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The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

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  • The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

    The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis
    by William K. Black

    Bill Black is an Associate Professor of Economics and Law at the University of Missouri – Kansas City (UMKC). He was the Executive Director of the Institute for Fraud Prevention from 2005-2007. He has taught previously at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin and at Santa Clara University, where he was also the distinguished scholar in residence for insurance law and a visiting scholar at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics.

    As a white-collar criminologist and former financial regulator much of my research studies what causes financial markets to become profoundly dysfunctional. The FBI has been warning of an "epidemic" of mortgage fraud since September 2004. It also reports that lenders initiated 80% of these frauds. When the person that controls a seemingly legitimate business or government agency uses it as a "weapon" to defraud we categorize it as a "control fraud" ("The Organization as 'Weapon' in White Collar Crime." Wheeler & Rothman 1982; The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One. Black 2005). Financial control frauds' "weapon of choice" is accounting. Control frauds cause greater financial losses than all other forms of property crime -- combined. Control fraud epidemics can arise when financial deregulation and desupervision and perverse compensation systems create a "criminogenic environment" (Big Money Crime. Calavita, Pontell & Tillman 1997.)

    The FBI correctly identified the epidemic of mortgage control fraud at such an early point that the financial crisis could have been averted had the Bush administration acted with even minimal competence. To understand the crisis we have to focus on how the mortgage fraud epidemic produced widespread accounting fraud.

    Don't ask; don't tell: book profits, "earn" bonuses and closet your losses
    The first document everyone should read is by S&P, the largest of the rating agencies. The context of the document is that a professional credit rater has told his superiors that he needs to examine the mortgage loan files to evaluate the risk of a complex financial derivative whose risk and market value depend on the credit quality of the nonprime mortgages "underlying" the derivative. A senior manager sends a blistering reply with this forceful punctuation:
    Any request for loan level tapes is TOTALLY UNREASONABLE!!! Most investors don't have it and can't provide it. [W]e MUST produce a credit estimate. It is your responsibility to provide those credit estimates and your responsibility to devise some method for doing so.
    Fraud is the principal credit risk of nonprime mortgage lending. It is impossible to detect fraud without reviewing a sample of the loan files. Paper loan files are bulky, so they are photographed and the images are stored on computer tapes. Unfortunately, "most investors" (the large commercial and investment banks that purchased nonprime loans and pooled them to create financial derivatives) did not review the loan files before purchasing nonprime loans and did not even require the lender to provide loan tapes.

    .
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    The results were disconcerting
    A rating agency (Fitch) first reviewed a small sample of nonprime loan files after the secondary market in nonprime loan paper collapsed and nonprime lending virtually ceased. The second document everyone should read is Fitch's report on what they found.
    Fitch's analysts conducted an independent analysis of these files with the benefit of the full origination and servicing files. The result of the analysis was disconcerting at best, as there was the appearance of fraud or misrepresentation in almost every file.
    [F]raud was not only present, but, in most cases, could have been identified with adequate underwriting, quality control and fraud prevention tools prior to the loan funding. Fitch believes that this targeted sampling of files was sufficient to determine that inadequate underwriting controls and, therefore, fraud is a factor in the defaults and losses on recent vintage pools.
    Fitch also explained why these forms of mortgage fraud cause severe losses.
    For example, for an origination program that relies on owner occupancy to offset other risk factors, a borrower fraudulently stating its intent to occupy will dramatically alter the probability of the loan defaulting. When this scenario happens with a borrower who purchased the property as a short-term investment, based on the anticipation that the value would increase, the layering of risk is greatly multiplied. If the same borrower also misrepresented his income, and cannot afford to pay the loan unless he successfully sells the property, the loan will almost certainly default and result in a loss, as there is no type of loss mitigation, including modification, which can rectify these issues.
    The widespread claim that nonprime loan originators that sold their loans caused the crisis because they "had no skin in the game" ignores the fundamental causes. The ultra sophisticated buyers knew the originators had no skin in the game. Neoclassical economics and finance predicts that because they know that the nonprime originators have perverse incentives to sell them toxic loans they will take particular care in their due diligence to detect and block any such sales. They assuredly would never buy assets that the trade openly labeled as fraudulent, after receiving FBI warnings of a fraud epidemic, without the taking exceptional due diligence precautions. The rating agencies' concerns for their reputations would make them even more cautious. Real markets, however, became perverse -- "due diligence" and "private market discipline" became oxymoronic. These two documents are enough to begin to understand:
    Unfortunately, the author of this piece does not give any links to the documents he wants everybody to read -- not even the titles of the documents! At least at Huffington Post he does not!

