mortgage

Yes, we know there’s a horrible mixed metaphor in the headline, but both halves of it just seem so appropriate that we’re willing to overlook our own literary faux pas to make the point.

The Associated Press previews another act in the upcoming economic calamity:

Fannie Mae asked the government Friday for an additional $8.5 billion in aid after declining home prices caused more defaults on loans guaranteed by the mortgage giant.

The company said it lost $8.7 billion in the first three months of the year. Those losses led Fannie to request more than three times the federal aid it sought in the previous quarter. The total cost of rescuing the government-controlled mortgage buyer is nearing $100 billion – the most expensive bailout of a single company.

Combined with the bailout of sibling company Freddie Mac, the government expects their rescue to cost taxpayers about $259 billion. That money will cover the mortgage giants’ losses on soured loans made in the midst of the housing bubble.

Home prices declined on average 1.8 percent across the country during the January-March quarter, Fannie Mae said. That led to more foreclosures and to homeowners abandoning houses that were worth less than they owed on their mortgages.

Things are horrible! But things are getting better! Just ask Fannie Mae President and CEO Michael Williams:
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Late to the party, 60 Minutes finally covers the missing/forged mortgage paperwork fiasco known as Foreclosuregate. Unbelievably, they even said the words, “double dip.” What’s the world coming to?

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The BankofAmericaSuck.com site, which I understand is affiliated with the hacker group Anonymous, has posted some emails that allegedly show Bank of America employees purposely removing, falsifying and electronically altering loan documents. I found the B of A Sucks site confusing to read, so go to the BoomBustBlog.com site who has put some excerpts together in a more readable format. Note that these emails are dated just four months ago, so if true, show that these problems are still happening under the new CEO.

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Making Homes Affordable

For an administration that has the bankers in their back pocket — er, the bankers who have the administration in their back pocket might be more accurate — and runs a campaign of class warfare to save the little guy, their ineptitude in running their mortgage loan modification program is astounding.

The program is intended to help homeowners at risk of foreclosure by lowering their monthly payments, first with a trial run, and then hopefully with a permanent loan modification the homeowner can live with. But it’s not going well. Yesterday the Treasury Department said that of the more than 1.4 million desperate people that have applied, 774,000 have fallen out of the program. That’s a whopping 54%. Only 35% have been so far been successfully converted to a lower payment loan.

The real tragedy is seeing those who start with the program, believing it will become permanent, only to then be rejected. I know one such person, and I remember the call, and he was so excited about the new lower payments, something he could afford. Then, after a couple months, he learned that he did not qualify. Uh, hello, of course he did not qualify — in theory and in practice, those who need help would have trouble qualifying. He could have afforded the lower payments, and the bank would not have to foreclose on his house someday. But now, full and timely payments are not going to be coming from him. And the bank will end up having another home they will have to have to resell at a loss. Brilliant. Just brilliant.

The bankers and the Obama Administration. They deserve each other. But we don’t deserve either.

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Photo Credit: spaceodissey


A new poll by the Washington Post found that a majority of Americans are now worried about being able to make their mortgage or rent payment. Specifically, 53% of respondents said that they are “very concerned” or “somewhat concerned” about having the money to make their monthly payment, compared with 37% in December 2008.

The Washington Post article states, “A new Washington Post poll shows that concerns about housing payments have spiked since 2008 despite some improvements in the overall economy.” Improvements in the economy? Are they insane? Unemployment is higher now, foreclosures are higher now. What improvement, the stock market? Memo to WaPo: the stock market is not the economy.

And it’s not just that more homes are underwater now than before that is causing the anxiety, as 70% of renters are concerned, compared with 46 percent of homeowners. It’s the unemployment, and the gloomy outlook for our one great nation.

Source: Washington Post

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This clip is a must watch. MSNBC’s Dylan Ratigan interviews ForeclosureHamlet.org blogger Lisa Epstein and former bank regulator and economics professor Bill Black on the massive fraud we’re discovering in all aspects of the Mortgage Backed Securities saga.‬ The only ones who seem to not see the fraud is the government.

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While most talking heads repeat the “real estate has bottomed” mantra, there are some who aren’t following the crowd and who are bold enough to say that we ain’t seen nothing yet. One of the most well-known is Gary Shilling, who you’ll hear in this clip from his appearance on CNBC last week.

First, Diana Olick presents the Clear Capital announcement that home prices have dropped 6% in only two months, and also warned that Foreclosuregate will most definitely cause prices to continue to fall. This is followed by Shilling telling CNBC host Simon Hobbs that he sees home prices tumbling another 20% over the next few years. Not only that, as a result of this, the number of underwater homeowners will rise from 23% to 40%.


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Foreclosure Sign

The Banking Sector, which must participate in any stock market rally for the rally to be real and lasting, has failed several times this year to break out along with other sectors. And it just failed again this month. Perhaps investors are thinking about something that’s been on our minds this week: and that is the effect of the exploding foreclosure “chain of title” problem on banks.

What is the Chain of Title?

Before the existence of mortgage-backed securities, most mortgages were held by local banks, the good old savings and loan. Title on the note was easy to prove. But when mortgage securitization happened, mortgage loans were bundled into Real-Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits (REMICs), handled by the Mortgage Electronic Registration System (MERS), which became the repository for the digitized mortgage notes, and which ended up slicing and dicing them into mortgage-backed securities. And these were then sold off to investors, according to their risk characteristics.

So what’s the problem? Everything was fine and dandy as home prices continued to rise.
But as home prices fell, and foreclosures rose, some sharp homeowners began asking the question, “does the bank who is foreclosing on me actually own the note? Do they really have the legal right to foreclose?”

Good question, because what these homeowners’ lawyers found was that in many cases the “chain of title” was broken. What does this mean? The actual IOU of a mortgage loan is the note. A note can be sold or transferred an unlimited number of times, but the physical document has to be physically signed over to the next holder. All of the signatures are what’s called the “chain of title.” If these signatures are skipped, then the chain of title is broken, and legally, the note is no longer valid. And so, legally, the homeowner no longer owes the loan.

A Higher Mortgage Delinquency Rate

Now, we’re not naive enough to believe that the government, bought and sold by the banks, is going to allow people to simply walk on the loans. Complete chaos would ensue. But, the confusion over the nation’s foreclosure process, and the temporary halting of all foreclosures by big banks such as Bank of America, will have a consequence.

Homeowners on the edge, who have already missed a payment, or have struggled to make their mortgage payments, will look at this mess and think, “Hmmm…it’s safe to miss a few payments while this is going on. I’ll worry about them later.” Since virtually no one can get any kind of loan these days, it’s a way for a homeowner in trouble to get a loan for a few months.

And don’t discount the ability of the media to ask the question, day in and day out, “Will homeowners be able to walk away from their mortgages?” They’ll trot out legal experts on both sides, leaving homeowners not only confused, but leaving a great many actually believing they can walk. It’s easy to believe when you are desperate, trying to put food on the table.

Our prediction is that the next few months will see the already staggering number of delinquent mortgages rise even further, and at a more rapid rate than expected.

Eventually, as go the Banks…

A higher mortgage delinquency rate means a less revenue for the banks. And this comes at a time when the banks will be spending untold sums trying to reestablish the chain of title on the notes, which will be a legal nightmare. This will put the underperforming banking stocks further underwater. And with no leadership from the banking sector, along with the failed recovery, the entire stock market will suffer.

No, don’t believe the subprime crisis is over. We’re just in the second act.

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