From
Pariah to Presidential Advisors
The
Obama GSE Hypocrisy Rolls On
When in doubt look to Fannie Mae (for help).
The reliable word, when Barack Obama first was elected, was that his (badly uninformed) "people" told him to stay away from Fannie Mae issues and officials, because the company was a festering mess.
He did, later actually turning against the Fannie business model and calling for its disassembly.
But, some of thought that political paranoia
ended when in 2009, he nominated a former Fannie colleague and friend, Donald Remy,
to be the General Counsel of the US Army. (Remy had senior legal positions
at Fannie, the Justice Department and was an assistant attorney to the Army GC,
previously.)
One McCain Memory (Thank You!)
But, the old Obama doubts returned when a Senate Armed Services Committee GOP staffer, working for Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)*, suddenly claimed that the Committee hadn't realized Remy had served as a Fannie lawyer and Obama—wilting from pressure--promptly folded his hand and pulled the plug on Donald (who went on to be named the NCAA’s chief legal officer).
*During
the 2006 presidential campaign, when candidate John McCain began making
disparaging GSE comments, I told the NYT that McCain’s campaign staff was
filled with ex-Fannie consultants, causing the McCain camp some long faces and embarrassment,
especially when it became known his campaign director still was on Freddie’s
payroll. So, I knew why the Senator disliked Fannie.
From a June 13, 2009, n
ABC Network news transcript: “An administration source pointed out
that Remy fully disclosed his tenure at Fannie Mae in other documents provided
to the committee, including his Senate Armed Services Committee Questionnaire,
his National Security Questionnaire and his Public Financial Disclosure
Report.”
But when desperate and unable to call Ghostbusters, you call....
The President didn’t do the “Fannie blanch” at Tom Donilon’s six influential years of "Fannie service," when—in 2010--he tabbed Donilon to be his National Security Advisory. Nor did Barack let Tom Nides Fannie’s service-- before Nides had returned to Wall Street-- stop him when he named Nides in 2011 to support Hillary Clinton when she was Secretary of State.
And now President Obama has chosen, former O’Melveny and Myers lawyer and Fannie Mae consultant (who also served as VP Joe Biden's Chief of Staff) to be the country’s "Ebola Czar."
Good
luck, Ron, just pull off your normal excellent job. The nation needs your best.
One Klain Memory
When working with Fannie, consultant Ron Klain produced
an exemplary piece of work, a proposed strategic (as opposed to just tactical)
Fannie attack aimed at the FM Watch antagonists,
its member companies, their principals and lobbyists.
Based on Klain’s rich research and arguments, had Fannie
adopted his plan, it might have saved a lot of people from losing their jobs
and the company getting heavily besmirched by the GOP and Fannie’s business and
political opponents and it would have
been so much fun to implement.
But, Klain’s idea was rejected by those above my pay
grade, a fact I didn’t support and never will understand.
I wonder when and if the WH will back off its “Fannie
bad!” script, they once aimed at individuals and publicly still used against
the institution.
Maybe this week?
Fannie
& Freddie Get New Obama Tasks?
Mel Watt and HUD Secretary Julian Castro will speak this
week to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s annual meeting in Las Vegas (recently
the trade group said it had association earnings $9 million over last year’s).
Most of what Watt and Castro will say has leaked (hey, its
Washington isn’t it).
Reportedly, Watt will ask Fannie and Freddie to again
finance/securitize 97% LTV loans. The Admin and the industry hope this return
to
limited 3% down financing--with slightly lower credit criteria--will
jumpstart American housing finance, building and purchases.
The other rumored development is that Watt will announce F&F
providing funds for two multifamily and rental low income programs. Past GSE regulator
s balked at funding them, because: (1) the Administration never prioritized the recipients’
needs; (2) didn’t believe the GSEs had the money for the efforts; or (3)
Treasury desperately wanted all the F&F earnings for the general fund 9see
first reason).
So now a desperate Administration once again is turning to
the two Gorilla mortgage finance entities to help with housing problems the “private”
banks and other lenders won’t/can’t do on their own. Gee, sound familiar?
