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  • Wall Street protest by homeowners: Just say no to government bailouts

    Wall Street protest by homeowners: Just say no to government bailouts

    We published this notice Tuesday March 25 to make our readers aware that a group of home owners organized by the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA) planned to protest government bailout of Bear Sterns and other investment banks that made bad bets in the mortgage industry. The protesters are homeowners who do not believe that banks or homeowners should be bailed out.


    Complete press release here.

    Lest you think the NACA is some kind of wacky fringe group, note that its CEO received the Boston Globe's Bostonian of the Year for his two decades of work enabling lower income families to purchase homes but without ripping them off.
    Guarding the House
    December 30, 2007 (Neil Swidey - Boston Globe)

    It is for his relentless advocacy and sensible innovation in working to find a way out of this mortgage mess that affects so many that Bruce Marks is our 2007 Bostonian of the Year.

    Wall Street made billions off the backs of homeowners. But when the mortgage crisis blew up, a pit bull named Bruce Marks stood up for the Average Joes and, incredibly, got some of the biggest banks to bend.

    There are guys you'd want to talk Sox trades with over a beer, guys you'd want to deliver the toast at your wedding, guys you'd want by your side if some goateed knucklehead took a swing at you because you accidentally bumped into his girlfriend. Bruce Marks is none of these guys.

    But if you should find yourself up against one of the nation's most powerful banks, feeling abused by a maddening loop of automated messages, threatening letters, and buck-passing paper pushers, if you should feel powerless to reassure your little daughter when she tearfully asks you if you're going to lose the only home she's ever known, well then, there's nobody you'd want in your corner more than Bruce Marks. And sadly, a whole lot of desperate people had to turn to Marks for help this year, and a whole lot more will need his emergency services in the year ahead.

    Marks credits his deep-seated anger for keeping him barking from behind the same chain-link junkyard fence for two decades. During that time, Marks watched as many of the world's most powerful financial institutions went from ignoring people of modest means to coveting them, realizing they could make billions by catering directly to that mortgage market. But instead of doing it through the tedious, disciplined work of a group like NACA - which offers extensive education before qualifying borrowers for a below-market-rate, 30-year fixed mortgage with no down payment or closing costs - they opted for the subprime route. Suddenly, virtually anyone could qualify for a loan. It was just a question of how much they'd be charged. Subprime loans generally come with a rate at least 3 percentage points higher than the going prime rate, but they are often masked by lower "teaser" rates and have nooselike provisions slipped into the fine print, such as penalties for prepayment and timed resets to extremely high rates. Wall Street fell in love with all this subprime "product," because loans were bundled into huge funds, theoretically minimizing risk - but in reality pushing it downstream - while producing hefty returns for investment firms. As the players all along the lending process got rich, from mortgage brokers to servicers to investment bankers, the demand for more borrowers exploded. Before long, the normal safeguards for underwriting loans got tossed faster than losing scratch tickets outside a convenience store.

    It got so bad that some lenders began offering what they called "no-doc" loans, where borrowers didn't need to provide even the most basic documentation for their income. One 41-year-old Brockton woman named Tammy told me that even though she made no more than $15,000 a year as a part-time newspaper delivery person, she watched as her mortgage broker put down her income as $44,000. "I was smart enough to know what was happening," Tammy says. "Who's going to give me a loan when all I have is a damn paper route?" But she figured that was just the ways things were done.

    As the number of subprime loans climbed, Marks railed against them as just old-fashioned predatory lending gussied up in a new skirt and pumps. He says NACA lost a good deal of business when low-and moderate-income borrowers found they could qualify for a lot more money, with a lot less work, by signing a subprime note with a big-name bank.

    In the meantime, Marks busied himself making the NACA process better, working with his IT guy to develop a streamlined Web-based software system that was able to determine, efficiently and reliably, what a borrower could afford to pay. The system improved quality control for Marks as he continued to open new NACA offices across the country.

    When subprime went south and homeowners started defaulting and getting squeezed out of their homes, Marks shifted into his activist mode. He refused to see borrowers as anything but victims, even if some of them, like Tammy of Brockton, blamed themselves. "Bruce has a Messiah complex," says local real estate analyst John C. Anderson. "He refuses to differentiate between people suffering discrimination and people who are legitimately bad credit risks." The latter, Anderson says, "have always been able to borrow their way out of trouble, until now."

