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Banks float $5 billion deal to settle foreclosure probe: report
(Reuters) – Major banks are willing to pay as much as $5 billion to settle claims by federal and state officials of improper mortgage foreclosure practices, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the situation.
The banks’ offer comes as mortgage companies and state and federal officials continue their efforts to strike a settlement of investigations sparked by allegations of “robo-signing” and other questionable foreclosure practices that came to light last fall, the Journal said.
The banks intend to propose that as much as $5 billion be used to compensate any borrowers previously wronged in the foreclosure process and provide transition assistance for borrowers who are ousted from their homes, the WSJ said, citing people familiar with the matter.
(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Ramya Venugopal)
State AGs Offer New Settlement Terms to Mortgage Servicers
American Banker | Wednesday, May 11, 2011
By Cheyenne Hopkins
WASHINGTON — After months of stalemate, the state attorneys general have proposed new terms to the top five mortgage servicers that drop some controversial provisions of their first attempt at a settlement, including a push to force banks to reduce principal on thousands of mortgages.
The new offer, which was expected to be discussed at a meeting between the two sides on Tuesday, moves them closer to a final agreement, but does not detail how much state AGs are seeking in penalties for servicing issues uncovered by federal and state regulators.
Banks have privately said that they will not agree to a fine above $10 billion — far below a discredited $20 billion figure floated in the press two months ago — arguing that regulators have not provided evidence that servicing problems led to wrongful foreclosures.
The AGs are considering using whatever money they receive from banks to start a “cash for keys” program to help troubled borrowers move out of their homes and speed the foreclosure process by providing them cash incentives to leave. The funds are also expected to be used to promote mortgage counseling and offer some forebearance to troubled homeowners.
While banks have not agreed to the new terms, they do appear much more beneficial than an offer made in February, which demanded sweeping changes across the servicing industry, including principal reductions. By dropping that requirement, banks have already scored a key victory, observers said.
“It makes sense for principal reduction to be off the table because it creates a tremendous number of legal and logistical obstacles that in the context of a complex settlement are obviously difficult and distracting,” said David Dunn, a partner at Hogan Lovells law firm. “It makes sense for that to come off the table for the parties to reach agreement on issues that are less difficult and controversial.”
But the term sheet would still require the servicers to enact substantial changes to their practices, and could potentially raise issues in new areas.
Under the new terms, according to several sources, servicers would be required to allow borrowers that received a trial Treasury Home Affordable Mortgage Program modification — but which were denied a permanent mod — to reapply for the program.
The state AGs are also continuing to insist that servicers stop pursuing loan modifications and foreclosures at the same time, a process known as dual tracking that has drawn complaints from confused consumers.
The revised term sheet raised some new issues, including a proposed requirement for more documentation concerning the basis of knowledge for a foreclosure and notes and assignments. The state AGs are seeking to require documentation on the appropriate transfer and delivery of endorsed notes and deeds of trust at the formation of a mortgage-backed security. Essentially, servicers would have to document that they not only have positions with the MBS but document that the securitization was formed properly.
The new term sheet would also expand protections provided by the Servicemembers Relief Act to prohibit foreclosures on servicemembers who have been permanently moved to a post in a different state.
The new settlement also includes language that servicers must make borrowers aware of loss mitigation options prior to referral to foreclosure and facilitate loss mitigation applications. But the state AGs have dropped a demand that servicers provide to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau their formulas for calculating the net present value of a home.
It remains unclear if banks are amenable to the proposed new terms. Also unknown is whether the new requirements would be extended to the rest of the servicing industry.
“I don’t know where the banks are with this because they are working on their federal consent orders,” said Lisa DeLessio, a partner at Hudson Cook LP. “I still think it’s very unclear what this means. If the AGs reach a settlement with the banks, what will this mean for the rest of mortgage servicers? What will happen to them?”
