Monday, June 1, 2015

If not now, when?


When Will the Public See the Fleecing?

 

 

I played around with—but then dropped—a scheme to start an online petition, using social media and other forum, to generate public opposition to what I believe is a dangerous GOP legislative strategy to weaken federal regulatory authority over large financial institutions, as evidenced by the “Shelby package’’ of amendments, named for Senate Banking Committee Chairman Dick Shelby (R-Ala), which sailed out of his committee on a strict 12 R's to 10 D's vote. 

I bagged my plan because I don’t think my petition would generate the necessary attention, since the steady public stream of major bank violations and fines, including several in the week before and after the Shelby approval, hasn’t roused anybody’s ire.  

I am certain many in the public read these stories but the citizenry never seem to make the connection they—as taxpayers and financial—are indirectly paying these fines, especially when their banks raise prices to recapture revenue paid out to the government. 

Where is the noise and outrage?  

Does the public just not understand the major financial screwing big banks are handing us? 

I am not sure and recent actions give me little comfort. 

Will the public—tired of endless major bank legal and regulatory violations and the fines which don’t seem to stop the aberrance—ever begin to realize that the Republican party is seeking to undertake major steps, at the public’s expense,  to reduce government regulatory control over these bank giants—no matter how many violations they commit, especially when the American consumer picking up the pieces one way or another? 

Billions and billions of dollars in fine have been heaped onto large financial institutions—for a variety of egregious acts--but the banks don’t stop corner cutting and cheating and, asking for more relief. But nobody—save occasionally Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)-- gets super vexed and certainly this Administration isn’t opting to send anyone to jail (a practice that has to end if we want the shocking bank behavior to decrease or to stop). 

As noted before, the Shelby bill contains moves to weaken the control of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve and alter the oversight of financial institutions between $51 Billion and $499 Billion in asset size (those bank holding companies over $500 Billion—the really TBTF institutions and those under $51 Billion saw most of the regulation undisturbed.) While they are important to the institutions and the mortgage borrowing public, the details have been ignored in overall Shelby effort.
 

That Shelby action occurred amid10 days when the Department of Justice  fined five of the nation’s largest banks  $5.7 Billion for currency manipulation and two weeks after 2 other were fined more than $2 Billion for violations. Late last week, the Bank of America was found guilty of overcharging 70,000 veterans on their bank loans. 

But, I hear little outrage or public dismay. 

As Washington Post cartoonist Tom Toles suggested below, the public seems to reap a never ending “in your face” from the financial institutions, which truly don’t need additional GOP help to earn more  money, rob and steal from the nation (their customers) and crap all over their/our regulators.

(The Toles cartoon may not replicate in the blog space, but—if it doesn’t—you can find it at this link.)

 

(Tom Toles)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Warren and Shelby
A friend sent me a “twitter report” that some 300,000 people had looked in on comments by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) opposing Shelby (and she and the other committee D’s voted against it). 
I guess that gives me a little bit of hope that the GOP  skullduggery gets exposed, but not much. 
I had a few arguments with my poker buddies over how good a politician Shelby is, with me saying,  “He’s real good" and the others saying his bill shows he misread the terrain."
I think Dick Shelby is too smart a politician to put this package out there to lose or be embarrassed.
He has the majority votes in the Senate and could attract enough—to get to the magic sixty to stop a potential  filibuster—just by sweetening his bill in other financial services goodies, some D Senator might want.
Don’t underestimate him! 
Wallison/WSJ Get “Black” Eye and More! 
William Black, an author and consultant on financial services matters, who teaches economics and law at the University of Missouri, delivered a severe stomping to both the AEI’s Peter Wallison and the Wall Street Journal editorial board, in a lengthy article, appearing in “New Economic Perspectives.” 
Black’s article is too lengthy to blog print in toto, but the first few hundred words are worth reading and then finishing with the article link, provided below. 
(Black’s opening salvo.)
 
