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  • US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

    Big news? Nothing? Seems bearish for bank shares, at the least.

    U.S. Is Set to Sue a Dozen Big Banks Over Mortgages

    By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ

    Published: September 1, 2011

    The federal agency that oversees the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is set to file suits against more than a dozen big banks, accusing them of misrepresenting the quality of mortgage securities they assembled and sold at the height of the housing bubble, and seeking billions of dollars in compensation.

    The Federal Housing Finance Agency suits, which are expected to be filed in the coming days in federal court, are aimed at Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank, among others, according to three individuals briefed on the matter.

    The suits stem from subpoenas the finance agency issued to banks a year ago. If the case is not filed Friday, they said, it will come Tuesday, shortly before a deadline expires for the housing agency to file claims.

    The suits will argue the banks, which assembled the mortgages and marketed them as securities to investors, failed to perform the due diligence required under securities law and missed evidence that borrowers’ incomes were inflated or falsified. When many borrowers were unable to pay their mortgages, the securities backed by the mortgages quickly lost value.

    Fannie and Freddie lost more than $30 billion, in part as a result of the deals, losses that were borne mostly by taxpayers.

    In July, the agency filed suit against UBS, another major mortgage securitizer, seeking to recover at least $900 million, and the individuals with knowledge of the case said the new litigation would be similar in scope.

    Private holders of mortgage securities are already trying to force the big banks to buy back tens of billions in soured mortgage-backed bonds, but this federal effort is a new chapter in a huge legal fight that has alarmed investors in bank shares. In this case, rather than demanding that the banks buy back the original loans, the finance agency is seeking reimbursement for losses on the securities held by Fannie and Freddie.

    The impending litigation underscores how almost exactly three years after the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the beginning of a financial crisis caused in large part by subprime lending, the legal fallout is mounting.

    Besides the angry investors, 50 state attorneys general are in the final stages of negotiating a settlement to address abuses by the largest mortgage servicers, including Bank of America, JPMorgan and Citigroup. The attorneys general, as well as federal officials, are pressing the banks to pay at least $20 billion in that case, with much of the money earmarked to reduce mortgages of homeowners facing foreclosure.

    And last month, the insurance giant American International Group filed a $10 billion suit against Bank of America, accusing the bank and its Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch units of misrepresenting the quality of mortgages that backed the securities A.I.G. bought.

    Bank of America, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan all declined to comment. Frank Kelly, a spokesman for Deutsche Bank, said, “We can’t comment on a suit that we haven’t seen and hasn’t been filed yet.”

    But privately, financial service industry executives argue that the losses on the mortgage-backed securities were caused by a broader downturn in the economy and the housing market, not by how the mortgages were originated or packaged into securities. In addition, they contend that investors like A.I.G. as well as Fannie and Freddie were sophisticated and knew the securities were not without risk.

    Investors fear that if banks are forced to pay out billions of dollars for mortgages that later defaulted, it could sap earnings for years and contribute to further losses across the financial services industry, which has only recently regained its footing.

    Bank officials also counter that further legal attacks on them will only delay the recovery in the housing market, which remains moribund, hurting the broader economy. Other experts warned that a series of adverse settlements costing the banks billions raises other risks, even if suits have legal merit.

    The housing finance agency was created in 2008 and assigned to oversee the hemorrhaging government-backed mortgage companies, a process known as conservatorship.

    “While I believe that F.H.F.A. is acting responsibly in its role as conservator, I am afraid that we risk pushing these guys off of a cliff and we’re going to have to bail out the banks again,” said Tim Rood, who worked at Fannie Mae until 2006 and is now a partner at the Collingwood Group, which advises banks and servicers on housing-related issues.

    The suits are being filed now because regulators are concerned that it will be much harder to make claims after a three-year statute of limitations expires on Wednesday, the third anniversary of the federal takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.


    While the banks put together tens of billions of dollars in mortgage securities backed by risky loans, the Federal Housing Finance Agency is not seeking the total amount in compensation because some of the mortgages are still good and the investments still carry some value. In the UBS suit, the agency said it owned $4.5 billion worth of mortgages, with losses totaling $900 million. Negotiations between the agency and UBS have yielded little progress.

