Wall Street Faces Fury Over Subprimes

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MARK JEWELL | February 18, 2008 07:35 PM EST | AP

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A for sale sign stands in front of a bank-owned home in Las Vegas, Friday, Feb. 8, 2008. Regulators are trying to punish Wall Street for mortgage finance practices that expanded home ownership and spread risk among a host of new players _ but also may have duped borrowers and investors who supplied cash to fuel a housing boom that's turned bust. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

BOSTON — Regulators are trying to punish Wall Street for mortgage finance practices that expanded home ownership and spread risk among a host of new players _ but also may have duped borrowers and investors who supplied cash to fuel a housing boom that's turned bust.

A handful of state securities regulators and a couple foreclosure-blighted cities have fired the opening shots with lawsuits trying to prove that investment banks and big lenders are guilty of more than just bad business decisions and failing to foresee looming mortgage troubles. Some regulators say greed and fraud underlie much of the subprime mortgage mess that has spread across the broader housing market, triggering a spike in foreclosures.

Aside from the civil cases, the FBI is looking at possible criminal action, focusing on what Wall Street firms knew about the risks of mortgage securities backed by subprime loans, and whether they hid risks from investors.

Observers don't expect the financial penalties that regulators extract in the civil cases to be massive. But the cases could turn up evidence that forces Wall Street to defend itself amid growing talk of government help to ease subprime-related financial strains on bond insurers. Revelations of bad behavior turned up by the government also could spur private investors to file even more lawsuits than the hundreds they've already brought to recover losses.

"This could get a lot nastier, for many reasons," said John Akula, a business law lecturer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management. "Prolonged close scrutiny often turns up all kinds of dubious practices that in normal times are under the radar.

"If the government sponsors any kind of bailout with public funds, this may be coupled with an aggressive prosecutorial agenda in support of efforts to get private parties to kick in."

Although the foreclosure-blighted cities of Cleveland and Baltimore have sued seeking to recover damages from mortgage lenders, most of the cases filed so far are from regulators alleging violations of state securities laws.

Attorneys general in New York and Ohio are targeting alleged systematic inflation of home appraisals by major lenders and appraisal firms. Litigation in Massachusetts and other states seeks to demonstrate that investment banks failed to disclose risks to investors who bought mortgage-related securities and weren't up front about conflicts of interest across their far-flung financial operations, including trading of subprime investments.

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"Over the years, the relationship between lender and borrower and a particular piece of property has been severed," said Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin. "It's clear that it's become a runaway train."

Gone are the days when most borrowers simply got loans from the neighborhood bank, which used to hold the bulk of mortgage risk. Now that risk is spread further _ mortgages are bundled together and sold to investors. Behind the scenes, credit-rating agencies offer advice on whether the investments are secure.

Until recently, cash from Wall Street banks and investors extended growing amounts of credit to low- and middle-income Americans enticed to enter a market when home prices appeared headed nowhere but up.

Lenders wrote $625 billion in subprime mortgages in 2005, nearly four times the total in 2001. The boom brought in big fees to mortgage brokers, lenders, banks and ratings agencies.

But now that prices are dropping, those players are hurting. Global banks have ousted executives and have written off nearly $150 billion since mortgage securities began collapsing last summer.

Given the losses, "It's doubtful some of these entities will repeat their performance," Galvin said. "But I think there needs to be an understanding of how we got where we are, whether that is through regulatory action, or through Congress."

States have responded by tightening rules governing how lenders and brokers arrange mortgages and are compensated. But lawsuits and administrative complaints are the main tools regulators use to seek fines against companies accused of wrongdoing, or to set examples to deter bad behavior.

"What they can't enforce through regulation, they will try to accomplish through suing," said David Bizar, a Hartford, Conn.-based attorney with the firm McCarter & English who defends against subprime mortgage lawsuits brought by consumers and regulators.

Already, the number of subprime-related cases filed in federal courts is outpacing the rate of litigation that emerged from the savings and loan meltdown in the late 1980s and early '90s, according to a study released Thursday.

The 278 subprime cases filed in federal courts in 2007 already equals half of the total 559 S&L cases handled over multiple years, according to the findings from Navigant Consulting Inc.

Criminal action also could be looming. The FBI said last month it was investigating 14 companies for possible accounting fraud, insider trading or other violations that could result in criminal charges. The FBI didn't identify companies but said the probe involves firms across the financial services industry.

The FBI is working with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which has civil enforcement powers. The SEC said in January that it had about three dozen active investigations under way.

