Atlanta, on behalf of the borrowers, Patricia and Ricardo Jordan. The Jordans are fighting a foreclosure on their home of 25 years that they say was a result of an abusive and predatory loan made by NovaStar Mortgage Inc. A lender that had been cited by the Department of Housing and Urban Development for improprieties, like widely hiring outside contractors as loan officers, NovaStar ran out of cash in 2007 and is no longer making loans.

Also named as a defendant in the case is the initial trustee of the securitization that contained the Jordans' loan: JPMorgan Chase. In 2006, the bank transferred its trustee business to Bank of New York Mellon, which is also a defendant in the case. The Jordans are asking that all three defendants pay punitive damages.

"We contend that the trustee has direct liability on the theory that even though they were not sitting at the loan closing table, they were involved in the securitization and profited from it," said Sarah E. Bolling, a lawyer in the Home Defense Program at the Atlanta Legal Aid Society who represents the Jordans. "The prospectus had been written before the loan was closed. If this loan was not going to be assigned to a trust, it would not have been made."

IN their legal briefs, the trustees have made the traditional argument that their relationship with NovaStar was not a joint venture and that they are not responsible for any problems with the Jordans' loan.

A JPMorgan spokesman declined to comment on the case but said that because the bank was no longer the trustee, it was not directly involved in the litigation. A spokesman for Bank of New York Mellon also declined to comment.

A lawyer for NovaStar did not return calls seeking comment.

The facts surrounding the Jordans' case are depressingly familiar. In 2004, interested in refinancing their adjustable-rate mortgage as a fixed-rate loan, they said they were promised by NovaStar that they would receive one. In actuality, their lawsuit says, they received a $124,000 loan with an initial interest rate of 10.45 percent that could rise as high as 17.45 percent over the life of the loan.

Mrs. Jordan, 66, said that she and her husband, who is disabled, provided NovaStar with full documentation of their pension, annuity and Social Security statements showing that their net monthly income was $2,697. That meant that the initial mortgage payment on the new loan — $1,215 — amounted to 45 percent of the Jordans' monthly net income.

The Jordans were charged $5,934 when they took on the mortgage, almost 5 percent of the loan amount. The loan proceeds paid off the previous mortgage, $11,000 in debts and provided them with $9,616 in cash.

Neither of the Jordans knew the loan was adjustable until two years after the closing, according to the lawsuit. That was when they began getting notices of an interest-rate increase from Nova- Star. The monthly payment is now $1,385.

"I got duped," Mrs. Jordan said. "They knew how much money we got each month. Next thing I know I couldn't buy anything to eat and I couldn't pay my other bills."

All the defendants in the case have asked the judge to dismiss it. The Jordans are awaiting his ruling.

Perhaps the most famous case that linked a brokerage firm with a predatory lender was the one involving First Alliance, an aggressive lender that declared bankruptcy in 2000, and Lehman Brothers, its main financier.

More than 7,500 borrowers had successfully sued First Alliance for fraud, and in 2003 a jury found that Lehman, which had lent First Alliance roughly $500 million over the years to finance its lending, "substantially assisted" it in its fraudulent activities. Lehman was ordered to pay $5.1 million, or 10 percent of damages in the case, for its role.

Another case, from 2004, took up the issue of liability for abusive lending that went beyond a loan's originator. That case, which involved Wells Fargo and a borrower named Michael L. Short, was settled after the court denied two motions to dismiss it.

That matter turned on the language in the securitization's pooling and servicing agreement, which provides details not only on the types of loans in a pool but also on the relationships of various parties involved in it.

Diane Thompson, a lawyer with the National Consumer Law Center, said that the meaning of the agreement was that "the trustee was a joint venture with the originator and was therefore responsible for everything that happened in that joint venture."

Many such agreements, she said, create a joint venture by force of law. "Everybody I know that has tried this argument has had pretty good success. Absolutely we are going to see more of these cases."

And let us not forget that late in the mortgage mania, Wall Street was no longer content simply to package these loans and sell them to investors. Eager for the profits generated by originating these loans, big firms bought subprime lenders to keep their securitization machinery humming. This could expose the firms to liability.

"I think something that hasn't been explored much is the extent to which the financial services industry has exposure to litigation risk in securitizations," Professor Engel said. "As the industry got faster and looser, Wall Street just stopped paying attention. And when you stop paying attention, you get in trouble."

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