    The two mortgage giants acquired the securities in the years before the housing market collapsed as they expanded rapidly and looked for new investments that were seemingly safe. At issue in this case are so-called private-label securities that were backed by subprime and other risky loans but were rated as safe AAA investments by the ratings agencies.

    In the years before 2007, “the market was so frothy then it was hard to find good quality loans to securitize and hold in your portfolio,” said David Felt, a lawyer who served as deputy general counsel of the finance agency until January 2010. “Fannie and Freddie thought they were taking AAA tranches, and like so many investors, they were surprised when they didn’t turn out to be such quality investments."

    Fannie and Freddie had other reasons to buy the securities, Mr. Rood added. For starters, they carried higher yields at a time when the two mortgage giants could buy them using money borrowed at rock-bottom rates, thanks to the implicit federal guarantee they enjoyed.

    In addition, by law Fannie and Freddie were required to back loans to low-to-moderate income and minority borrowers, and the private-label securities were counted toward those goals.

    “Competitive pressures and onerous housing goals compelled them to operate more like hedge funds than government-sponsored guarantors, ” Mr. Rood said.
    In fact, Freddie was warned by regulators in 2006 that its purchases of subprime securities had outpaced its risk management abilities, but the company continued to load up on debt that ultimately soured.

    As of June 30, Freddie Mac holds more than $80 billion in mortgage securities backed by more shaky home loans like subprime mortgages, Option ARM and Alt-A loans. Freddie estimates its total gross losses stand at roughly $19 billion. Fannie Mae holds $38 billion of securities backed by Alt-A and subprime loans, with losses standing at nearly $14 billion.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/02/bu...s.html?_r=1&hp

  • #2
    Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

    There will be a lot of noise about punishing the parties responsible for the crisis, but at the end of the day, not much would actually change in terms of loss exposure.

    Any losses that are ultimately shifted from Fannie and Freddie (which are effectively subsidiaries of the Treasury Department) will be borne by:

    - Current bank shareholders, including mutual funds and pensions.

    For public pensions, states and municipalities will ultimately have to increase contributions to make up for the share price losses (effectively, Federal government takes from the states and cities).

    For private pensions, the losses will ultimately be borne by plan sponsors (private companies), pensioners (reduced benefits and standard of living), and ultimately, the federal PBGC (a subsidiary of the Treasury department; no risk transfer, effectively)

    - Current bank employees via lower compensation or workforce reductions. I would guess that not much of the pain will be felt by the individual mortgage bankers who were most responsible for the problem but by lower-level operational employees. Many of those most responsible for the problem worked for failed mortgage originators that are no longer with us or took their money and left the industry.

    - Bank customers and borrowers in the form of higher costs being passed through to pay for settlements

    If this has a large enough impact that the banks can't sell new equity to private investors and depositors become concerned enough to pull their money out, the banks might need to be backstopped or recapitalized by... the Treasury Department, and its subsidiary, the FDIC.

    The biggest beneficiaries might be new bank investors who may be able to buy shares at a discount to present levels and politicians who can take credit for doing something without actually doing anything.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

      I'm feeling nauseous.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

        I agree, mmreilly. I've become fully jaded and cynical about the large banks being entirely above the law; at every turn their losses get transferred onto either the taxpayer's debt accounts or mom and pop's retirement accounts. All the criminal charges for crooked dealing end up resolved with no person going to jail, no firms shut down, and a relatively minor fine that looks like a big number to joe 6 pack but which is just a tiny cost of doing business for the bank.

        I expect a similar resolution here -a modest payment that makes for a good headline and which buys full absolution for the big banks who will retain nearly all their illegal plunder.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

          Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
          I agree, mmreilly. I've become fully jaded and cynical about the large banks being entirely above the law; at every turn their losses get transferred onto either the taxpayer's debt accounts or mom and pop's retirement accounts. All the criminal charges for crooked dealing end up resolved with no person going to jail, no firms shut down, and a relatively minor fine that looks like a big number to joe 6 pack but which is just a tiny cost of doing business for the bank.