In the rush to sue big business, there's plenty of blame to go around in the subprime meltdown, said Bizar, the lawyer who has represented lenders in subprime cases. Those include everyone from investors buying mortgage-related investments without understanding the risks, to credit-rating agencies that failed to alert investors to lenders' precarious positions as mortgage delinquencies spiked.

But the mess can be blamed more on unrealistic expectations than fraud, he said.

"You had a lot of people reaching to get into homes they couldn't afford, on the theory that it would go up in value," Bizar said.

BOSTON — Regulators are trying to punish Wall Street for mortgage finance practices that expanded home ownership and spread risk among a host of new players _ but also may have duped borrowers a...
BOSTON — Regulators are trying to punish Wall Street for mortgage finance practices that expanded home ownership and spread risk among a host of new players _ but also may have duped borrowers a...
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These 'instruments' were spread around... everybody knew the risks.. but the greedy bastards who put these deals together thought they could off the risk on enough different people that they would take the money and run.;

I hate that about capitalism... I'm a small business person... benign. I HATE big business. They are all cheats, and thieves.

Big business is the problem - they are multi national and care for no one but themselves.

I want to see these guys prosecuted and stripped of their fancy digs. I'm sick of being a sucker in their world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 02/19/2008

It is kinda hard to fault anyone other then the money providers in this tragedy. An appraisal is a professional opinion of recent comparable sales analysis. This means that if three similar homes just sold for $300,000 then the subject property is also the same value. Realtors are agents for the seller and buyer that receive a restricted amount commission on the sale. It is foolish to attempt a sale or purchase in our law suit rich society without professional protection. It all comes back to the investor policy of offering 100% financing. If you have to come up with 5% to 20% down depending on credit worthiness, and you don't have the cash, then this risk deal does not happen. There were very few loans booked with fraudulent paperwork or appraisals. The originators did what was legally required of them. There are plenty of laws on the books because of the nasty things that happened in the 80's. Who is at fault? The government that did not restrict the 100% financing. The rich who owned them. The parties that wanted to upset the market to lead to bargains when the collapse happened. If you want to know who to blame, follow the trail of the cheap houses and who buys them. You know that people will scream to bail out the banks with tax payer money. Then the same scum will sell their cheap houses for the new price and make a killing. Am I going to fast for you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 02/19/2008
- Tellurider I'm a Fan of Tellurider 2 fans permalink
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An appraisal is an opinion of value that only works if the appraiser is not in the deal. The conspiracy between the Realtors, the appraisers and the mortgage companies, many of which were jointly owned by the same people, is not really arguable. Appraisers get paid when the deal closes as do Realtors and mortgage brokers.
Certainly, there was no government regulation, but this time as different from the 80's, it wasn't the banks that made or held the loans, it was the mortgage department of the banks and investment companies that arranged the loans in conjunction with an agreed upon plan to sell the loans to Wall Street. The mortgage departments are now the "servicers" of the debt and are collecting fees for their efforts. Wall Street packaged the loans into bundles of securitized debt and sold it all over the world. School teacher pension funds in Australia have been wiped out along with millions of American families who were told by their Realtor that they should BUY, BUY, BUY.
The person that pulls the trigger is as culpable and guilty, maybe more so, as the puppet masters that planned, perpetrated and promoted what is being called by many as the greated fraud in modern history.
Wall Street collected more than $120 Billion in fees. How much did Realtors, Appraisers and mortgage brokers collect?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 02/19/2008
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And the mess can also be blamed on unreal expectations for any real decent leadership from this administration that chose instead to look the other way "Justice Alito"-style when banks and businesses were doing what signs are pointing from many directions that a mess was truly being made, with an even bigger one on the way. Now it's too late to stop the bloodletting, the tragic cuts into our structures have been gashed.

