Archive for the ‘MBS’ Category
Mortgage-Backed Securities Without Mortgages?
The number of deals the RMBS Investor Clearing House now has a big enough interest in to request action by bond trustees has climbed about 30 percent since a July statement by Franklin. The clearing house allows bondholders to coordinate without divulging to each other which securities they own.
The group added three new portfolios Nov. 12 that weren¡¯t included in the most recent total, Franklin said in an e-mail from Dallas that day. A quarter of bond investors in any single deal marks the minimum threshold to force mortgage-bond trustees to grant access to loan files that may help investors prove mortgage sellers should buy back bad debt or take other action.
Remember, the allegations made by various legal folks in the practice (and apparently validated by the case law thus far) is that not one note has been able to be produced that contains all of the required conveyances and endorsements.
What’s going to happen when (or if) these folks gain access to the files and find that they’re missing – that is, that the custodian doesn’t have them?
Well now that would be interesting, no? “Mortgage-backed securities” that in fact have no mortgages in them? Why that would be a wee problem, no?
Everything we know up to this point strongly suggests that this is exactly what is going to be discovered, and as a consequence, the RMBS Investor Clearing House is definitely an entity to watch.
The wheels of justice turn slowly, but they do turn, and if in fact basically none of these notes have been properly conveyed into the trusts, and as such the trusts are a legal nullity, then investors have spent billions of dollars as unknowing participants in a massive fraudulent scheme.

Weekend Roundup: Foreclosuregate Status
There is a very important audio interview on KOH that you need to listen to.
It’s two hours, and that’s a lot. But it’s important.
In particular, listen to the couple of minutes starting at 12:30 in. Then listen to 6:30, and 42:30, right around 50:00 and then again at 70:00 and finally, at 78:00 in.
Pay attention to what’s being said here.
First: The assertion is made that the lenders and holders of the notes were paid in full. That is, they have no economic damage from the default (!) due to the way they structured the deals.
Second: The assertion is made that there was fraud in the inducement in all of these loans, in that there is an implied duty of dealing in good faith in all contracts that was violated by the banks that made knowingly bad loans – which we now have sworn testimony on. While this is not settled by any means, there is currently pending litigation on this point, and if this approach wins, well, then you go – those contracts are voidable.
Third: The allegation is made that the banks were not stupid – they knew the mathematics (as we all do now) and intentionally crashed the market. That just compounds the second point.
Fourth: MERS has given sworn testimony that they have no economic interest and have nothing to transfer. Oh wait a second….. then how the hell do they transfer a deed they don’t have (even though they’re listed as Mortgagee) to someone who then forecloses – or alternatively, forecloses themselves on behalf of someone else?
Incidentally, FDN has picked up on this too. Don’t expect the entire “fraud in the inducement” line of inquiry to remain quiet for very long, and again, if this wins at trial – even once – you’re gonna get this:

The MERS problem is also outlined in a rather long and exhaustive paper in the Cincinnati Law Review. The salient point is here:
With these services on offer, the mortgage finance industry quickly and wholeheartedly embraced recording and foreclosing its mortgage loans in MERS’s name, rather than the actual parties in interest. Instead of legislation or a landmark court ruling, mortgage industry insiders report that the key development in the acceptance of MERS was the endorsement of credit rating agencies such as Moody’s, Standard and Poor’s, and Fitch Investment. 71 For example, in 1999-before any significant appellate judicial opinion on the subject-Moody’s Investors Services issued a report concluding that MERS’s mechanism to put creditors on notice of a mortgage would not be harmed. 72 Moody’s concluded without citation to any court opinion, or even to any state recording statute, that “subsequent creditors of the entity selling the mortgages to the MBS [mortgage backed securities] transactions [sic] should not be able to contest the conveyance of the mortgages based on lack of notice. 73
Got that?
The agencies concluded without any legal justification whatsoever that this was all ok.
Since when does a ratings agency trump State Law?
There’s been an awful lot of flip-flopping on many of these points in the last week. In particular, you’ve got people who were all over the fraud side of this that suddenly got very quiet.
One wonders why – and note, it’s not that they’re repudiating what they formerly said, it’s that they’re saying nothing at all, and some are now trying to throw this back on the borrowers, making all sorts of claims of “unethical” behavior on their part.