    But Marks blamed only the greed of the big guys. He started by going after the biggest of them all, Countrywide. He prepared himself for a long fight and was shocked to see the lender cave within 48 hours.

    The teetering company no doubt wanted to shut Marks up. More important, though, was NACA's state-of-the-art system, which integrates financial counseling and behavioral change on the part of the borrower with the creation of a solid new loan package based on what that particular borrower can afford to pay. Marks offered Countrywide a more reliable alternative to a flood of expensive foreclosures.

    As senior policy adviser to the Financial Services Roundtable, veteran banking executive Bill Longbrake is one of the key players in plotting the response, by government and industry, to the mortgage meltdown. Until now, he never wanted anything to do with Marks, given his reputation. But after seeing NACA's operation up close, he became a believer in Marks. Now he's trying to persuade other banking executives to do the same. "The time is right for what he's built, given the crisis in this country," Longbrake says. "It's almost as if Bruce has two personalities. There's the advocate and bomb thrower, which has made many people in banking wary of him. But behind that, there's this incredibly effective, disciplined businessperson." more...

    So how did the homeowner protest go? Here's an amateur video of the event.




    How did the press cover it? Depends on where you go for coverage. Here is the CNBC coverage.




    Danny Schechter was there covering the coverage. For those of you who don't know Danny, here's an article of his published today by Editor & Publisher Magazine.
    Where Was Media When Sub-Prime Disaster Unfolded?

    If we were long on the edge of "disaster" with a "financial nuclear winter" waiting in the wings, why were American news consumers among the last to know?

    By Danny Schechter (March 27, 2008) -- "It is somewhat surprising," Larry Elliott, economics editor of London's The Guardian observed recently, "that there is not already rioting in the streets, given the gigantic fraud perpetrated by the financial elite at the expense of ordinary Americans.” If such a fraud was taking place, and if Wall Street’s financial crisis, according to the usually staid Economist, was on the edge of “disaster” with a “financial nuclear winter” waiting in the wings, why were American news consumers among the last to know? more...
    Here are excerpts of Danny's coverage of the coverage of yesterday's protest. Fair coverage? You be the judge.
    THE “COVERAGE”

    First Reuters (from 43rd St) which beat out the AP (that came all the way from West 33)…They reported “ABOUT 60 PROTESTERS, not homeowners or family members facing foreclosure but just “protesters,” as if that was their only identity and raison d’etre.. Then look at how they describe the Bear Stearns employees—soon to become former employees, by the way—but don’t quote any official from the firm for a reaction. That would have taken work.

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - About 60 protesters opposed to the U.S. Federal Reserve’s help in bailing out Bear Stearns entered the lobby of the investment bank’s Manhattan headquarters on Wednesday, demanding assistance for struggling homeowners.

    Demonstrators organized by the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America chanted “Help Main Street, not Wall Street” and entered the lobby without an invitation for around half an hour before being escorted out by police.

    “There are no provisions for homeowners in this deal. There are people out there struggling who need help,” said Detria Austin, an organizer at NACA, an advocacy group for home ownership.

    Bear Stearns employees were alternatively amused and perplexed, taking pictures on their cell phones.

    “Homeowners, that’s more than $1 trillion (in mortgage debt), you’re crazy,” one man in a suit screamed at a protester on the street.”

    I guess “one man in a suit” was the stand-in for Bear Stearns. Funny, I was wearing a suit.

    Now here’s DEALMAKER, a Wall Street Tabloid. They are even more snide and but at least put the number at 200, quite a few more than Reuters. But their second paragraph is as stupid as it is insensitive suggesting that the demonstrators “ wandered off to do whatever it is demonstrators do after a demonstration. (We’re guessing: wait in TKTKS line for Xanadu tickets.)”.

    The Daily News was one of the few local news outlets that actually covered the protesters at St Barts Church where they assembled on Park Avenue.

    CNBC did interview one banker at BEAR who said, anonymously of course, that he sympathized with the protest and would probably lose his job and his house. Few at Bear were talking about the issue or the protest---perhaps because they are crying about their own futures or, in some cases, sneering.

    One brainiac in the latter camp was interviewed by the NY Post. I have to put this in CAPS lest you miss it. He was identified as a 23 years old.

    'IT SEEMS KIND OF FUNNY TO PEOPLE UPSTAIRS.....IT'S LIKE A BIG JOKE. WE REALLY DON'T KNOW WHAT THEY ARE PROTESTING ABOUT.”