          I expect a similar resolution here -a modest payment that makes for a good headline and which buys full absolution for the big banks who will retain nearly all their illegal plunder.
          Nobody is going to get rich on this one...except for the lawyers. Can't argue with your description above of the likely resolution, but I expect it will be milked for several years by the lawyers before arriving at that point.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

            Originally posted by Chomsky View Post
            Big news? Nothing? Seems bearish for bank shares, at the least.
            I think, perhaps, a negative impact on bank shares is likely, whatever the practical consequence. Sentiment about banks was already nervous, and until the bottom line becomes clear, this is one more risk. Also, the suits were filed on Friday, and news of the filings broke after market close. That implies to me there was some delicacy in timing the news, so at least someone thinks there could be an impact.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

              Originally posted by Chomsky View Post
              Big news? Nothing? Seems bearish for bank shares, at the least.
              Big news to those who thought the Obama Administration was entirely a captive of the TBTF banks. For the next year, I think the Adminstration will be trying to burnish its image as a protector of taxpayers and consumers vs. the Big Banks, but I doubt these suits will live much past November 2012.

              Yes, Fannie and Freddie are technically private corporations not controlled by the Administration, but their mission statements require that management defend the entire notion of government subsidized mortgages. I believe most of the Fannie/Freddie officers are very angry about the Tea Party's claim that the Financial Crisis was caused by Fannie/Freddie, the CRA, ACORN, or any similar efforts to help lower income Americans buy a home. I believe they want to turn the spotlight on the fraud we all know originated with lenders (or their mortgage brokers), not borrowers.

              As I see it, this development has been timed to coincide with Obama's jobs speech next week. I believe he will include some sort of "mass refi" proposal that will need only the Fed and not Congress to support. The real purpose will be to stem the coming flood of strategic defaults by those who are presently current but hopelessly underwater on higher rate mortgages. The hope is that by refinancing those 6-7% mortgages to 4%, the borrowers will stay current and not exaccerbate the problem of substantial shadow inventory hitting the market soon after the government announces the Big Deal with banks on the robo-signing and foreclosure scandals. $20 billion there, $30 billion for Fannie/Freddie and soon you're talking about real money and, it is assumed, votes for the President in 2012.
              Last edited by goodrich4bk; September 02, 2011, 05:27 PM. Reason: wrong date

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

                How does this square with recent pressure on Schneiderman?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

                  please dont take this personally g4bk, i dont aim it at you....

                  Originally posted by goodrich4bk View Post
                  Big news to those who thought the Obama Administration was entirely a captive of the TBTF banks (??? huh?) . For the next year, I think the Adminstration will be trying to burnish its image as a protector of taxpayers and consumers vs. the Big Banks, but I doubt these suits will live much past November 2012.
                  just more 'meme management' = tail waggin the dog = too little too late, as in "..now that the horses have escaped (to the cayman islands), we better close the gate and find somebody (besides us) to blame..."

                  since they are now _desparate_ to make the waffler-in-chief look prezidential, no matter whos ox gets 'gored'

                  Yes, Fannie and Freddie are technically private corporations not controlled by the Administration, (??huh? and both run by dem party aparatchiks) but their mission statements require that management defend the entire notion of government subsidized mortgages. I believe most of the Fannie/Freddie officers are very angry about the Tea Party's claim that the Financial Crisis was caused by Fannie/Freddie, the CRA, ACORN, or any similar efforts to help lower income Americans buy a home.

                  now _theres_ the UNDERSTATEMENT of the year...
                  but because a few 'fast buck operators' were able to game the system - that the political class devised in the name of worshipping at the PC alter - adding liberal quantities of unintended-consequence along the way?

                  "we wouldnt want the electorate to believe that our (liberal/dem) policies were to blame, now would we?"

                  of course not....

                  "so lets get the AG to file some lawsuits and this will distract the herd just long enough to make our point"
                  and take the spotlights off the fact that the rest of their economic agenda (since 2009) has been AN ABJECT FAILURE!


                  I believe they want to turn the spotlight on the fraud we all know originated with lenders (or their mortgage brokers), not borrowers.
                  right again - this being right up there with the effort of the public ed system to work on 'developing self esteem' while they dumbdown the curriculum and the end result (unintended consequence) is PRECISELY the same.

                  "...but we wouldnt want the poor over-extended masses to think that _they_ did anything wrong, (by falling into the debt/sucker trap) allowing us to point the finger at the bad-ole-boggeyman called 'business/capitalism'..."