Few people’s efforts at myth-making have been as devastatingly refuted as Peter Wallison. But fables that are designed to make the banksters look less criminal are always welcome by the banksters. Any honest discussion of Wallison’s claims would begin with three points. First, Wallison’s adult life has been devoted, on behalf of the banksters, to pushing the three “de’s” – deregulation, desupervision, and de facto decriminalization. He is therefore as culpable as anyone in the world for the epidemics of accounting control fraud that drove the financial crisis and the Great Recession.
Second, he was appointed by the Republican leadership to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) to assure that the banksters would have the benefit of their leading apologist. The chances that he would ascribe any problems to the three “de’s” was always non-existent because he does not have a scholarly instinct in his body. He is rabidly ideological and a willing tool of the banksters.
Third, the Republicans appointed three other members to the FCIC, each of them a highly partisan Republican who was known to oppose effective financial regulation – yet none of them was willing to join Wallison’s dissent. They were unwilling to do so because Wallison’s dissent was discredited so effectively by the FCIC investigation and report. The data destroyed Wallison’s screed – repeatedly.
But the WSJ editorial pages are no fans of data and huge fans of the banksters and anti-governmental dogma. In the WSJs alternate history:
“Peter Wallison, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, demonstrates in a new book that the subprime housing boom was fostered mainly by federal housing politics and policy, not by the rampant “deregulation” that many have imagined out of whole cloth.
Note the rhetorical game that Wallison and the WSJ editor play from the beginning – they refer to only one of the three “de’s” – ignoring desupervision and de factodecriminalization. The formal rules do not matter if they are not enforced by the banking regulators and the Department of Justice (DOJ). Wallison knows that desupervision and decriminalization of finance were very close to total – and that he and those who shared his dogmas such as Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke are all responsible for this result. Tom Frank’s Wrecking Crew captures Bush (II’s) approach to destroying effective regulation, supervision, enforcement, and prosecutions by appointing anti-regulatory leaders dedicated to the self-fulfilling prophecy of regulatory failure.
But Wallison (and the WSJ) also ignores the key act of deregulation that lies at the heart of his thesis (and is fatal to that thesis). The most important act of deregulation was the removal of our loan underwriting rule that we used to drive “liar’s” loans out of the S&L industry beginning in 1991. The rule was destroyed by Bill Clinton and Al Gore’s “Reinventing Government” assault on effective regulation. The underwriting rule was replaced with a deliberately unenforceable “guideline.” The elimination of the rule was not the product of housing goals – it was the product of Clinton and Gore’s “New Democrat” hostility to effective regulation. The elimination of the rule made it far harder for regulators to ban liar’s loans and take enforcement action against them. (The Fed had unique authority once HOEPA was passed in 1994 to ban all liar’s loans, but Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke’s anti-regulatory dogmas ensured that the Fed refused to ban such loans even when it knew their fraud incidence was 90 percent. Their refusal had nothing to do with affordable housing goals and everything to do with the fact that they were co-celebrants of Wallison’s anti-regulatory dogmas.)
The WSJ op ed actually spends very little time discussing Wallison’s thoroughly and repeatedly discredited thesis that Fannie and Freddie, because of government housing goals, were the demons that caused the crisis. The WSJ op ed is really devoted to providing yet another apologia for the banksters – who are the victims of an overly aggressive DOJ.
Banks have been shaken down for billions in settlements for selling Fannie and Freddie subprime loans they demanded. They’ve been criminalized for paperwork shortcuts in the resulting foreclosure tsunami, though the result was no material injustice to borrowers.
I will take this very slow because to be hired to the WSJ editorial staff one must be certifiably Murdoch-delusional. First, bankers sell mortgage paper. Because of the two great epidemics of “accounting control fraud” in the loan origination process (“liar’s” loans and appraisal fraud) if those bankers were to sell their fraudulently originated mortgages to the secondary market they could only do so by making fraudulent “reps and warranties” to the purchasers such as Fannie and Freddie (but also many others). That was the third great epidemic of accounting control fraud. When you make fraudulent reps and warranties to a purchaser you have engaged in fraud. One remedy for fraud is to pay restitution. That is not a “shake down.”
Second, the primary “paperwork shortcut” was that the mortgage servicer prepared pervasively fraudulent affidavits and declarations (signed under penalty of perjury) that they had taken certain acts to ensure that foreclosure was appropriate. Those sworn statements were deliberate lies. That is also called fraud (and perjury) and in addition to being a felony, represents a host of regulatory violations. The extraordinary fact about all of these fraud epidemics is that none of the banksters have been prosecuted for the felonies I have described and one – out of tens of thousands – has been subjected to a meaningful civil recovery. The WSJ and Wallison ignore or dismiss as trivial the many other frauds committed by the banksters.
The WSJ op ed is so weak that it seems clear that despite their formulaic apologia for the banksters’ frauds they know that the jig is up.
(Read the rest of Black’s article via the link, above.) 
Full disclosure, later in his tome Black also whacks some old Fannie and Freddie actions, but notes that the GSEs maintained their higher quality lending standards far longer than non-GSE lenders.
 
