Archive for October 18th, 2010
The Loss Of Trust And The Great Unraveling To Come
Anyone who believes the foreclosure crisis can be contained is deluded, because the real issue in play is the citizens’ trust in their government’s ability to govern the nation’s Financial Elites according to the rule of law. Clearly, our government has failed its citizens–utterly, completely, totally, at every level of governance (Federal, State, local) and at every level of oversight and regulation.
The bitter truth is that the nation’s Financial Power Elites are not constrained by rule of law, and as a result of this revelation Americans’ trust in their government and political class has been shattered.
Despite raising their voices 600 to 1 against the TARP and related bailouts of the nation’s Financial Power Elites (who stripmined the nation’s wealth from their investment banking and mortgage banking fortresses) in 2008, the government shoved trillions of dollars of bailouts and guarantees into private hands with pathetically little control in return.
In their rage at this abject, cowardly surrender of their government to the Financial Elites, the American people tossed the craven bankers-lapdogs Republicans out and replaced them with an untested young president who talked the talk and old-line Democrats.
All of whom proceeded to attach the same leash to their necks and become craven lapdogs of the Financial Elites. Less than two years after the inevitable meltdown of the Power Elites’ stripmining operation and its unprecedented rescue by the Federal government, the Financial Power Elites are once again caught flouting the laws of land as if the U.S. were a “banana republic” in which laws are “only for the little people.”
And now the inevitable calls are arising for a “Federal solution” which will bail the bankers out of the foreclosure crisis with their ownership of the political class and the nation’s wealth firmly in hand.
The people have lost their trust in their government for good reason: it has betrayed their trust. The emotions being raised are beyond the understanding of the cowards and brown-nosers pulling the levers of governance: why are people so angry about some botched paperwork?
The emotions will be familiar to anyone who has been cheated on by a spouse or business partner: the Federal government has betrayed its people in the most profound way.
The Foreclosure crisis is only one moving part in a much larger machine bent on impoverishing the citizenry for the benefit of the Power Elites.
The story here is complex and interconnected, and in the days ahead I will endeavor to trace it out in a coherent manner.
As a brief sketch: Bernanke and the Fed are playing an unprecendented game on two tables at once. The games are interconnected: one is the domestic economy and the other is the global economy.
Here’s the Fed’s game plan in each game. In the domestic economy, the Fed aims to save its Overlords in the banking sector by giving them unlimited credit at zero interest (ZIRP). The banks are free to speculate with this money and earn a higher return. This dynamic–unlimited free money at zero interest–is designed to let the banks “earn” their way of their insolvency.
But that zero interest policy is robbing the citizenry of hundreds of billions of dollars annually. Banks were once required to pay 5.25% interest on all savings accounts. People who saved for retirement could expect to earn at least that on their capital. Thanks to the giveaway to the banks, they now earn basically nothing.
Zero interest is nothing but a transfer of wealth from the citizens to the Financial Power Elites in the money-center and investment banks. Please note the bankers divided up $144 billion in bonuses last year, despite their insolvency. That buys a lot of politicos–basically all of them.
Secondly, the Fed is destroying the nation’s currency, the dollar, to drive money into the stock market. This is designed to create a facade of “prosperity” which gives some sort of credence to the government’s claim that a “recovery” is underway. Since the Grand Stimulus has failed utterly and completely, then juicing the stock market is the only way left to bolster the illusion of “recovery.”
Unfortunately for the incompetent toadies of the Fed, much of the “hot money” speculation they have incentivized is flowing into commodities, driving up the prices of food and fuel. Once again the Fed has engineered a policy which siphons money away from the citizenry in order to reward and enrich the Financial Power Elites.
While the dollar has plummeted since June, the stock market has raced ever higher, creating over $1 trillion in “new wealth” for the top 1% who owns most of the equities. The consequences of this irresponsible destruction of the dollar (via ZIRP and Quantititive Easing–QE2) are now apparent: commodities such as sugar and corn are skyrocketing everywhere in the world.
