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Obama's Mortgage Task Force: Working Hard or Hardly Working?

Posted: 04/20/2012 3:22 pm

Maybe you're reading about it less and less. It doesn't seem to be the lead story on many national news broadcasts anymore. But it's still there, festering away like an untreated wound.

The foreclosure crisis and the morass of other problems surrounding persistently problematic real estate prices, unwise loans made to now-bereft homeowners, and predatory mortgage products and practices isn't going away. But this week, at last, there was some news. Unfortunately, the news by and large is that there is little news.

The New York Daily News just published an Op-Ed noting that 85 days after President Obama announced its formation in an impassioned speech, the new Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Working Group (RM-BSWG) had done virtually nothing. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, who co-chairs the group with Colorado U.S. Attorney John Walsh, admitted earlier this month that the RM-BSWG had no office space and no staff. So... No one works there yet. (The piece was written by Arnie Graf, co-director of the Industrial Areas Foundation, and Mike Gecan, an IAF trustee. IAF was founded by Saul Alinsky and works as a coalition of nonprofits, in a model similar to Nader's PIRG network.)

Calls made to the Justice Department a few days ago, where the Working Group is legally housed, were fruitless as departmental operators had no clue as to just what the group is, or where it might be located. Reuters, however, had reported a few days earlier that a Justice Department official claimed that "the co-chairs meet formally every week and talk almost every day to coordinate on a 'range of investigations,'" and that "about 50 staff members are working on the effort, and the task force has identified separate office space in Washington and will move some personnel there." The Reuters article also noted that the working group "issued more than a dozen civil subpoenas to top financial institutions... [asking] for documents related to mortgage-backed securities offerings between 2006 and 2008."

Really, it's hard to believe these two articles are about the same organization.

The RM-BSWG includes representatives from the Justice Department, the SEC, the FBI and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, among others. Its mission is to investigate the securitization and marketing of residential mortgages that contributed to the financial crisis. Presumably, this Group is necessary because the much-ballyhooed $26 billion settlement of the lawsuit brought by 49 state attorneys general and the federal government against the five major banks deals only with mortgage and foreclosure process abuses, such as robo-signing.

Under the settlement, which was finally approved by a federal judge earlier this month, the banks will reduce the principal on loans held by some now-lucky underwater homeowners, refinance certain mortgages at current and very low rates of interest and compensate the winners of the robo-signing lottery, who lost their homes due to improper foreclosure practices, to the tune of approximately $2,000 apiece. That certainly will pay for a 400 square-foot apartment for a family of four for a couple of months. But most importantly, the settlement does not "Release any criminal liability or grant any criminal immunity," nor does it "Release any private claims by individuals or any class action claims."

Bottom line, the Daily News Op-Ed appropriately points out that 12 million homeowners, collectively $700 billion underwater, are in or near foreclosure. Reality check -- a $26 billion settlement (only $5 billion of which is in cash) is a relatively insignificant figure given the scope of this disaster. The very existence of the RM-BSWG and the fact that the banks haven't been released from any criminal liability is an acknowledgement of that.

Let's, for the moment, take the Daily News Op-Ed with a grain of salt, and give the RM-BSWG the benefit of the doubt. For the sake of argument, let's assume that they are working hard behind the scenes -- actually, let's pray for that. The politicians who set the group up know full well that perception is reality, and after five years of pain, the fact that the new RM-BSWG has yet to find an office, and that there seems to be no institutional awareness of their mission within government, looks very, very bad. And if this working group really is all hat and no cattle, designed to ameliorate the public for a moment in time which has now passed, let's stop playing games. Close up shop and leave the real work to the class action lawyers. You better believe that they are sufficiently motivated.

I, for one, hope the RM-BSWG is the real deal. With that in mind, I make the following plea: this is a mission that must be accomplished NOW so please get your act together, guys. In the face of such stark reality, the mere appearance of reality is both immoral and unacceptable.

This article originally appeared on Credit.com.

 

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Maybe you're reading about it less and less. It doesn't seem to be the lead story on many national news broadcasts anymore. But it's still there, festering away like an untreated wound. The foreclosu...
Maybe you're reading about it less and less. It doesn't seem to be the lead story on many national news broadcasts anymore. But it's still there, festering away like an untreated wound. The foreclosu...
 