Hasn’t America seen this picture before, say in 1992 and later
when the Bush and then Clinton administrations leaned on F&F to do more for
low income and minority families?
Given this regulatory reinvigoration, what will the Obama
Admin do when the next US Senator or GOP Member asks for F&F to be shut
down or phased out??
Ludicrous
and “Ludicrouser”
(Personally,
I call “Bullshit” on judge Margaret Sweeney’s decision to deny Tim Howard
access to “discovered documents,” while she claims he still can work for plaintiffs
Fairholme Capital. I am pessimistic about a plaintiff’s victory because I think—but
can’t prove—the Judge was reflecting her inclination on the core hearing
question.)
Here is a link.
Sweeney’s objections to Tim Howard are a shaky concluding Howard, only, is a risk to leak information.
She said he owned/owns Fannie stock; he wrote the US
government was wrong in charging him and others with crimes, allegations that
later a federal judge threw out of court; and he settled some OFHEO restitution
demands with no personal assets lost.
Despite claiming she
wasn’t questioning Howard's honesty re stock dealings, she does exactly that and ignores that Fairholme's lawyers filed a
formal notice--which Tim had signed when Fairholme approached him—assuring the
court that he would not buy, sell, or trade in any securities for the duration
of the trial/hearing and until such time as Judge Sweeney rendered her final decision.
Howard’s Book Said What?
In rejecting Howard’s proposed
role, she argues he said the federal government—i.e., Fannie's regulator, then
known as the Office of Financial Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO)--had wrongly accused
him (and two other Fannie execs) of "securities fraud," a 2004 charge,
compounded, when the Bush SEC supported it.
These events, and the intervening
eight years until a federal judge threw the matter out were covered in Tim's book, published last year.
Sweeney's view suggests,
if the federal government f****d you over and you say it, you can’t be part
of legal discovery on some future related case. (Why, will Howard the consultant invent material not in government files?)
Way back, Tim did give up some claims to
financial assets in his settlement with OFHEO (as did Frank), which OFHEO, by
design, over 6 years ago and Judge Sweeney, again, last week grossly/significantly inflated their value.
Look carefully at what they "gave"
and then answer: why would anyone not do the same to get the vengeful OFHEO absurdist
hacks off their back?
To make their prize look more impressive, OFHEO
six years ago valued the “captured” securities at their much higher
initial award price, not their depressed near zero dollars market price
(April 2008). The regulator also counted as part of the settlement a cash
payment to Treasury from an insurance company.
Result, the $6.4 million that both OFHEO and Sweeney
claimed Howard "paid" to settle the bogus OFHEO charges was made up
of worthless underwater stock options, a contribution to a housing non-profit
of stock he hadn't been given, and cash paid by an insurance company.
None of it was out of Howard’s (or Raines's)
pocket, or represented any admission of guilt. Sweeney knew all that—since
it was made clear in a motion submitted by Fairholme’s lawyers—yet she
still chose to portray the settlement as if it consisted of real money.
Administration
Hyper-bloviation?
In opposing Howard
participating in “discovery,” defendants told (a gullible?) Judge Sweeney-–again,
suggesting Howard would mistreat the data—that the government is
sitting on information about two companies it has tightly controlled for the
past six years, that are conservatively operated and spitting out annual
billion dollar profits—which if revealed could have “external deleterious
consequences” and a “destabilizing effect
on the nation’s housing markets?
(I think I now know
where Uncle Sam’s true “Area 51 and Roswell UFO crash” data is kept!)
Also, with regard to Mel
Watt and Mike Stegman claiming Howard should be kept away from these
financially momentous, powerful and weighty government records, really, what
are you guys smoking, or what is it you truly fear?
I cannot comprehend what
in the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac record(s), if divulged, could cause serious and
catastrophic damage to the mortgage finance system, but Judge Sweeney swallowed
that propaganda whole.
Compounding her myth
acceptance, Judge Sweeney raked Tim Howard with her legal claws, possibly
reopening old wounds on a man whose reputation federal Judge Richard J. Leon helped
cauterize two years ago when Leon ruled none of the claims against Howard (and
Raines) had any merit?