Not enough is being done whatsoever by Dems, the media or anyone to hold this corrupt administration accountable for it's horribly failed leadership but Americans know and know in great numbers that these rightwingers have been the kiss of death to our nation, and they will come out in droves to can these rethuglican piss-ants come election day.
Just like they are coming out in droves here in Houston to listen to Obama speak this afternoon. The huge Toyota Center's sold out! Whether it is him or Hillary, I'm sure I will almost feel sorry for McCain to watch how miserably he will lose, and he will.
America is simply not as stupid as the rightwing fascists like to think we are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 AM on 02/19/2008
- Tellurider I'm a Fan of Tellurider 2 fans permalink
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The third leg of the stool were the Realtors in this swindle that conspired, collaborated and partnered with the appraisal companies and mortgage lenders.
Realtors collected billions and billions in commissions on selling housing that they knew were not worth the sales price and knew this scenario was heading for big trouble. What they said to Buyers goes like this: "The price of the house doesn't matter. What matters is that we get an appraisal for at least the sales price and I know I can get you a loan approved."
Forget fiduciary duty to your client. Close the deal and collect your 3% and cash the check. NEXT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 02/19/2008

If the house appraises for the sale price then the house is not over priced by definition.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 02/19/2008

How many people will vote for the Republican candidate in November even though they have witnessed first-hand the greed the party represents?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 02/19/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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I guess we're just going to have to pass ANOTHER amnestly law....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 02/19/2008
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 161 fans permalink

And when a group or the ACLU tries to sue, they will be told by the court that you can't prove you were screwed if you if you don't know who screwed you. Is that right, or did I screw up?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 PM on 02/19/2008
- Mark701 I'm a Fan of Mark701 20 fans permalink
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You have to wonder where all the regulators were as this mess was developing. Now we get this display of righteous "fury" before the US government starts taking billions of our tax dollars to bail their sorry "free market" asses out. I wish I could be less cynical but be prepared for (maybe) one or two show trials, a couple of convictions (maybe) to assure the coddled masses that the evildoers have been brought to justice and that the system is basically sound. Meanwhile expect their lobbyists to begin working double time to guarantee our flawed and broken regulatory environment stays that way because anything else would be "government interference" in the free market. Damn, you can't make this stuff up.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 02/19/2008
- geobushono I'm a Fan of geobushono 15 fans permalink

get ready for a round of very public hand wringing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 AM on 02/19/2008

GREED DISHONESTY GREED NO ETHICS GREED AND MORE GREED

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 AM on 02/19/2008

CLOSE that roulette table! Take all companies private.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 AM on 02/19/2008
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Annoyed, maybe.

Fury.....
mmm....
not so much.

(Apologies too Mr. Borat.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 AM on 02/19/2008
- bick I'm a Fan of bick 2 fans permalink

good thing they passed that bankruptcy bill that made it harder for regular americans to declare bankruptcy, or EVERYBODY would be bankrupt!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 AM on 02/19/2008
- aigeanta I'm a Fan of aigeanta 5 fans permalink
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We need to stop bailing out multinational corporations and start helping out our actual real live living people who are suffering. People over profits, ironically, helps bring greater fortune for all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 AM on 02/19/2008
- rcampbell I'm a Fan of rcampbell 11 fans permalink

Capitalism is great. But, unbridled, unregulated capitalism can become like a cancer eating upon itself from within.

Reagan was wrong to deregulate everything in sight, break labor unions and cut taxes. We now have the experience of two Presidents (Reagan and GWBush) who have inflicted their poison of "trickle down" economics and lax or no regulation of business activity. Both attempts produced loose credit markets, unrestrained greed and ultimately collapsed markets (Crash of '87 & '07/'08 meltdown) and recessions.

The union-busting contributes to the breaking of the middle class. Not providing robust regulation over these past 25 years has helped lead us to today's perpetually late air flights, lead painted toys from China, meat recalls, dams and bridges falling down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 PM on 02/18/2008

Why do Republican policies only work in worlds filled with Democrats?

The basic premise of deregulation is "we don't need regulation if we are good people". But Republicans are notoriously bad people when it comes to business practices.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 02/19/2008

Reagan wanted all of the utility companies to go private. They went private and they are a nightmare to deal with and not cheaper or more efficient. In Illinois we were told in the 1970s if we built power plants we would always have cheap electricity. We built them. Now that a private electric company has taken over the electricity from the power plants, Illinois citizens pay the same high rates that everyone else does.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 AM on 02/19/2008

This entire administration has been anti-regulation; they appoint people who share the anti-consumer, pro-big business bias of the administration, to regulatory agency positions to make sure there is no meaningful regulation going on--- So the so-called "regulatory agencies" and those who appointed anti-regulation players to run these agencies, are major players in the subprime fiasco.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 02/18/2008

Their definition of regulatory "oversight" is to intentionally overlook violations--- until they become politically embarrassing, and then say, "Oh, this is terrible! We must very publicly sue a few, to persuade the public that our agency cracks into action when the regulations we are enforcing are violated! Tisk tisk!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 PM on 02/18/2008
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