Recall that the U.S. is still roughly a third of the global GDP, and while $1 trillion has been “normalized” in the U.S. it is still a gargantuan sum fully capable of distorting any commodity market on the planet. As the Fed’s trillions flow into private hands seeking speculative yields anywhere and everywhere, then “inflation”–price increases driven not by supply issues but by speculative demand for yield and “real goods”–is rising everywhere.
In a global market, the price of corn rises everywhere as the grain flows to the highest prices being paid.
The Fed is seeking a two-fer by destroying the dollar: it hopes to make U.S. goods cheap enough on the global market to boost exports. The Fed’s rapid depreciation of the dollar has sparked a “currency war” in which other nations are watching their own currencies rise to the point that their own exporters can no longer make a profit.
It is widely known that Japan’s exporters cannot turn a profit on U.S. sales if the Japanese yen drops below 90 to the dollar. It is now around 81. Japan’s exporters will either lose vast sums or they will have to raise prices in the U.S.
The same can be said of other currencies being driven higher against the dollar.
The U.S. is in effect wielding the dollar, still the world’s reserve currency, as a weapon to pound down everyone else’s profitability.
But wait–there’s more! Nations which are running trade surpluses with the U.S. have surplus dollars, and as the Fed destroys the dollar then those holdings are losing value. In terms of retaining liquidity and some measure of safety, buying U.S. Treasuries is practically the only game in town.
So exporting nations are funding the Fed’s zero-interest policy by buying U.S. bonds, even as the Fed depreciates the value of their holdings. Talk about a rigged game.
The wild-card currency is the Chinese yuan, as it is a proxy for the U.S. dollar.Since the yuan is pegged to the dollar (6.8 to $1), then all these machinations of the Fed don’t change the yuan’s value. This is a frustration for the U.S., so the political lapdogs have been engaged to yap and bark noisily, demanding a devaluation in the yuan.
Weirdly, perhaps, the declining dollar is actually a plus for China, as its goods are now cheaper in Europe and Japan: as the dollar falls against other currencies, so too does the yuan.
This sort of currency hegemony is wearing thin around the world. So the Fed is not only perfectly happy to impoverish Americans via skyrocketing commodity prices and rising import prices, its dollar-destruction policies are driving the rest of the world into creating another reserve currency. The “free ride” the U.S. has enjoyed as holder of the only reserve currency will end, and the nation will have to live within its means.
The Fed’s incompetence and ownership by the Financial Power Elites is painfully obvious. Which is more pernicious and destructive hardly matters, but it seems its incompetence adds a positive feedback to its servitude to the bankers.
Was propping up the stock market to give the ruling politicos a boost on November 2 worth the destruction of the dollar? Obviously not.
Proof Countrywide Never Assigned Collateral To Bank of America
To go along with the previous post And So It Begins….(Countrywide Breach of PSA), I am going to show proof positive that there was never any collateral on mortgages assigned to Bank of America from Countrywide when that ‘merger’ took place.
First, we have a print-out from the Oakland County, Michigan Register of Deeds. This is the authority in this county where all transactions pertaining to real property MUST be recorded. The 1st mortgage on the property was originated by Countrywide. All subsequent transactions were also with Countrywide (with the exception of the quit claim deeds, which were done by the homeowner for the purposes forming an estate trust). There was the original mortgage in 2002, a refinance for a lower interest rate in 2003; then there was a home equity line of credit (HELOC) established at the same time as the refinance; and finally there was a refinance of the HELOC into a 2nd mortgage at a fixed interest rate in 2007. The homeowner never transacted with anyone other than Countrwide. Notice what is glaringly missing: Never is there any conveyance of the security interest to Bank of America by way of assignment from Countrywide. If this ocurred, in order for it to be legal and binding, it would have had to have been recorded at the Oakland County Register of Deeds and would show up clearly on this print-out obtained directly from them.
In addition, both the 1st and 2nd mortgages were discharged in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2008. These mortgages are serviced to this day, by Bank of America. The homeonwer is not, nor has he ever been in default.