Differences Between Fannie and Freddie?
I had a conversation with some mortgage market veterans this past Friday and “hypothesized”—based on what I heard about the company CEOs and cultures—if the Government (FHFA, Treasury, WH) told Fannie and Freddie execs to prepare to “merge” (only a theoretical premise, not real, yet), Freddie’s Ed Layton would jump up, salute and then lead his troops down the slippery slope to “goodbye land,” while Fannie’s Tim Mayopoulos would balk and argue against it.
As one listener said, “So little has changed in 20 years?”
What Others are Saying
Presidential Humor 
(Email sent from a former colleague.)

"When they call the roll in the Senate, the Senators do not know whether to answer 'present' or 'not guilty.'"
                             - Teddy Roosevelt

''In my many years I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress.''
                            - John Adams

"Being president is like running a cemetery: you've got a lot of people under you and nobody'
s listening."
                         - Bill Clinton


"Politics is supposed to be the second-oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first."
                        - Ronald Reagan 
 

"There are few things in life harder to find and more important to keep than love. Well, love and a birth certificate."
                        -
Barack Obama 
______________________________________________ 
New York Times notes that Bank of America, adding to the litany of bad bank behaviors, just was fined $33 Million for overcharging veterans’ on the Armed Services members’ bank loans and accounts. Happy Memorial Day from BofA!!
 Brandon Ivey and John Bancroft,  writing in Inside Mortgage Finance, reported major industry developments last week: a possible mortgage ceiling increase for Fannie and Freddie; solid growth on GSE business volumes from California, which historically provides a major slug of F&Fs profits; and word that commercial bank lenders increased earnings in 1Q 2015.
FHFA Ready to Hike Conforming Loan Limits?
By Brandon Ivey
Conforming loan limits could go up for the first time in years as the Federal Housing Finance Agency formally announced plans to use one of its own home price indexes to calculate changes.
Given the rising prices, it is now important that FHFA formally establish the specific methodology it will use for tracking prices and adjusting the baseline loan limit,” the agency said in a public notice seeking feedback.
The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 prevents the FHFA from raising the baseline conforming loan limit until home prices recover from the significant declines seen from 2007 through 2011. The baseline loan limit for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac has been $417,000 since 2006.
______________________________________________
California Has a Huge Gain in GSE Business: Up Almost 70 Percent
By John Bancroft
Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s new business volume in the first quarter represented a huge increase from the feeble start back in early 2014, with all major markets showing strong gains.
A new Inside The GSEs analysis of GSE business lenders in the first quarter shows that California posted one of the biggest gains compared to a year ago. The Golden State produced $44.95 billion of new Fannie/Freddie mortgages, up 69.6 percent from the first quarter of 2014. Over that same period, GSE business grew by 43.3 percent nationally.
 
