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Richard (RJ) Eskow

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The Obama Administration's 'New' Bank Fraud Deal: Still Unfair, Still Unjust, Still Unbalanced

Posted: 01/11/12 12:02 AM ET

The Obama White House continues to push for a settlement that would let bankers avoid being punished -- or even investigated -- for a wave of mortgage-related crimes that includes perjury, tax evasion, and several types of fraud.1

Despite the president's new-found populism -- rhetorically, anyway -- officials in his administration continue to push an unfair deal designed to conceal the financial Crime of the Century.

The Financial Times reported on new details of the proposed settlement, whose stated purpose is to punish banks and reduce the amount of money owed by underwater homeowners. But it's increasingly clear that the deal wouldn't help homeowners very much and wouldn't punish bankers at all.

Banks could lower those loan balances by reducing the amount owed on mortgages owned by investors and not by the bank itself. That's what Bank of America is accused of doing as part of an $8 billion settlement it reached in 2008. This deal would set the stage for a repeat performance.

This proposed deal is still unfair, unjust, and very unbalanced. And it has the Administration's fingerprints all over it.

Unfair

Banks deceived investors into buying bundled mortgages (mortgage-backed securities) that they knew were worth far less than they were paying. Now, as part of this settlement deal, they could shaft those investors again. Many of the investors are from the 99 percent, not the one percent. As the head of the Association of Mortgage Investors told the Financial Times, "It would be a Pyrrhic victory to settle the mortgage crisis with the money of public institutions, pension funds and seniors."

The proposed deal would force banks to meet a certain dollar limit for reducing mortgage principal. But it's designed to let them use other people's money -- mortgage investors' money -- to reach that limit. They would have to reduce principals by a larger amount if they were using someone else's money.

Taking $1.00 off their own books might get them $1.00 closer to their goal, while using investors' money money only "earn" them fifty cents. Is that really supposed to encourage them to do the right thing?

Ask yourself: What if you were given a choice between spending a thousand dollars of your own money to pay a fine -- or two thousand dollars of someone else's? (And remember: You're a banker, so don't let conscience influence your decision.) What would you do?

The money should come out of the banks' balance sheets, not those of mortgage investors that in many cases they've already defrauded. Even that isn't entirely fair: Many pension funds and other institutional investors hold bank stock, too, as do unwary private investors. They've also been defrauded by bank executives. But someone has to pay the price for trusting these bankers and tolerating their continued presence in the executive suite.

Guess whose shares have soared since details of this proposed deal emerged? Bank of America. The rest of the country may suffer under this day, but the leaders of its worst-run bank (and that's saying something) will make out like ... well, like bandits.

Unjust

Justice: 1. the maintenance or administration of what is just, especially by the impartial adjustment of conflicting claims ... the administration of law; especially the establishment or determination of rights according to the rules of law or equity. 2 the quality of being just, impartial, or fair.
-Merriam-Webster

And speaking of bandits: The evidence of banker crime is overwhelming. For any group of citizens but bankers, the investigations and prosecutions would have started years ago.

Justice isn't served by the suppression of information. (Neither is the free market.) Justice isn't served by letting an entire group of wealthy and powerful individuals remain above the law. And justice isn't served when millions of Americans continue to pay the price of financial ruin or hardship for crimes that will forever remain unpunished.

In fact, justice won't be served unless bankers themselves are forced to pay personally. Many of them made millions by deceiving homeowners, shareholders, and investors. Unless they're required to reimburse their victims they have no reason not to keep defrauding them again and again.

And do we really think that the country's screwed-over homeowners will find justice under this deal? The Administration's Making Home Affordable program was supposed to help homeowners who had missed two or more payments, but new Treasury Department reports show that less than 20 percent of the 4.6 million people who fit that description will even be considered eligible for the program.

Is this bank-managed program likely to do any better, especially with the design flaws we've heard about already? (There are bound to be others that haven't been reported yet.)