What this means is that without assignment of the Deed (which represents the collateral/home), Bank of America has absolutely no enforceable contract upon which to have any right or standing to foreclose if the homeowner were to default. To make matters more interesting, the 2nd mortgage shows on the MERS system as held by them, with the investor being Fannie Mae as of April 2010. So, Countrywide never assigned the mortage to Bank of America and Bank of America assigned the mortgage, to which they had no rights, to MERS who then assigned it to Fannie Mae.
The only things legally transferred here were the mortgages (the debt). The property (collateral), has in effect, been severed from the mortgage notes, making these notes unsecured debt, which notes have been discharged in bankruptcy. Nowhere is there any recorded rights to the collateral afforded to any entity but Countrywide, which institution no longer exists.
So, is it any wonder the holders of Countrywide MBS (mortgage-backed securities) are a bit miffed? They don’t hold securities – ie. debt that is secured by collateral – they own unsecured debt, much of which is defaulting and quite possibly, already discharged in bankruptcy, leaving the MBS holders absolutely no recourse to foreclose on the collateral to which their debt should have been attached.
‘Procedural error?’ I think not. This was intentional because this is but one of hundreds of examples in Oakland County, Michigan alone with regards to Countrywide/Bank of America. These homeowners have a LEGAL right under The Fair Debt Collections Practices Act to know to whom they are really indebted and these MBS holders have a right to know who is in possession of their promised collateral so that they may deal directly with those people in order to have any hope of collecting on their now unsecuritized securities. The MBS holders were defrauded and in many casesa, homeowners have been illegally foreclosed upon by entities with no rights to the homes. That collateral was then dispensed (sold) without payment to the people actually owed the money! I’m sure the MBS holders would like to know where their money went.
Bill Black describes it best: The Great American Bank Robbery. Indeed.
And So It Begins…. (Countrywide Breach of PSA)
Well well well what do we have here?
HOUSTON, Oct. 18 /PRNewswire/ –Today, the holders of over 25% of the Voting Rights in more than $47 billion of Countrywide-issued RMBS sent a Notice of Non-Performance (Notice) to Countrywide Home Loan Servicing, as Master Servicer (“Countrywide Servicing”), and to Bank of New York, as Trustee, identifying specific covenants in 115 Pooling and Servicing Agreements (PSAs) that the Holders allege Countrywide Servicing has failed to perform.
The Holders’ Notice alleges that each of these failures has materially affected the rights of the Certificateholders under the relevant PSAs. Under Section 7.01 of the PSAs, if any of the cited failures “continues unremedied for a period of 60 days after the date on which written notice of such failure has been given … to the Master Servicer and the Trustee by the Holders of Certificates evidencing not less than 25% of the Voting Rights evidenced by the Certificates,” that failure constitutes an Event of Default under the PSAs.
Uh huh.
Gee, three years on, but here it is, and here it comes….
I wonder if there might be a lack of conveyance, for instance? Or maybe some loans in there that wantonly violated the representations and warranties?
Oh wait – they tell us what (at least part) of their complaint is:
Instead, it urges the Trustee to enforce Countrywide Servicing’s obligations to service loans prudently by maintaining accurate loan records, demanding the repurchase of loans that were originated in violation of underwriting guidelines, and compelling the sellers of ineligible or predatory mortgages to bear the costs of modifying them for homeowners or repurchasing them from the Trusts’ collateral pools.
Uh huh.
$47 billion in the pools eh? Uh, that could smart a bit, seeing as it’s going to land straight back on Bank of America.
So much for “no material impact” eh?
Incidentally, do you think BAC knew this was going to come out tonight when they issued their little press release this afternoon claiming that they were all ok with the “Robosigning” nonsense?
I said up front that the robosigning deal and all the sound and fury related to it was a diversion intended to cover up the original failures in the underwriting and securitization process.