Despite the proposed new terms, many observers were pessimistic the two sides will reach a deal anytime soon. Fed up with the delay in the process, the banking regulators already moved forward in April with a cease and desist action against the top 14 mortgage servicers.
The state AGs, meanwhile, have been beset by doubts on their own side after the initial release of their 27-page term sheet. Several Republican AGs said pursuing principal reductions were a mistake, while GOP members on Capitol Hill criticized the CFPB’s involvement in the settlement process.
Some said the process was liable to continue to drag out.
“I do not believe the prospects of a full resolution in the short term are very high as there remain divergent views among all parties,” said Andy Sandler, co-chair of BuckleySandler LLP.
Others said the AGs will not force a settlement until they can provide more details on what exactly the banks did wrong. While the banking regulators released an 18-page report detailing deficiencies at the servicers, the state AGs have not spelled out what issues they uncovered.
“There has to be some more due diligence and investigation before they have the credibility to enforce a settlement,” said Josh Rosner, managing director of the research firm Graham Fisher & Co. “If they did a credible investigation of origination and servicing and detailed the findings of that investigation it would demonstrate how troubled the situation is and how deep the economic morass is.”
Since August 2007, which marked the beginning of the “foreclosure crisis”, MainStreet has provided guidance, direction and peace of mind to over 150 families. These families are from every walk of life and each of their mortgage situations is as unique as each individual tied to it.
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Are you in default or foreclosure? If you suspect you have been the victim of Predatory Lending here in Florida, suspect you might be a victim of fraud, suspect the lender who provided your mortgage may have been less than honest, or may have even purposely overvalued your property in the Appraisal, please contact me, Tiffany Arthur at mainstreetemail@aol.com or visit my website for more information at www.mainstreetresolutions.com We are interested in helping the homeowner find a permanent resolution to keep them in their home.
As Regulators and Banks Review Foreclosures, We’ll Be Watching
by Paul Kiel
ProPublica, April 21, 2011, 10:19 a.m.
A bank-owned sign stands outside of a foreclosed home on June 15, 2009. Regulators are launching an unprecedented plan to compensate victims of wrongful foreclosures in 2009 and 2010. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
The country’s bank regulators are launching an unprecedented plan to undo some of the damage done by mortgage servicers, compensating victims of shoddy or illegal foreclosure practices. Part of the plan involves a massive outreach effort to contact the potentially millions of borrowers affected.
Exactly how this will unfold is, for now, unclear; if regulators hold true to form, the process figures not to be transparent. Homeowner advocates applaud the idea of the banks righting their wrongs but are skeptical the process will be thorough and fair. The regulators don’t “have a good track record at identifying or fixing servicer misbehavior,” said Diane Thompson of the National Consumer Law Center.
Bank of America: Federal Reserve, OCC
Wells Fargo: Federal Reserve, OCC
JPMorgan Chase: Federal Reserve, OCC
Citi: Federal Reserve, OCC
GMAC (aka Ally): Federal Reserve and FDIC
OneWest (aka IndyMac): OTS
HSBC: Federal Reserve, OCC
U.S. Bank: Federal Reserve, OCC
PNC: Federal Reserve, OCC
Aurora: OTS
SunTrust: Federal Reserve
MetLife: Federal Reserve, OCC
Sovereign Bank: OTS
EverBank: OTS
- Making Home Affordable.gov
The administration’s web site for the foreclosure prevention program. Provides an FAQ, homeowner examples, and other tools to see whether you might qualify for the program. - Foreclosure Avoidance Counselors
A list of HUD-approved housing counseling agencies nationwide. - FTC Tips for Mortgage Servicing Consumers
Tips for homeowners from the Federal Trade Commission. - Program Guidelines for Mortgage Servicers
These “supplemental directives” lay out how mortgage servicers are supposed to conduct the program. - Compensation for Mortgage Servicers
This Treasury Department document lays out how mortgage servicers are compensated for completed modifications - Calculated Risk
A finance and economics blog that provides news and metrics on the state of the housing market.