 
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04:46 PM on 04/23/2012
The issue is never whether Washington will form a task force because that grabs headlines, the issue is does it know what tasks to perform. They know that today’s headline is just waiting to be trumped by the next political gaff or missing child, etcetera. To put a political arm on what is easily one of the most preventable crimes in America is placing the fox in the hen house. True to form they have in the past 6 years really gone after no one who could fight back. This task force will in all probability go after what most would call small change. Those brokers/pseudo bankers who when attacked have all their assets taken and therefore can't fight back are the eventual target. Anyone who fully understands the systemic nature as how underwriting guidelines and due diligence are performed in the wholesale commercial banking arena knows this is attacking the result not the problem. I have seen FBI agents come into a meeting with a book on mortgages thinking they understand it. They have no clue, don't and never did understand securitization, the driving force of all this and therefore are attacking the result when with just a little bit of commitment they could be attacking the crime and eventually making it a better market that is liquid and negotiable. "The truth", as Jack Nicholson said, "you can’t handle the truth". The real reason is it would expose too many contributors to the next billion dollar presidential campaign.
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kamact
Market Observer
12:05 AM on 04/23/2012
All show....
08:10 PM on 04/22/2012
Anyone with experience in corporate America knows the creation of a task force is the best way to kill a project. Nothing is ever accomplished in committee, especially when the person creating it directs them to do nothing. Obama is working for Wall Street, they got him elected and he does whatever they tell him to do. In this case they want to destroy private property and that suits his goal to create a New World Order where we are all living in urban ghettos, oh no projects, oh no green housing that's the party line, small farms are no more, only agribusiness and wealthy 1% estates looking out upon large wilderness tracts where we used to live.
05:09 PM on 04/22/2012
Obama is a politician and politicians SAY all the right things (duh - no one gets elected by promising debt crises and market crashes) but what they DO is often entirely different.

So smart people track what HAPPENS not what is SAID.

Fools talk about what Bush or Obama said in their speech or in a briefing.

Talk is cheap.
03:28 PM on 04/22/2012
Our two co-chairs are probably being paid handsomely to lead this non-effort. Again, your hard earned tax dollars at work. Do we really need another investigation into this? We already know there were many abuses of securities, mortgage, and banking systems but we have no way to make anyone accountable for the financial devastation their actions caused in this country. I don't have much confidence that this newly formed "working group" will be identifying the individuals or entities to make them PAY US BACK!
01:45 PM on 04/22/2012
The sense of entitlement on display is breathtaking. Homeowners, demanding their right to to see their property investments increase in value, regardless of what they paid for the property, and regardless of natural disasters, economic downturns, or anything else. No, these entitled ownership society goobs got hooked on seeing their paper wealth inflate 10-30% per year and they will accept nothing less than a return to that, even if it means passing their paper losses onto the society at large in the form of taxpayer bailouts.

Apparently, this author thinks all the people who can't afford mortgages, and pay rent, should pay more in taxes and through currency debasement so that property owners can continue to buy boats and recreational vehicles by perpetually refinancing and extracting fantasy wealth from their homes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Darius Molark
de gustibus non est disputandum
04:30 AM on 04/22/2012
And who thinks of all the people who have had their 'credit scores' ruined by the mortgage debacle? These people need places to live, too. But if they get anything they must suffer extra percentage points on interest on any loans that they may get. Upon their backs again, they must carry further burden of the profiteering banks. Of course, the opposite happened to these banks who defaulted out the mess and gain re-footing with government cash infusions.

No, I don't think there is anything the system will allow our President to do that will be fair. He simply will not get the support from the financial institutions and their representatives that he needs. And he dare not defy them at this time when he needs their cash to win re-election. I can only pray and hope that he continues to make the issue clear - that if the Republicans win there will be no justice for distressed homeowners, there will be no practical means of housing access for those who need better places to live.