Bill Black: The Great American Bank Robbery
An excerpt from the Hammer Forum presentation “The Great American Bank Robbery” by William Black, former bank regulator, now a PhD white collar criminologist and economics professor. You can watch the entire presentation at: http://hammer.ucla.edu/programs/detail/program_id/222
This was a trillion dollar plus industry that was run on the premise of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell.
Foreclosuregate: Time to Break Up the Too-Big-to-Fail Banks
Looming losses from the mortgage scandal dubbed “foreclosuregate” may qualify as the sort of systemic risk that, under the new financial reform bill, warrants the breakup of the too-big-to-fail banks. The Kanjorski amendment allows federal regulators to pre-emptively break up large financial institutions that — for any reason — pose a threat to US financial or economic stability.
Although downplayed by most media accounts and popular financial analysts, crippling bank losses from foreclosure flaws appear to be imminent and unavoidable. The defects prompting the “RoboSigning Scandal” are not mere technicalities but are inherent to the securitization process. They cannot be cured. This deep-seated fraud is already explicitly outlined in publicly available lawsuits.
There is, however, no need to panic, no need for TARP II, and no need for legislation to further conceal the fraud and push the inevitable failure of the too-big-to-fail banks into the future.
Federal regulators now have the tools to take control and set things right. The Wall Street giants escaped the Volcker Rule, which would have limited their size, and the Brown-Kaufman amendment, which would have broken up the largest six banks outright; but the financial reform bill has us covered. The Kanjorski amendment — which slipped past lobbyists largely unnoticed — allows federal regulators to preemptively break up large financial institutions that pose a threat to US financial or economic stability.
Rep. Grayson’s Call for a Moratorium
The new Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) probably didn’t expect to have its authority called on quite so soon, but Rep. Alan Grayson (D-FL) has just put the amendment to the test. On October 7, in a letter addressed to Timothy Geithner, Shiela Bair, Ben Bernanke, Mary Schapiro, John Walsh (Acting Comptroller of the Currency), Gary Gensler, Ed DeMarco, and Debbie Matz (National Credit Union Administration), he asked for an emergency task force on foreclosure fraud. He said:
The liability here for the major banks is potentially enormous, and can lead to a systemic risk. Fortunately, the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation includes a resolution process for these banks. More importantly, these foreclosures are devastating neighborhoods, families, and cities all over the country. Each foreclosure costs tens of thousands of dollars to a municipality, lowers property values, and makes bank failures more likely.
Grayson sought a foreclosure moratorium on all mortgages originated and securitized between 2005-2008, until such time as the FSOC task force was able to understand and mitigate the systemic risk posed by the foreclosure fraud crisis. But on Sunday, White House adviser David Axelrod downplayed the need for a national foreclosure moratorium, saying the Administration was pressing lenders to accelerate their reviews of foreclosures to determine which ones have flawed documentation. “Our hope is this moves rapidly and that this gets unwound very, very quickly,” he said.
According to Brian Moynihan, chief executive of Bank of America (BAC), “The amount of work required is a matter of a few weeks. A few weeks we’ll be through the process of double checking the pieces of paper we need to double check.”
“Absurd,” say critics such as Max Gardner III of Shelby, North Carolina. Gardner is considered one of the country’s top consumer bankruptcy attorneys. “This is not an oops. This is not a technical problem. This is not even sloppiness,” he says. The problem is endemic, and its effects will be felt for years.
Rep. Grayson makes similar allegations. He writes:
The banks didn’t keep good records, and there is good reason to believe in many if not virtually all cases during this period, failed to transfer the notes, which is the borrower IOUs in accordance with the requirements of their own pooling and servicing agreements. As a result, the notes may be put out of eligibility for the trust under New York law, which governs these securitizations. Potential cures for the note may, according to certain legal experts, be contrary to IRS rules governing REMICs. As a result, loan servicers and trusts simply lack standing to foreclose. The remedy has been foreclosure fraud, including the widespread fabrication of documents.