By John Bancroft
Commercial banks and thrifts earned $3.99 billion from their mortgage-banking operations during the first quarter of 2015, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Mortgage Trends.
Mortgage-banking income was up 12.7 percent from the previous quarter and 19.0 percent ahead of the pace set in the first three months of 2014. However, early 2015 was no record-setter, by any means, and profits were well below the levels reached in the middle of last year.
 
 
Maloni, 6-1-2015 
(Happy birthday to my late brother, Louis Maloni, who would have turned 78 on June 6. I really miss you, man!)
 
 
 
 





 

 

 

Warren and Shelby

 

 

A friend sent me a “twitter report” that some 300,000 people had looked in on comments by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) opposing Shelby (and she and the other committee D’s voted against it). 

I guess that gives me a little bit of hope that the GOP  skullduggery gets exposed, but not much. 

I had a few arguments with my poker buddies over how good a politician Shelby is, with me saying,  “He’s real good.”

 

I think Dick Shelby is too smart a politician to put this package out there to lose or be embarrassed.

 

He has the majority votes in the Senate and could attract enough—to get to the magic sixty to stop a potential  filibuster—just by sweetening his bill in other financial services goodies, some D Senator might want.

Don’t underestimate him!

 

Wallison/WSJ Get “Black” Eye and More!

 

William Black, an author and consultant on fianncial services matters, who teaches economics and law at the University of Missouri, delivered a severe stomping to both the AEI’s Peter Wallison and the Wall Street Journal editorial board, in a lengthy article, appearing in “New Economic Perspectives.”

 

Black’s article is too lengthy to blog print in toto, but the first few hundred words are worth reading and then finishing with the article link, provided below.

 


 

(Black’s opening lines.)

 

Few people’s efforts at myth-making have been as devastatingly refuted as Peter Wallison. But fables that are designed to make the banksters look less criminal are always welcome by the banksters. Any honest discussion of Wallison’s claims would begin with three points. First, Wallison’s adult life has been devoted, on behalf of the banksters, to pushing the three “de’s” – deregulation, desupervision, and de facto decriminalization. He is therefore as culpable as anyone in the world for the epidemics of accounting control fraud that drove the financial crisis and the Great Recession.

Second, he was appointed by the Republican leadership to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) to assure that the banksters would have the benefit of their leading apologist. The chances that he would ascribe any problems to the three “de’s” was always non-existent because he does not have a scholarly instinct in his body. He is rabidly ideological and a willing tool of the banksters.

Third, the Republicans appointed three other members to the FCIC, each of them a highly partisan Republican who was known to oppose effective financial regulation – yet none of them was willing to join Wallison’s dissent. They were unwilling to do so because Wallison’s dissent was discredited so effectively by the FCIC investigation and report. The data destroyed Wallison’s screed – repeatedly.

But the WSJ editorial pages are no fans of data and huge fans of the banksters and anti-governmental dogma. In the WSJs alternate history:

“Peter Wallison, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, demonstrates in a new book that the subprime housing boom was fostered mainly by federal housing politics and policy, not by the rampant “deregulation” that many have imagined out of whole cloth.

Note the rhetorical game that Wallison and the WSJ editor play from the beginning – they refer to only one of the three “de’s” – ignoring desupervision and de factodecriminalization. The formal rules do not matter if they are not enforced by the banking regulators and the Department of Justice (DOJ). Wallison knows that desupervision and decriminalization of finance were very close to total – and that he and those who shared his dogmas such as Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke are all responsible for this result. Tom Frank’s Wrecking Crew captures Bush (II’s) approach to destroying effective regulation, supervision, enforcement, and prosecutions by appointing anti-regulatory leaders dedicated to the self-fulfilling prophecy of regulatory failure.