                  As I see it, this development has been timed to coincide with Obama's jobs speech next week. I believe he will include some sort of "mass refi" proposal that will need only the Fed and not Congress to support. The real purpose will be to stem the coming flood of strategic defaults by those who are presently current but hopelessly underwater on higher rate mortgages. The hope is that by refinancing those 6-7% mortgages to 4%, the borrowers will stay current and not exaccerbate the problem of substantial shadow inventory hitting the market soon after the government announces the Big Deal with banks on the robo-signing and foreclosure scandals. $20 billion there, $30 billion for Fannie/Freddie and soon you're talking about real money and, it is assumed, votes for the President in 2012.
                  all we need now is for slugman and the rest of the lamestream media chattering class to jump on the bandwagon
                  and they will have enuf propaganda spewing forth (just like in 2008) to guarantee 25% unemployment, so they can continue to 'celebrate' their historical return to their heyday: the 1930's

                  aint it grand, this 'vision'....

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

                    Originally posted by Thailandnotes View Post
                    How does this square with recent pressure on Schneiderman?
                    thats a _very_ good question.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      This Democratic leadership sure has gull.

                      The same government that gave Franklin Raines a free pass in 2004? Look this defense of Raines and cronies;

                      http://www.slate.com/id/2107894/

                      "...The simplest, and most conspiratorial, is that the Fannie investigation represents a Republican payback for Enron and Halliburton. Conservatives are delighting in the gutting of Raines and Fannie Mae—a Democratic boss of a Democratic-leaning company..."

                      This all looks pretty ridiculous now but I'll wager this lefty cheerleader has learned nothing and is right now writing so other hit piece on those that dare to ask for an ethical government.


                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

                        Originally posted by goodrich4bk View Post
                        Big news to those who thought the Obama Administration was entirely a captive of the TBTF banks. For the next year, I think the Adminstration will be trying to burnish its image as a protector of taxpayers and consumers vs. the Big Banks, but I doubt these suits will live much past November 2012.

                        What's the point of suing the banks? Jailing the bank executives will be more satisfying.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

                          Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
                          I agree, mmreilly. I've become fully jaded and cynical about the large banks being entirely above the law; at every turn their losses get transferred onto either the taxpayer's debt accounts or mom and pop's retirement accounts. All the criminal charges for crooked dealing end up resolved with no person going to jail, no firms shut down, and a relatively minor fine that looks like a big number to joe 6 pack but which is just a tiny cost of doing business for the bank.

                          I expect a similar resolution here -a modest payment that makes for a good headline and which buys full absolution for the big banks who will retain nearly all their illegal plunder.
                          Don't forget that part that what ever deal is made, will be made on the weekends when no one is paying attention. Preferable a holiday weekend or one with some sort of major news event going on.

                          I've been saying the banks are not only too big to fail but too big to prosecute.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

                            Originally posted by Thailandnotes View Post
                            How does this square with recent pressure on Schneiderman?
                            My guess is that it's somewhat obvious. The pressure's on Schneiderman because they want a deal done. This is another avenue. I think that the Obama administration has made the political calculus that it can no longer afford to overtly be best friends with the TBTF banks.

                            They would have rather pressed no law suit (as evidenced by it taking this long for them to get involved). But they realize that his numbers are going south hard enough that reelection is at risk and Perry might have some real traction. So they send Tim Geitner down to Goldman to find out how much flesh the big boys are willing to give for the public sacrifice.

                            Of course, mmreilly is right, and in the end of the day they'll get almost all of the cash back from the public sector somehow. So he explains this, they don't like it, but they'll still be willing to donate to the campaign in 2012 (although probably not in the amounts they did in 2008). In fact, this administration may get more cash from wall street than its republican counterpart's (just like in 2008), especially if the GOP members keep talking bad about the Fed.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: US Govt to file suit against big banks for mortgage securities fraud

                              Originally posted by Kadriana View Post
                              Don't forget that part that what ever deal is made, will be made on the weekends when no one is paying attention. Preferable a holiday weekend or one with some sort of major news event going on.

                              I've been saying the banks are not only too big to fail but too big to prosecute.

                              it sure is lookin like we're gonna have one of the bernanks little 'fireside chats' perty quick - wonder if it'll be on monday?

                              Comment

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