Here's the most unjust thing of all: Under this deal,crooks will get away with their crimes without even suffering the embarrassment of being investigated. Whoever said "crime doesn't pay" will have to eat their words -- again.

Unbalanced

The entire amount of the deal is $25 billion, and we now know that even some of that will be payable out of other people's funds. Let's put that figure in perspective:

American homes have lost more than ten trillion dollars in value as a result of the bank-fueled bubble and crash. $25 billion is one-fourth of one percent of the lost value.

Americans owed $750 billion in principal for non-existent real estate that evaporated after the crash, as of the last study. That's money borrowed against values that were artificially inflated by the banks, which made bankers rich and left homeowners holding the bag. That figure has risen since then.

But even if we don't adjust for additional losses, $25 billion is a little more than 3 percent of the amount that's owed for nothing -- that is, for bank-inflated and now nonexistent home value.

There were more than 11 million underwater mortgages in this country as of last report. The number is higher now, but even at the artificially low figure of 11 million homes, this settlement would only provide about $2,200 for each mortgage. Does that sound right to you?

The "good news" for 2011 was that US homes only lost an estimated $681 billion in value. That's down from the $1.1 trillion lost in 2010. But even at last year's slower rate of loss, know how long it would take for US homes to lose the entire $25 billion amount of this settlement in value?

Less than two weeks.

PS: It's Unwise,Too

It's possible that the president and his advisors don't understand the level of outrage the public feels -- outrage over being fleeced by banks, who kept telling them that real estate was a 'can't lose' investment even as they artificially inflated its value; and outrage over the lack of prosecutions for the bank crimes that have caused such damage to their lives.

If so, they're acting very unwisely. The president's popularity has risen since he's started adopting the rhetoric of populism and economic justice. How long would it take to fall once his Administration puts a deal like this into place?

But politics isn't the biggest problem with this deal. Fair play would take a beating under this settlement, making a mockery out of our system of justice. But even that might not be its biggest problem.

If it goes through, we may look back at this agreement someday and decide that this was its biggest problem: Bankers who get away with breaking the law always do it again. When they do, another financial crisis is sure to follow.

And next time our economy may not survive.

__________________

[1] See
- That $335 Million Bank of America Settlement: The Good, the Bad, the (Very) Ugly
- Wall Street: Guilty as Charged
- Mr. President, Stop Protecting Bankers ...
- Pictures Of MERS, Part 1: Corporate Documents Illustrate The Mortgage Shell Game
- Fix Foreclosure Fraud With A Borrowers' Bill Of Rights
- Getting Medieval On Your Assets: Four Reasons Foreclosure Fraud Really, Really Matters

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
haimchaim
10:57 AM on 01/14/2012
we have to listen to the Man RJ ..only can assume its on the up & up in the Banking world
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
haimchaim
11:11 AM on 01/12/2012
the banking financial industry is in a world of there own .. they do not overdo, overact & do not overspend .. unless u keep very busy producing what u do best such as wheeling & dealing to get ahead ..
12:36 AM on 01/12/2012
All the evidence is out there and in abundance. What the banks did was fraud x1000. They should be in jail. But nobody holds them accountable, and instead of going to jail, they get billions and tax payer dollars as a reward. Derivitive=massive fraud If the President can Bail the Banks Out, Then Why Can't He Bail The Home Owners Out? America need Help. Too many families living on the streets due to lost of their homes and jobs. Homeowners need a bailout just like the banks, we need a fresh start on credit and housing payments. Where is our HELP>
12:29 AM on 01/12/2012
Bankers do not need to be punished for lending money to people that could not afford the houses they bought...they have already been punished by being stuck with a lot of squatters who cannot afford to pay their mortgages.

A better approach would be to make peopel who willingly signed up for these loans meet their obligations.