But Wallison (and the WSJ) also ignores the key act of deregulation that lies at the heart of his thesis (and is fatal to that thesis). The most important act of deregulation was the removal of our loan underwriting rule that we used to drive “liar’s” loans out of the S&L industry beginning in 1991. The rule was destroyed by Bill Clinton and Al Gore’s “Reinventing Government” assault on effective regulation. The underwriting rule was replaced with a deliberately unenforceable “guideline.” The elimination of the rule was not the product of housing goals – it was the product of Clinton and Gore’s “New Democrat” hostility to effective regulation. The elimination of the rule made it far harder for regulators to ban liar’s loans and take enforcement action against them. (The Fed had unique authority once HOEPA was passed in 1994 to ban all liar’s loans, but Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke’s anti-regulatory dogmas ensured that the Fed refused to ban such loans even when it knew their fraud incidence was 90 percent. Their refusal had nothing to do with affordable housing goals and everything to do with the fact that they were co-celebrants of Wallison’s anti-regulatory dogmas.)

The WSJ op ed actually spends very little time discussing Wallison’s thoroughly and repeatedly discredited thesis that Fannie and Freddie, because of government housing goals, were the demons that caused the crisis. The WSJ op ed is really devoted to providing yet another apologia for the banksters – who are the victims of an overly aggressive DOJ.

Banks have been shaken down for billions in settlements for selling Fannie and Freddie subprime loans they demanded. They’ve been criminalized for paperwork shortcuts in the resulting foreclosure tsunami, though the result was no material injustice to borrowers.

I will take this very slow because to be hired to the WSJ editorial staff one must be certifiably Murdoch-delusional. First, bankers sell mortgage paper. Because of the two great epidemics of “accounting control fraud” in the loan origination process (“liar’s” loans and appraisal fraud) if those bankers were to sell their fraudulently originated mortgages to the secondary market they could only do so by making fraudulent “reps and warranties” to the purchasers such as Fannie and Freddie (but also many others). That was the third great epidemic of accounting control fraud. When you make fraudulent reps and warranties to a purchaser you have engaged in fraud. One remedy for fraud is to pay restitution. That is not a “shake down.”

Second, the primary “paperwork shortcut” was that the mortgage servicer prepared pervasively fraudulent affidavits and declarations (signed under penalty of perjury) that they had taken certain acts to ensure that foreclosure was appropriate. Those sworn statements were deliberate lies. That is also called fraud (and perjury) and in addition to being a felony, represents a host of regulatory violations. The extraordinary fact about all of these fraud epidemics is that none of the banksters have been prosecuted for the felonies I have described and one – out of tens of thousands – has been subjected to a meaningful civil recovery. The WSJ and Wallison ignore or dismiss as trivial the many other frauds committed by the banksters.

The WSJ op ed is so weak that it seems clear that despite their formulaic apologia for the banksters’ frauds they know that the jig is up.

(Read the rest of Black’s article via the link, above.)

 

Full disclosure, later in his tome Black also whacks some old Fannie and Freddie actions, but notes that the GSEs maintained their higher quality lending standards far longer than non-GSE lenders.

 

Differences Between Fannie and Freddie?

I had a conversation with some mortgage market veterans this past Friday and “hypothesized”—based on what I heard about the company CEOs and cultures—if the Government (FHFA, Treasury, WH) told Fannie and Freddie execs to prepare to “merge” (only a theoretical premise, not real, yet), Freddie’s Ed Layton would jump up, salute and then lead his troops down the slippery slope to “goodbye land,” while Fannie’s Tim Mayopoulos would balk and argue against it.

As one listener said, “So little has changed in 20 years?”

 

 

 

What Others are Saying

 

Presidential Humor

 

(Email from a former colleague.)