There are now trillions of dollars of securitizations of these loans in the hands of investors. The trusts holding these loans are in a legal gray area, as the mortgage titles were never officially transferred to the trusts. The result of this is foreclosure fraud on a massive scale, including foreclosures on people without mortgages or who are on time with their payments. [Emphasis added.]
Why Wasn’t It Done Right in the First Place?
That raises the question, why were the notes not assigned? Grayson says the banks were not interested in repayment; they were just churning loans as fast as they could in order to generate fees. Financial blogger Karl Denninger says:
I believe a big part of why it was not done is that if it had been done the original paperwork would have been available to the trustee and ultimately the MBS owners, who would have immediately discovered that the representations and warranties as to the quality of the conveyed paper were being wantonly violated.
You can’t audit what you don’t have.
Both are probably right, yet these explanations seem insufficient. If it were just a matter of negligence or covering up dubious collateral, surely some of the assignments by some of the banks would have been done properly. Why would they all be defective?
The reason the mortgage notes were never assigned may be that there was no party legally capable of accepting the assignments. Securitization was originally set up as a tax dodge; and to qualify for the tax exemption, the conduits between the original lender and the investors could own nothing. The conduits are “special purpose vehicles” set up by the banks, a form of Mortgage Backed Security called REMICs (Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits). They hold commercial and residential mortgages in trust for the investors. They don’t own them; they are just trustees.
The problem was nailed in a class action lawsuit recently filed in Kentucky, titled Foster v. MERS, GMAC, et al. (USDC, Western District of Kentucky). The suit claims that MERS and the banks violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, a law originally passed to pursue organized crime. Bloomberg quotes Heather Boone McKeever, a Lexington, Ky.-based lawyer for the homeowners, who said in a phone interview:
RICO comes in because the fraud didn’t just happen piecemeal. This is organized crime by people in suits, but it is still organized crime. They created a very thorough plan.
The complaint alleges:
53. The “Trusts” coming to Court are actually Mortgage Backed Securities (“MBS”). The Servicers, like GMAC, are merely administrative entities which collect the mortgage payments and escrow funds. The MBS have signed themselves up under oath with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC,”) and the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS,”) as mortgage asset “pass through” entities wherein they can never own the mortgage loan assets in the MBS. This allows them to qualify as a Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (“REMIC”) rather than an ordinary Real Estate Investment Trust (“REIT”). As long as the MBS is a qualified REMIC, no income tax will be charged to the MBS. For purposes of this action, “Trust” and MBS are interchangeable. . . .
56. REMICS were newly invented in 1987 as a tax avoidance measure by Investment Banks. To file as a REMIC, and in order to avoid one hundred percent (100%) taxation by the IRS and the Kentucky Revenue Cabinet, an MBS REMIC could not engage in any prohibited action. The “Trustee” can not own the assets of the REMIC. A REMIC Trustee could never claim it owned a mortgage loan. Hence, it can never be the owner of a mortgage loan.
57. Additionally, and important to the issues presented with this particular action, is the fact that in order to keep its tax status and to fund the “Trust” and legally collect money from investors, who bought into the REMIC, the “Trustee” or the more properly named, Custodian of the REMIC, had to have possession of ALL the original blue ink Promissory Notes and original allonges and assignments of the Notes, showing a complete paper chain of title.
58. Most importantly for this action, the “Trustee”/Custodian MUST have the mortgages recorded in the investors name as the beneficiaries of a MBS in the year the MBS “closed.” [Emphasis added.]
Only the beneficiaries — the investors who advanced the funds — can claim ownership. And the mortgages had to have been recorded in the name of the beneficiaries the year the MBS closed. The problem is, who ARE the beneficiaries who advanced the funds? In the securitization market, they come and go. Properties get sold and resold daily. They can be sliced up and sold to multiple investors at the same time. Which investors could be said to have put up the money for a particular home that goes into foreclosure? MBS are divided into “tranches” according to level of risk, typically from AAA to BBB. The BBB investors take the first losses, on up to the AAAs. But when the REMIC is set up, no one knows which homes will default first. The losses are taken collectively by the pool as they hit; the BBBs simply don’t get paid. But the “pool” is the trust; and to qualify as a REMIC trust, it can own nothing.