Let me be clear on my position: This entire bubble was predicated on fraud – up and down the line. I’ll simply quote Bill Black, since he’s more concise than I can be:
Nothing short of removing all senior officers who directed, committed, or acquiesced in fraud can be effective against control fraud. We repeat: Foreclosure fraud is the necessary outcome of the epidemic of mortgage fraud that began early this decade. The banks that are foreclosing on fraudulently originated mortgages frequently cannot produce legitimate documents and have committed “fraud in the inducement.” Now, only fraud will let them take the homes. Many of the required documents do not exist, and those that do exist would provide proof of the fraud that was involved in loan origination, securitization, and marketing. This in turn would allow investors to force the banks to buy-back the fraudulent securities. In other words, to keep the investors at bay the foreclosing banks must manufacture fake documents. If the original documents do not exist the securities might be ruled no good. If the original docs do exist they will demonstrate that proper underwriting was not done — so the securities might be no good. Foreclosure fraud is the only thing standing between the banks and Armageddon.
There’s only one solution to all of this: Take all of the big banks into receivership.
Force these securities to be examined, those with fraudulent originations beyond their specifications to be unwound and put back on the securitizers.
This will detonate them. Since they’re in receivership, their stockholders will wind up wiped out and their bondholders will take the hit as they are crammed down into equity.
Where intentional fraud is found in the inducement, as has been alleged by Citibank’s former chief underwriter in over 80% of production for 2007, people need to go to prison. A lot of people. And while this does not necessarily mean “free houses” it sure does mean recission of the deal – and if that winds up forcing renegotiation of the terms (including principal), then so be it.
The more time goes on the deeper this rabbit hole gets and the more fraud we find evidence of. Contrary to the professed claims in the media, this is not getting clearer and headed more toward “clerical errors” - it is headed more toward the entire financial system being one gigantic pyramid of fraudulent transactions layered upon each other, none of which were unwound during the so-called “bailouts.”
Instead, it appears that government decided to attempt to perpetuate the debt and fraud ponzi schemes – likely because, arithmetic or not, they knew that letting it all into the light of day would mean incalculable and insatiable demands for prosecution – at least figurative if not literal heads on pikes.
If you think the idiocy and downplaying of reality is limited to the bankster apologists on CNBS, you’re wrong. We also can look to Housingwire, which put forth a pure fantasy piece that included the following:
The real fact is that the ‘robo-signing’ scandal is a procedural one, albeit one that offends the very nature of due process.
….
The injured parties from this gross abuse of process are limited to the court, who has seen its rule of law mocked; and potentially investors, who must ultimately pay for the added time and expense of re-filing.
Forgery is not a “procedural issue.” It’s a felony act of perjury. Mocking the rule of law is not a procedural matter – it goes to the very heart of our legal system, not to mention The Constitution. There is this pesky thing called The 5th Amendment. I know that the mortgage and housing industries think that such matters lack substance in this case but I’m quite sure that if the people decided to start stringing up lenders, bankers, and builders from lampposts en-masse, they’d change their tune about “procedural issues” and due process rights in a big damn hurry.
Within minutes of the ‘robo-signing’ scandal, seemingly, commentators were giving credence to long-standing claims regarding the validity of MERS as a foreclosing party, who really owns the note, as well as highlighting put-back risks — a span of issues that are distinctly and utterly separate from the procedural challenges encompassed by ‘robo-signing.’
Nonsense. The entire “robo-signing” thing is part and parcel of the industry’s inability to produce factual documentation right up front. There are only two reasons not to produce the original paperwork, properly endorsed, instead of all this robo garbage:
-
You don’t have it because you never got it, and you’re trying to cover that up.
-
You don’t have it because you intentionally destroyed it or are hiding it, as producing it would document that you did something fraudulent earlier on in the process (like at origination, for instance), and you’re trying to cover that up.
In short, there is no other explanation. A few lost pieces of paper here and there? Sure. A system that can’t produce any of the paperwork, properly endorsed over? That’s not accident – it’s an intentional act. Period.
In other words: massive GSE putbacks? Yes. Massive private-label putbacks? Eh, probably not so much. In either case, however, hardly does this seem to be the sort of end-of-the-world scenario that so many have painted recently.
Really? Remember, Lehman wasn’t so much the end of the world for Lehman per-se, as it wasn’t that big a firm. Rather it was the cascading credit default exposure that everyone was worried about.
Does anyone recall us actually fixing that by forcing it all onto regulated exchanges, where margin was maintained on a nightly basis so we know that everyone’s good for the crap they’re holding? Oh, I seem to remember that didn’t happen.
Funny how everyone forgets that the nuclear device that started all this crap is still sitting on the board room table, it’s still ticking, and someone still has tape over the timer window so nobody can see how many more “ticks” we’ve got.