And then, after he wins, I hope the people, this time, will win.
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feelingdisposable
Obama 332 - Romney 206
09:34 AM on 04/22/2012
Finally - someone besides me who gives a thought to all the people who, through no real fault of their own, have had their lives & credit scores turned upside down! If your credit took a bad enough hit when you lost your house, even finding a place to rent becomes extremely problematic since most potential landlords will do a credit report on you before they will let you rent from them. Chances are that the lower your score, the higher your deposit, etc., will be. How are people able to start over again when everything is so connected to your credit score? If your credit score is low, you are seen as the lowest of the low. I'd love to see that system changed to more accurately take into account the economy of the last few years.
01:47 PM on 04/22/2012
The person issuing credit is naturally free to use whatever metric or yardstick they like to evaluate their customers. If you don't like it, take your business elsewhere, or start up your own "really kind and fair credit reporting agency".
RealistBC
Micro-bios must pass muster.
06:08 PM on 04/21/2012
Obama only works for big money. Anyone who expected to enjoy support from Obama in repairing their mortgages has been left at the station as the gravy train pulled out.
01:34 PM on 04/21/2012
There is nobody to call if you have an issue with the settlement - the banks still don't disclose whether you qualify or not and the AG just refers you back to the bank for help. How the heck do you complain that the banks aren't performing under the settlement when they are policing themselves and just give you the phone run around????
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09:35 AM on 04/21/2012
Obama has very few things he could do - all by himself - which could really change the course of this mess and get the economy really moving. He could actually affect a fundamental change in the Mortgage Business by ordering all underwater mortgages of $729K or less to be re-written to reflect the taxpayer contribution to saving the Banks and mortgage industry and the actual (not broker inflated) value. Second, he could institute a moratorium on all foreclosures under $729K and require only the payment of Real Estate Taxes. If the taxes can't be paid by the homeowner, the property would go into a pool and be dealt with BY a local bank with a special tax lien category. This moratorium should continue for a 12 month period as should the re-writing of all mortgages. The influx of cash and investment would be amazing and the housing market would have to re-set to actual solid values, not the insane BS we read about. A broker told me I could get easily $100K for my house yet the house 2 doors down, nicer, newer, bigger and better maintained, went for $52K after being on the market at $200K, 150K, $100K, $75K and then make an offer. When I bought my house - that house was "valued" at $260K.
01:50 PM on 04/22/2012
I rent an apartment, but you seem to think that I should pay more so some person with a $750k house does not have to realize a paper loss on their investment.

Are you going to make the losses on my 401k go away? How about my "underwater" car loan? I didn't think so.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Under Fed yet Fed Up
Always great distaste for both political parties
08:58 AM on 04/21/2012
As our president demonstrated in the healthcare debate, he is a concept manager, not a detail person. He delegates the detail work to others. And there is nothing wrong with that except he fails to hold anyone accountable.

A lack of accountability always leads to a lack of results.
08:40 AM on 04/21/2012
In making the decision very early on in his administration to pay back the banks for their huge campaign donations Obama turned his back on the victims of the mortgage crisis which meant that the economy would remain stagnant for a very long time. If he wasn't in debt to the banksters he could have unlocked this key to economic recovery but our corrupt politics dictated otherwise and we have watched as every program he has announced to help the victims turned out to do nothing but help the banks.
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BigBearcatBill
This is the real Bearcat - a Binturong
01:54 AM on 04/21/2012
Neutral analysis, but first here is the biggest fallout problem: 1) seniors and just retired and just had their last kid move out on their own are not able to sell their big homes and downsize into retirement or latter years of working life for two reasons, one is they want a higher price since market went down with Bush years end by about 30-50% and want it back up near there to sell and two is the fact that buyers cannot get loans to buy them for whatever reasons banks are tight with loans compared to Bush fiasco years. 2) young people especially with families are stuck in apartments or small homes and need to get into the American dream homes their parents got into easy 30 years ago. 3) the whole home sales/improvement industry and its employees turning over homes to new owners has nothing to do and must have laid off/cut back due to such low home sales. Now in reality what can Obama and legal teams do? Only thing I see that is legal is go prosecute any banks/lenders that developed illegal loans with unsuspecting / inexperienced buyers. The rest of the money they need to get the system back to normal after Bush fiasco years, is in the hands of the folks that made out like bandits legally though.
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03:46 AM on 04/21/2012
I agree. It will take time. If the republicans gain control of the WH, the investigation process will be dropped.
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BigBearcatBill
This is the real Bearcat - a Binturong
12:43 PM on 04/21/2012
and much worse things will happen to all the good people of the world, but not that bad.
11:12 PM on 04/20/2012
The President has never been anywhere, just on the way somewhere, with his desk full of work others have to do while he stands in the hallway talking to the supervisors getting himself promoted. The President is a mincing poseur.
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10:19 PM on 04/20/2012
Close up shop and put each disputed foreclosure case where it belongs--in bankruptcy court.