Why the Government’s Fear and Anxiety?
I suspect that there
are a skein of documents that show OFHEO/FHFA was a Treasury tool, an
empty suit, a "conservatorship" puppet failing to vigorously chart F&F's
financial recovery, which the Congress called for in the Housing and Economic
Recovery Act (HERA).
And further, there might
be documents which would show Treasury mismanaged its "third amendment sweep,"
when it underestimated how quickly Fannie and Freddie could rebound given the
housing recovery starting in 2012 and it probably bent/broke the law in denying
F&F any earnings from which they might be able to recapitalize.
Those facts will show up
somewhere, ideally in Sweeney’s court or maybe as part of an appeals hearing on
the original Lamberth decision.
But, none of that
justifies Sweeney’s clumsy trashing of Howard's character. Unless her mind is
set and she plans to back the government’s actions—“discovery be damned”—meaning
she has to fantasize events and possibilities supporting where she’s headed on
the larger case matter.
David Fiderer on Judge
Sweeney’s Decision
In a communication to
me, our insightful lawyer friend, David
Fiderer, who has been
through major financial services cases, with discovery and similar matters,
offers the following.
“Anyone who works for
the plaintiffs’ lawyers—a small army of support staff that consultants,
the secretaries the file clerks—is bound by the same confidentiality
strictures.”
(Maloni asks, how many
dozens or hundreds of these folks can pass Sweeney’s more pure than “Caesar’s
wife” test, which she applied to Howard only?)
“The US government
defendants basically are saying that since Tim Howard is so desperate to
reestablish his reputation—ignoring that
it already had been restored in a court of law--he is disposed to breaking the law and disclosing confidential
information to the public Of course, if you accept the defendant’s other premise,
the danger is nonsensical. The defendants claim the GSEs are joined at the hip
to the government, so how could the market react one way or another if the
preferred and common shares are, for all intents and purposes, nonexistent.”
“Do you think Judge
Sweeney understood that Howard (and Raines) went through an eight-year federal
court case, which featured 65 million pages of hearing material and testimony,
and there is not one shred of evidence that Tim Howard ever divulged anything
from those records until his case was history and he authored a book?”
“And for the umpteenth
time, shame on anyone who dares to claim that the Fannie
Mae “accounting scandal,” had one iota of substance.”
Maloni
on Real Ebola Worries
(I
wrote this before, Ron Klain, was named the nation’s Ebola Czar. My concern is
one where his longtime friend, former Obama National Security Adviser Tom
Donilon, can help Ron.)
Given the reality of “Ebola in the US,” which for now is
more spectacle and headless chickens running around (three known cases and one
death), does anyone but me think that ISIL or some other nut case group--maybe
just some right wing domestic terrorists--might consider the DC, New York,
Chicago, or LA water supply a good place to dump some Ebola inducing poisons???
What
Others Are Saying
Fannie
stock performance.
I
love the Washington Post's schizophrenia. Always looking to exploit
their editorial opposition to Fannie and Freddie, the Washington Post got hung
up, once again, when Fannie’s stock last week was one of Wall Street’s best
performers and it was listed by the Post on the business page as such. But wait “Posties” aren’t Fannie and Freddie
government agencies, how can they appear on the stock pages?
___________________________________________________
The
Washington Post’s Dina Elboghdady
talks about the coming F&F underwriting changes.
____________________________________________________
David Sims, writing in Seeking Alpha, likes Dr.
Clifford Rossi’s “recapitalize F&F with their earnings” regulatory proposal.
____________________________________________________
Value
Walk comment on Sweeney
decision
______________________________________________
Wells Not Making Many Home Loans,
Why?
___________________________________________________
The GOP Corner
Abortion and the GOP
__________________________________________________
Senate
Minority Leader McConnell Leads only by 4%
___________________________________________________
Hey, no matter who
your candidates, remember to vote on Nov. 4, 2014; it’s your right (and duty).
Maloni, 10-20-2014
Bill Great Job!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for all you do.