The real brewing issue in the markets currently — and quietly — is one of investor confidence, borne most lately of horrible remittance reporting. Investors have had it with inaccurate reports from servicers, and some are threatening to ditch MBS markets altogether.
Getting lied to repeatedly has a way of doing that. You know, things like Clayton being revealed to have done diligence on these loans and finding them bogus, but then having them shoved into the securities anyway – without disclosure to the buyers. Or Citibank’s chief underwriter stating under oath that eighty percent of production violated reps and warranties in 2007. Eighty percent?! Then you add stiff-arming to this by the securitizers for the original loan data. Gee, I wonder why they wouldn’t want anyone to look after their own people testified that they packaged up loans they knew were dogcrap and sold them on to investors!
The third real issue facing mortgage markets today, quite frankly, is that political reality is allowed to subsume actual reality. This is the outcome that sees the mortgage industry eat its own, if it comes to pass.
In a word, bullshit.
The “industry” should eat its own. What integrity does a fraud-laced process have? What sort of weight does someone who refuses to disclose what they did earlier on to a buyer command with a new buyer? Zero, that’s what. Getting rooked once is a bad thing. If you get rooked twice it’s your own fault for trusting someone who has proved, through their own conduct, that they will fuck you as long and as hard as they think they can get away with. That is, buyers of these securities appear to now know for a fact that they were sold crap on purpose without proper disclosure.
None of these banks has any reason to expect that any of these buyers would ever do business with them again under any set of terms or conditions. In fact, this alone ought to be enough to put them all out of business – permanently.
The reality here is that what we have is a bunch of piranhas in a tank that have been feasting on Americans for two decades. Now the Americans are down to bare femurs, tibia, fibula and ribcages – they’re out of assets to strip and out of payments to poach.
So now we get to the fun part, where the ravenous piranha, devoid of any sense of ethics and willing to eat literally anything, turn on their buddies and start tearing them apart.
After seeing Americans stripped like a turkey leg, I’m looking forward to this part of the show.
Banks Sold The Same Mortgages To Multiple Investors!
No, They Didn’t Sell The Same Thing Twice….
It appears as though many loans and other mortgage-related assets have been double and even triple-pledged to various constituencies.
There’s only one profession where that takes place on a routine basis and doesn’t involve ripping someone off – prostitution – where you can sell something and still have it.
In banking and finance, however, selling the same thing to two people is rank fraud. And yet this very event is being alleged by one of the banks that claims Foreclosuregate is just a “technicality” – Bank of America – in the below filing.
Boa Answer to Freddie Objection in Re Taylor Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp.
And here I thought that all the missing paperwork and “re-created” foreclosure documents were all a mistake, and not an attempt to cover up something nefarious that happened earlier?
Gee, you mean I was right three years and change ago, and despite the protests otherwise by bank executives on CNBS and other “mainstream media” outlets they are in fact filing court process agreeing with me, meaning that they’re intentionally LYING on national television?
Hattip Washington’s blog.
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.

CNBC: How Deep Does It Go? (Foreclosuregate)
Discussion about the true issues related to Foreclosuregate – gee, we bloggers were in front of this, but finally, after hammering on the issue for more than a year with MERS, and more than three and a half in total, we are getting some mainstream media coverage.
My only question: What the hell took you so long? Sticking your head in the sand at the direct behest and perhaps orders of your corporate backers – until you couldn’t any more?
HERE IT COMES FOLKS – WATCH THIS CAREFULLY, ESPECIALLY AROUND 3:30 ONWARD.
Now add to this that it is being reported that JP Morgan/Chase – one of the founders of MERS – has walked away from it. If the legs under that stool get kicked out all of the MBS trusts created using this mess are recognized as being invalid and over $6 trillion dollars of this crap, including a whole lot of Fannie and Freddie paper along with virtually all private-label MBS - all blows up at once.
No, The Fed can’t contain that, and neither can the Government. Not in their wildest dreams can they put a cork in the litigation alone, say much less the rest.
We have to fix this folks, and I’ve put forward a way to do it. But we damn well better get started and do it right damn now, along with dropping injunctions on the lot to prevent it from being detonated before we can dismantle it, because it doesn’t take much of the support for this system to be kicked out before you get a chain reaction, much like the old experiment in a room with a thousand set mousetraps into which one tosses a couple of ping-pong balls.
There are speculative investors out there who will trigger this intentionally (and make a hell of a lot of money doing it too) if we don’t put a cork in this, even if putting that cork in it requires that we “resolve” the big banks (and it does.)