Did you lose your home to foreclosure? Please share your experiences with ProPublica reporters.
Have you worked for a servicer in a loan modification call center? We want to hear from you.
ProPublica will be watching closely. We’d like to hear from current and former homeowners who wrongfully faced foreclosure in the last couple of years [1]. Much as we’ve tracked [2] the administration’s mortgage modification program [3], we’ll be tracking what happens with these cases.
Last week, regulators released “consent orders” that laid out problems at many of the country’s biggest servicers (see sidebar for the list), which collectively handle almost 70 percent of the country’s mortgages. The orders followed an investigation [4] prompted by widespread revelations [5] last fall that servicers were regularly filing false affidavits signed by so-called “robo-signers [6].” According to the orders, regulators found that servicers weren’t properly evaluating homeowners for loan modifications, had wrongly foreclosed on some homeowners, and in addition to doing a generally poor job, had broken the law. (None of this should surprise those who’ve been reading our coverage [7].)
You can see the regulators’ report on their investigation and all of the orders here [8].
To fix the ongoing problems, the orders lay out broad principles that servicers should follow — basics such as having sufficient staff, training them adequately, not losing documents, etc. But because the orders are so general, borrower advocates have been vocal [9] in saying they won’t be enough to fundamentally change the industry’s cost-cutting ways [10] or to ensure that homeowners are properly evaluated for a modification.
The orders include a requirement for the banks to do foreclosure reviews to address problems that have cropped up during recent years. The process will start immediately but won’t culminate until early 2012.
Each bank is required to hire an outside firm to review all of its foreclosure actions in 2009 and 2010. The firm will be tasked with looking for certain violations (see our list below [11]), ranging from robo-signed affidavits and forged documents to foreclosure sales that occurred without a proper review for a modification. Based on those findings, banks will compensate the victims, or as the orders put it, “remediate all financial injury to borrowers caused by any errors, misrepresentations, or other deficiencies.”
So, how exactly will this work? Many of the details remain unclear, but we spoke to regulatory sources who provided some additional information.
Over the next couple months, the banks will hire the outside firms to conduct the reviews. The actual reviews are expected to begin this summer. They are supposed to cover all mortgages that were in the foreclosure process at any point in 2009 or 2010, but because that involves more than 3 million loans, the firms will use sampling to do their analysis.
The process won’t be strictly internal, however. Regulators also will require some form of outreach. It’s likely, for instance, that all the banks will be sending letters to every homeowner who was in foreclosure in 2009 or 2010.
Of course, some of these people are likely to be former homeowners who may well no longer reside at the same address. There might also be a kind of ad campaign, but regulators acknowledge these people will be tough to reach.
However it’s done, there will be some way for homeowners to submit their complaints to banks. Those who think they might be eligible for reimbursement or remediation should “get their documents together,” said one regulatory source. When the reviews launch in the summer, it should become clear exactly where those complaints should go. (You can be sure we’ll post that information when it’s available.)
It’s still anyone’s guess what will happen after complaints are submitted. Among the important unanswered questions: whether the review will involve homeowner interviews; how the outside firms will investigate claims of violations; whether those who complain will receive some sort of explanation if they’re denied; and how banks and regulators will calculate what victims are owed.
Thompson, of the National Consumer Law Center, said she worries the reviews will “shift the burden onto homeowners” to prove they were wronged. Homeowners won’t necessarily have kept the documents that demonstrate harm, she said. Even those who do have documentation may not know they were wronged, she added. They wouldn’t know, for instance, whether the fees they were charged were improper or whether they were considered for a modification.
If the reviewers do no investigation of their own and simply reply on homeowners to submit proof of wrongdoing, she said, it will miss most of the problems: “The process and remediation will serve as a whitewash for servicer misbehavior without actually either remediating past errors or preventing future ones.”