    At least we know part of the reason: The media has done such a miserable job covering the crisis. more...
    We ask: In the case of the mortgage crisis, what would Albert J. Nock do?
    Heretofore in this country sudden crises of misfortune have been met by a mobilization of social power. In fact (except for certain institutional enterprises like the home for the aged, the lunatic-asylum, city-hospital and county-poorhouse) destitution, unemployment, "depression" and similar ills, have been no concern of the State, but have been relieved by the application of social power. Under Mr. Roosevelt, however, the State assumed this function, publicly announcing the doctrine, brand-new in our history, that the State owes its citizens a living. Students of politics, of course, saw in this merely an astute proposal for a prodigious enhancement of State power; merely what, as long ago as 1794, James Madison called "the old trick of turning every contingency into a resource for accumulating force in the government"; and the passage of time has proved that they were right. The effect of this upon the balance between State power and social power is clear, and also its effect of a general indoctrination with the idea that an exercise of social power upon such matters is no longer called for. - Our Enemy, The State by Albert J. Nock - 1935
    Getting back to the NACA it seems to us that allowing an orderly transfer of subprime mortgage assets to the NACA from distressed banks instead of government bailouts is a free market solution that neither unfairly uses taxpayer money to assist one group over another nor hands further power to the State over social affairs that are better managed by society and the marketplace. Why not create a New Bank that uses NACA practices, with its time tested economics*, and scale it up to allow all of the banks that are now demanding bailouts because the are "too big to fail" to sell their assets to the New Bank, management of the failed banks can retire of do whatever it is incompetent and failed bankers do. We'd suggest selling used cars but that's too hard on used car salesmen; at least a used car salesman has to look his or her customer in the eye before ripping them off.



    * NACA LATE LOANS

    The most recent available data on the percentage of mortgages in the NACA portfolio that are at least 90 days late - called "seriously delinquent" - compared with the national average:

    NACA RATE 1.15 percent VS. NATIONAL RATE 2.95 percent*

    *Prime loans, which make up the bulk of mortgages, have a national "seriously delinquent" rate of 1.31 percent. For subprime loans, that rate is 11.38 percent.

    NOTE: NACA borrowers pay into a Neighborhood Stabilization Fund, to which they can apply for assistance if they run into financial trouble. NACA reports that 6.32 percent of its borrowers have taken advantage of that fund.

    SOURCES: Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America, National Delinquency Survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association, Third Quarter 2007
    Ed.

  • #2
    Re: Wall Street protest by homeowners: Just say no to government bailouts

    Not that I want to introduce some fringe theories here, but the author of UrbanSurvival.com is working with a guy who does web bot analysis of the web including blogs, news sites, and other sources. His analysis focuses on subtle but significant changes in language being used around world issues. They have been forecasting a "revolution" meme to pick up steam this late spring and increase in force through the fall. This would completely fall into that meme.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Wall Street protest by homeowners: Just say no to government bailouts

      It's important to remember that during the last economic collapse that the US suffered, FDR was one of the least radical people that could have been chosen. Many respectable newpapers were advocating for a "strong man" solution - i.e., facism.

      It's going to be an interesting decade. I'm considering leaving the country, if another country will have me.
      -----
      Getting the direction right and the timing wrong since 2001.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Wall Street protest by homeowners: Just say no to government bailouts

        America got raped by Wall Street, the Federal Reserve, and the mainstream media. Again.
        But this time, they've got the Internet to contend with. Yes!
        Flower Power = peaceful revolution.
        Send the evil-doers and see-no-evils to Switzerland -- they will die of boredom there. Very slowly.
        Red tulips now up and out in Washington, D.C.! And cherry trees too.

        Comment


        • #5
          Wall Street protest by Lenders: Just say no to government regulations

          Wall Street protest by Lenders: Just say no to government regulations

          Two related items from today's NY Times [emphasis mine]. Why are we not surprised?