The lenders were trying to have it both ways; and to conceal what was going on, they dropped an electronic curtain over their sleight of hand, called Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems or “MERS.” MERS is simply an electronic data base. On its website and in assorted court pleadings, it too declares that it owns nothing. It was set up that way so that it would be “bankruptcy-remote,” something required by the credit rating agencies in order to turn the mortgages passing through it into highly rated securities that could be sold to investors. According to the MERS website, it was also set up that way to save on recording fees, which means dodging state statutes requiring a fee to be paid to establish a formal record each time title changes hands.
The arrangement satisfied the ratings agencies, but it has not satisfied the courts. Real estate law dating back hundreds of years requires that to foreclose on real property, the foreclosing party must produce signed documentation establishing a chain of title to the property; and that has not been done. Increasingly, judges are holding that if MERS owns nothing, it cannot foreclose, and it cannot convey title by assignment so that the trustee for the investors can foreclose. MERS breaks the chain of title so that no one has standing to foreclose.
Sixty-two million mortgages are now held in the name of MERS, a ploy that the banks have realized won’t work; so Plan B has been to try to fabricate documents to cure the defect. Enter the RoboSigners, a small group of people signing thousands of documents a month, admittedly without knowing what was in them. Interestingly, it wasn’t just one bank engaging in this pattern of coverup and fraud but many banks, suggesting the sort of “organized crime” that would qualify under the RICO statute.
However, that ploy won’t work either, because it’s too late to assign properties to trusts that have already been set up without violating the tax code for REMICs, and the trusts themselves aren’t allowed to own anything under the tax code. If the trusts violate the tax laws, the banks setting them up will owe millions of dollars in back taxes. Whether the banks are out the real estate or the taxes, they could well be looking at insolvency, posing the sort of serious systemic risk that would bring them under the purview of the new Financial Stability Oversight Council.
No need for disaster
As comedian Jon Stewart said in an insightful segment called “Foreclosure Crisis” on October 7, “We’re back to square one.” While we’re working it all out, an extended foreclosure moratorium probably is in the works. But this needn’t be the economic disaster that some are predicting – not if the FSOC is allowed to do its job. We’ve been here before, and not just in 2008.
In 1934, Congress enacted the Frazier–Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Act to enable the nation’s debt-ridden farmers to scale down their mortgages. The act delayed foreclosure of a bankrupt farmer’s property for five years, during which time the farmer made rental payments. The farmer could then buy back the property at its currently appraised value over six years at 1 percent interest, or remain in possession as a paying tenant. Interestingly, according to Marian McKenna in Franklin Roosevelt and the Great Constitutional War (2002), “The federal government was empowered to buy up farm mortgages and issue non-interest-bearing treasury notes in exchange.” Non-interest-bearing treasury notes are what President Lincoln issued during the Civil War, when they were called “Greenbacks.”
The 1934 Act was subsequently challenged by secured creditors as violating the Fifth Amendment’s due process guarantee of just compensation, a fundamental right of mortgage holders. (Note that this would probably not be a valid challenge today, since there don’t seem to be legitimate mortgage holders in these securitization cases. There are just investors with unsecured claims for relief in equity for money damages.) The Supreme Court voided the 1934 Act, and Congress responded with the “Farm Mortgage Moratorium Act” in 1935. The terms were modified, limiting the moratorium to a three-year period, and the revision gave secured creditors the opportunity to force a public sale, with the proviso that the farmer could redeem the property by paying the sale amount. The act was renewed four times until 1949, when it expired. During the 15 years the act was in place, farm prices stabilized and the economy took off, retooling it for its role as a global industrial power during the remainder of the century.
We’ve come full circle again. We didn’t get it right in 2008, but with the newly empowered Financial Stability Oversight Council, we already have the ready-made vehicle to avoid another taxpayer bailout, and to put too-big-to-fail behind us as well.