"When they call the roll in the Senate, the Senators do not know whether to answer 'present' or 'not guilty.'"
                             - Teddy Roosevelt
*
''In my many years I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress.''
                            - John Adams
*
"Being president is like running a cemetery: you've got a lot of people under you and nobody'
s listening."
                         - Bill Clinton


"Politics is supposed to be the second-oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first."
                        - Ronald Reagan

 


"There are few things in life harder to find and more important to keep than love. Well, love and a birth certificate."
                        -
Barack Obama

 

 

______________________________________________

 

New York Times notes that Bank of America, adding to the litany of bad bank behaviors, just was fined $33 Million for overcharging veterans’ on the Armed Services members’ bank loans and accounts. Happy Memorial Day from BofA!!

 

 


 

Brandon Ivey and John Bancroft,  writing in Inside Mortgage Finance, reported major industry developments last week: a possible mortgage ceiling increase for Fannie and Freddie; solid growth on GSE business volumes from California, which historically provides a major slug of F&Fs profits; and word that commercial bank lenders increased earnings in 1Q 2015.

FHFA Ready to Hike Conforming Loan Limits?
By Brandon Ivey
Conforming loan limits could go up for the first time in years as the Federal Housing Finance Agency formally announced plans to use one of its own home price indexes to calculate changes.
Given the rising prices, it is now important that FHFA formally establish the specific methodology it will use for tracking prices and adjusting the baseline loan limit,” the agency said in a public notice seeking feedback.
The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 prevents the FHFA from raising the baseline conforming loan limit until home prices recover from the significant declines seen from 2007 through 2011. The baseline loan limit for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac has been $417,000 since 2006.

 

California Has a Huge Gain in GSE Business: Up Almost 70 Percent
By John Bancroft
Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s new business volume in the first quarter represented a huge increase from the feeble start back in early 2014, with all major markets showing strong gains.
A new Inside The GSEs analysis of GSE business lenders in the first quarter shows that California posted one of the biggest gains compared to a year ago. The Golden State produced $44.95 billion of new Fannie/Freddie mortgages, up 69.6 percent from the first quarter of 2014. Over that same period, GSE business grew by 43.3 percent nationally.

 


By John Bancroft


Commercial banks and thrifts earned $3.99 billion from their mortgage-banking operations during the first quarter of 2015, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Mortgage Trends.

Mortgage-banking income was up 12.7 percent from the previous quarter and 19.0 percent ahead of the pace set in the first three months of 2014. However, early 2015 was no record-setter, by any means, and profits were well below the levels reached in the middle of last year.
 

 

Maloni, 6-1-2015

 

(Happy birthday to my late brother, Lou Maloni, who would have turned 78 on June 6. I really miss you, man!)

 

 

 

 

6 comments:

Matt Hill said...

What's the first question the general public now asks when they hear of a bank robbery conviction ?

"So how much did the bank get fined?"

Bill Maloni said...

I discussed my petition idea with several people, including those who know nothing about bank policy or the Congress. Most of the latter thought the fines were the answer and therefore, "things were being taken care of." A few others said nice things about Senator Warren, but no outrage or anger.

Anonymous said...

How many times must one circle the proverbial block before they realize that dems and reps are two cheeks on the same arse? Both stink from a lack of wiping clean their side of the isle, loaded with p.o.s., seem to promote the dingleberrries to leadership positions and as a hole, are in desperate need of an enema!

Bill Maloni said...

Yeh, yeh, but--the one issue that most interests me these days, the GSEs--over time showed the GOP almost always on the anti-side and the Democrats, for the most part on the side of F&F.

BTW, I thought John Adams' remark in "Presidential Humor" was the funniest and telling; that was offered more than 200 years ago.

jwnoblethree said...

Great blog thanks. The GSE petitions need feet on the street to gain any traction IMO. The public would need a canned version of the major issues and how it effects them.

I liked John Adams remark the best as well. Funny that Congress has had a bad M.O. for so long.

Bill Maloni said...

Truth, JW--if you look at the Greek and Roman Senate debates, you will see the same types of language, behaviors, positioning, posturing, and blame casting.

Open a Congressional Record from 50 or 75 years ago, and read any debate on a major--or even minor legislation--same-o, same-o.

It seems to go with those who are "representing" other citizens?