          April 28, 2008
          Loan Industry Fighting Rules on Mortgages
          WASHINGTON — The mortgage industry, facing the prospect of tougher regulations for its central role in the housing crisis, has begun an intensive campaign to fight back.
          As the Federal Reserve completes work on rules to root out abuses by lenders, its plan has run into a buzz saw of criticism from bankers, mortgage brokers and other parts of the housing industry. One common industry criticism is that at a time of tight credit, tighter rules could make many mortgages more expensive by creating more paperwork and potentially exposing lenders to more lawsuits.
          To the chagrin of consumer groups that have complained that the proposed rules are not strong enough, the industry’s criticism has already prompted the Fed to consider narrowing the scope of the plan so it applies to fewer loans...
          ...Earlier this month, as the comment period was about to close, the Fed was deluged with more than 5,000 comments, mostly from lenders who said the proposals could affect loans that have not presented problems. Some bankers and brokers also said the rules would discourage them from lending to some creditworthy borrowers.
          The plan was criticized in separate filings by three of the industry’s most influential trade groups — the American Bankers Association, the Mortgage Bankers Association and the Independent Community Bankers of America...
          And this Op Ed from three former SEC Chairmen:
          Op-Ed Contributors
          Muzzling the Watchdog
          By WILLIAM DONALDSON, ARTHUR LEVITT Jr. and DAVID RUDER
          Published: April 29, 2008
          THE downfall of Bear Stearns, the release of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s sweeping blueprint for the overhaul of our financial regulatory structure, and the worsening health of the stock market and our economy has raised serious questions for the future of the Securities and Exchange Commission. As the capital-markets regulator and investor’s advocate, the S.E.C. is a natural recipient of finger-pointing during a market crisis...
          ...But the Treasury Department proposal envisions an S.E.C. that would no longer regulate through hard-and-fast rules enforced swiftly and justly, but rather would practice “prudential” regulation, offering up principles and conceptual guidelines and working collaboratively behind closed doors with regulated entities and their self-regulatory organizations when they have violated the law.
          This approach would turn the S.E.C. from a market referee into an industry coach — a regulator that is heavy on forgiveness and light on punishment. That’s not a viable way to address wrongdoing. In our experience, tough enforcement of the securities laws deters bad behavior by market participants...

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Wall Street protest by Lenders: Just say no to government regulations

            Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
            Wall Street protest by Lenders: Just say no to government regulations

            Two related items from today's NY Times [emphasis mine]. Why are we not surprised?
            April 28, 2008
            Loan Industry Fighting Rules on Mortgages
            WASHINGTON — The mortgage industry, facing the prospect of tougher regulations for its central role in the housing crisis, has begun an intensive campaign to fight back.
            As the Federal Reserve completes work on rules to root out abuses by lenders, its plan has run into a buzz saw of criticism from bankers, mortgage brokers and other parts of the housing industry. One common industry criticism is that at a time of tight credit, tighter rules could make many mortgages more expensive by creating more paperwork and potentially exposing lenders to more lawsuits.
            To the chagrin of consumer groups that have complained that the proposed rules are not strong enough, the industry’s criticism has already prompted the Fed to consider narrowing the scope of the plan so it applies to fewer loans...
            ...Earlier this month, as the comment period was about to close, the Fed was deluged with more than 5,000 comments, mostly from lenders who said the proposals could affect loans that have not presented problems. Some bankers and brokers also said the rules would discourage them from lending to some creditworthy borrowers.
            The plan was criticized in separate filings by three of the industry’s most influential trade groups — the American Bankers Association, the Mortgage Bankers Association and the Independent Community Bankers of America...
            And this Op Ed from three former SEC Chairmen:
            Op-Ed Contributors
            Muzzling the Watchdog
            By WILLIAM DONALDSON, ARTHUR LEVITT Jr. and DAVID RUDER
            Published: April 29, 2008
            THE downfall of Bear Stearns, the release of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s sweeping blueprint for the overhaul of our financial regulatory structure, and the worsening health of the stock market and our economy has raised serious questions for the future of the Securities and Exchange Commission. As the capital-markets regulator and investor’s advocate, the S.E.C. is a natural recipient of finger-pointing during a market crisis...
            ...But the Treasury Department proposal envisions an S.E.C. that would no longer regulate through hard-and-fast rules enforced swiftly and justly, but rather would practice “prudential” regulation, offering up principles and conceptual guidelines and working collaboratively behind closed doors with regulated entities and their self-regulatory organizations when they have violated the law.
            This approach would turn the S.E.C. from a market referee into an industry coach — a regulator that is heavy on forgiveness and light on punishment. That’s not a viable way to address wrongdoing. In our experience, tough enforcement of the securities laws deters bad behavior by market participants...
            thanks for posting this. what's the saying? the crime that pays is the crime that stays? makes a person want to give up all this legit money making crap and get into one of these gummit protected rackets.

            Comment

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