The reviews are expected to culminate late this year or early next year, when checks are scheduled to go out to victims. Regulatory sources told us that the total amount sent to eligible homeowners would likely be disclosed. Even before this phase, observers may get a hint of what’s happening if, as expected, regulators levy financial penalties against the banks. The findings of the reviews will determine the size of those penalties, regulatory officials said.
Regulators have done similar reviews in the past to compensate victims of bank wrongdoing, but not on this scale. In 2008, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (one of several regulatory agencies for the biggest banks and servicers, such as Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, and Citibank), oversaw a process that resulted in Wachovia Bank issuing $150 million in checks [12] to more than 740,000 consumers for the bank’s role in a telemarketing scam. Regulators acknowledge, however, that the foreclosure reviews, which will involve 14 banks, millions of consumers, and billions of dollars in claims, is in a class of its own.
If you think you’re a borrower who should be compensated through this process, we want to hear from you [1]. We also want to hear from homeowners who have mortgage servicers not covered by this process (there are some large ones), because they might be covered by efforts from other regulators down the line [13].
Here’s the language from the Consent Orders that describes the scope of the foreclosure review:
The purpose of the Foreclosure Review shall be to determine, at a minimum:
(a) whether at the time the foreclosure action was initiated or the pleading or affidavit filed (including in bankruptcy proceedings and in defending suits brought by borrowers), the foreclosing party or agent of the party had properly documented ownership of the promissory note and mortgage (or deed of trust) under relevant state law, or was otherwise a proper party to the action as a result of agency or similar status;
(b) whether the foreclosure was in accordance with applicable state and federal law, including but not limited to the SCRA and the U.S. Bankruptcy Code;
(c) whether a foreclosure sale occurred when an application for a loan modification or other Loss Mitigation was under consideration; when the loan was performing in accordance with a trial or permanent loan modification; or when the loan had not been in default for a sufficient period of time to authorize foreclosure pursuant to the terms of the mortgage loan documents and related agreements;
(d) whether, with respect to non-judicial foreclosures, the procedures followed with respect to the foreclosure sale (including the calculation of the default period, the amounts due, and compliance with notice periods) and post-sale confirmations were in accordance with the terms of the mortgage loan and state law requirements;
(e) whether a delinquent borrower’s account was only charged fees and/or penalties that were permissible under the terms of the borrower’s loan documents, applicable state and federal law, and were reasonable and customary;
(f) whether the frequency that fees were assessed to any delinquent borrower’s account (including broker price opinions) was excessive under the terms of the borrower’s loan documents, and applicable state and federal law;
(g) whether Loss Mitigation Activities with respect to foreclosed loans were handled in accordance with the requirements of the HAMP, and consistent with the policies and procedures applicable to the Bank’s proprietary loan modifications or other loss mitigation programs, such that each borrower had an adequate opportunity to apply for a Loss Mitigation option or program, any such application was handled properly, a final decision was made on a reasonable basis, and was communicated to the borrower before the foreclosure sale; and
(h) whether any errors, misrepresentations, or other deficiencies identified in the Foreclosure Review resulted in financial injury to the borrower or the mortgagee.
Since August 2007, which marked the beginning of the “foreclosure crisis”, MainStreet has provided guidance, direction and peace of mind to over 150 families. These families are from every walk of life and each of their mortgage situations is as unique as each individual tied to it. MainStreet Resolutions is Your Path to A Fresh Start!
Call US TODAY
to See How We Can Help.
1-888-728-3020
Are you in default or foreclosure? If you suspect you have been the victim of Predatory Lending here in Florida, suspect you might be a victim of fraud, suspect the lender who provided your mortgage may have been less than honest, or may have even purposely overvalued your property in the Appraisal, please contact me, Tiffany Arthur at tiffanylarthur@aol.com or visit my website for more information at www.mainstreetresolutions.com We are interested in helping the homeowner find a permanent resolution to keep them in their home.