Bill,
ReplyDeleteI am in a quandary on voting. Warner is my state senator and Gilliepie has not stated his position on the GSE
have any politicians come to the GSE rescue. we all got lip service in DC on our visit. But i sure wish i could endorse someone.
ReplyDeleteThank you Mr. Sticks
_______________________________
Duncan--Let me try and help you this way.
First off, Eddie is no "GSE virgin" and worked with the anti-Fannie folks a long time ago. So, boo him!
If Warner goes down--an unlikely prospect, right now--it greatly enhances the GOP's chances of running the Senate, IMO a bad thing.
Warner won't ever get warm with F&F, having staked out the turf he did last year, but the issue might bore him, especially if the Admin expands what F&F can do via regulation.
Definitely vote.
Tim Howard is better off not getting involved in document discovery. The gov't is known for it's aggressiveness (e.g., Lamberth was removed from an "indian" Dept of Interior case because he was critical of DOI. Judge Sweeney needs to tread carefully and focus on the long game and not do anything "questionable" in the short run. Tim Howard, fairly or not, is both a media figure (he wrote a book) and is a bit tainted (events in 2004, although court case in 2012 exonerates him).
ReplyDeleteAnon--I hear you. But, he can't now--at least not in the way Fairholme wanted--but I wouldn't be shocked if they still took him on.
ReplyDeleteHe's too smart re the business--and now I guess the courts, not to employ him in some manner (as even Sweeney suggested).
But, I felt her justifications were lame and also--as Fiderer noted--dozens if not hundreds of lawyers and their assistants will see this stuff or the memos, emails, etc. which go back and forth between counsels--but in her view Howard was the guy to keep out?
Do you think I'm off Sweeney's Christmas card list?
I agree with Anon1. It's unnecessary to get Tim Howard involved, especially we have a fake Tim Howard doing the blog thing :-). It's confusing to general public - not everyone knows everything about the real Tim Howard and Judge Leon's decision. Let the discovery go without any controversy and distraction - that's the best for our GSE shareholders.
ReplyDeleteAs a GSE preferred shareholder since 2010, I am actually happy to see a fact-based, cautious Judge Sweeney declining Tim Howard's involvement. This may not be fair to Mr. Howard but this is GSE shareholders' lawsuit against the government, less controversial, the better.
Anon2
Anon--I understand your position, but what worries me and what I thought I saw in Sweeney's and Lamberth's decisions were some ignorance of the facts.
ReplyDeleteTreasury has no statutory protection from "arbitrary and capricious" (Lamberth)--which will be part of the plaintiff's appeal-- and why is someone biased if they write the government fouled them, when it did (Sweeney)?
OK, that's fine with Howard qua Howard as a consultant, because he is a tiny piece of this puzzle, but I hope Sweeney doesn't ignore the law if Fairholme's lawyers comeback with the equivalent of a smoking gun.
Bill,
ReplyDeleteWhat's up with the judges in this country?
Lamberth's Perry decision was in the proximity of mal-practice.
Sweeney on Tim Howard was stupid and cowardice.
The supreme court has come out with some really nutso things latel to boot.
Plus in three matters engaged with a magistrate, state court judge and a bk judge pjwalsh have come up with really dreamy fairy tale decisions.
Anyway, all of these judges are paid for, stupid, or idiots. What gives with the American Judges these days? Any hope they'll actually stumble across the right answer on the fnf thievery?
V First Anon
fyi... not a robot
V--You are asking the same question that I and others have asked (and, again, I'm not a lawyer).
ReplyDeleteBoth Lambert and then Sweeney seemed to ignore facts and law in their decisions, which gives me little confidence.
I can't answer your question except to point out how narrow and conservative these two rulings have been and then look at the recent SCOTUS decisions on voting rights, unlimited spending on political campaigns, saying corporations are people, etc. etc.
It's not a pretty picture and the Senate R's slow walk many of Obama's judicial appointees and the existing judges serve for life.
Very scary! I once wrote that it is the kind of thing which drives people to riot and destroy their neighborhoods when the courts always seem to rule against their interests.
And I don't consider myself a bleeding heart liberal. But I think I know right form wrong.
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