  • #2
    Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

    Here is the document from Fitch:

    http://blenderlaw.umlaw.net/wp-conte...itchfraud1.pdf

    And both of them are attached to this letter to the SEC:

    http://sec.gov/comments/s7-13-08/s71308-58.pdf

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

      Thanks -- will be useful reads

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

        You're welcome.

        You might find this interesting too:

        http://www.fitchratings.com/web_cont...on_07_2007.pdf

        and this:

        http://www.fitchratings.com/web_cont...MBS_Slides.ppt

        From the presentation above:

        U.S. subprime mortgage market media coverage has moved mainstream . . .

        Mortgage market news is now regularly on the front page of the Wall Street Journal and New York Times
        Over 80 articles on subprime mortgages were filed with various news agencies last week.
        A web site, “The Mortgage Lender Implode-O-Meter” tracks U.S. mortgage lenders that have either shut down or are no longer operating independently along with, “Mortgage Banking Bust News and Commentary.”
        853,106 visitors to the site from January 1 to March 12, 2007
        Claims 36 lenders “imploded” by either bankruptcy filing, halting major operations or last-ditch acquisition
        Claims another 10 lenders are “ailing”
        and this list of more documents:

        Selected Fitch Subprime RMBS and CDO Research

        15-Apr-05 “U.S. Subprime RMBS in CDOs,” co-authored by U.S. Structured Credit and RMBS groups

        07-Sep-05 “Operational Risks Inherent in New RMBS Products,” by U.S. RMBS group

        17-Jan-06 “2006 Global Structured Finance Outlook: Economic & Sector-by-Sector Analysis,” by Global Structured Finance

        24-Jul-06 “U.S. Structured Finance CDO Performance: 2006 Update,” by U.S. Structured Credit group

        21-Aug-06 “U.S. Subprime RMBS in CDOs (Update),” co-authored by U.S. Structured Credit and RMBS groups

        04-Oct-06 “40, 45 and 50 Year Mortgages: Option ARMs, Hybrid ARMs and FRMs,” by U.S. RMBS group

        13-Dec-06 “2007 Global Structured Finance Outlook: Economic & Sector-by-Sector Analysis,” by Global Structured Finance


        Lots of ghosts hanging around the Fitch websites and elsewhere:

        http://www.securitization.net/pdf/co...ons_2Nov04.pdf

        I think almost all of those titles can be found here, but not if you use the website's search function. Search for the titles within quotes, using the google cache function.

        http://www.securitization.net/
        Last edited by Slimprofits; February 26, 2009, 03:04 PM.

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        • #5
          Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

          http://www.mortgagebankers.org/files...esentation.pdf

          another Fitch ghost from May 2006

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          • #6
            Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

            Originally posted by babbittd View Post
            This is one of the things I love about iTulip. You guys can find anything!!!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

              Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
              This is one of the things I love about iTulip. You guys can find anything!!!
              Yep -- & I reckon the day is not far when google will be able to search mis-placed items in my home

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

                Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                This is one of the things I love about iTulip. You guys can find anything!!!
                It's google, especially the cache function. Maybe other search engines too, but google will locate documents that are hosted on a website, even if their not supposed to be seen. That's probably a terrible explanation, but the link you quoted is a perfect example. Can you locate that document on the host website, using their search function? No, but it's right there and I got by searching for the title in quotation marks.

                Likewise, I searched within quotation marks for one quote from each of the original documents mentioned in Rajiv's original post and those links are on the first page of the results.
                Last edited by Slimprofits; February 26, 2009, 09:30 PM.

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                • #9
                  Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

                  Thanks for the tip!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: The Two Documents Everyone Should Read to Better Understand the Crisis

                    Matt Taibbi in the new issue of Rolling Stone:

                    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-last-mystery-of-the-financial-crisis-20130619?link=mostpopular2


                    It's long been suspected that ratings agencies like Moody's and Standard & Poor's helped trigger the meltdown. A new trove of embarrassing documents shows how they did it



                    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics...hayes-20130621

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