Kai
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4eva
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08:31 PM on 01/11/2012
Government Set to Sell Foreclosures in Bulk
http://www.cnbc.com/id/45925851/comid/2

A Huge Housing Bargain -- but Not for You
http://www.thestreet.com/story/11224917/a-huge-housing-bargain--but-not-for-you.html
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4eva
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08:28 PM on 01/11/2012
"Americans owed $750 billion in principal for non-existent real estate that evaporated after the crash, as of the last study. That's money borrowed against values that were artificially inflated by the banks, which made bankers rich and left homeowners holding the bag. That figure has risen since then. "

____

This is misleading by ommission. It is not only people who still owe on their mortgages who have lost 'principle'. Even people with paid off mortgages have lost the same in value, only they actually PAID for this bubble value, whereas those with mortgages have not yet paid for non-existent value. Who is going to make the people who actually paid for bubble value whole?

An unfairness not mentioned in the article.
03:43 PM on 01/11/2012
Facts
1)California is not included the State Attorney Generals Settlement; Our Attorney General pulled out and is independently suing the Banks - as is New York
2) HAMP is designed to help homeowners who face a financial hardship; you can be current and receive a Modification, many have been. HAMP has a program (includes Fannie, Freddie and FHA) where unemployed homeowners payment is drastically reduced for up to a year - if they find work they can Modify their payment to be affordable to their new income.
3. The Banks are paid Servicing based on the outstanding loan balance and thus make less money when the balances are reduced - if they had to write the check there would be no Bank Standing; and for Fannie and Freddie it is literally our money on the line - for more than 60% of all mortgages;
5. Using investor $ for reducing loan balance is the suggestion made by the Association of Mortgage Investors - the formula calculates whether foreclosure or modification / principle reduction would net the investor the most $ while considering the risk of homeowners walking away in the future because of their negative 'underwater' equity... some are exchanging negative equity with a shared appreciation mortgage so the homeowner starts out fresh with no negative equity and when they sell the Investor receives 25% - Investors like these solutions - they are even supporting BK Legislation requiring Servicers Modify Mortgages
5. We need to solve today's 'underwater' Crisis -
batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
01:42 PM on 01/11/2012
Help put pressure on the Obama administration to not give the banker/mortgage scam criminals a free ride. Join Russ Feingold and Progressives United in calling for a complete and thorough investigation, not a sweetheart deal!

Sign the petition calling on President Obama to order a full federal investigation of potential Wall Street misdeeds today.


http://www.progressivesunited.org/action/obama-investigate-wall-street?utm_source=sp4326732&utm_medium=e&sc=sp4326732&refcode=sp4326732&ta=
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Martha Fair
04:57 PM on 01/11/2012
Thanks, signed it and passed it along!
12:25 PM on 01/11/2012
I'd pay good money to see the banksters do the perp walk. They could obviously get away with literal murder and never even see the inside of a court room.
jhNY
Mercy.
11:56 AM on 01/11/2012
Impassioned lip service to the needs of the citizenry and yeoman labor on behalf of that citizenry's exploiters will likely lead our president to campaign contributions aplenty.

But as a way of inspiring the base of the Democratic Party, it's not one.

The calculation-- that, in the end, the base will come out to prevent a Republican takeover, joined by some portion of independents-- proved disastrous in 2010. So why is this the strategy going forward? Hope?
batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
10:48 AM on 01/11/2012
Thank you for staying on top of this RJ! This Obama-backed fraud/deal by state attorneys general allows criminal perpetrators that bilked millions out of their homes and savings to get-off relatively Scott-free is an abomination and shows where Obama's allegiance (or that of his handlers/advisers with his approval) lies; with the banker thieves and scam artists. It is only the integrity of the attorneys general of NY, Delaware, and CA who are leading increasing opposition to the scam deal absolving the thieves from any further criminal liability or meaningful economic penalties.

For all Obama's increasing progressive/populist rhetoric the base direction of his administration has not changed from when he hired the de-regulation Rubinites Geithner and Summers (arguably instrumental in the current “economic downturn”) instead of progressive reformers. The concept of justice is stood on its head by this deal that absolves bankers of responsibility (as well as the Obama administration by implication) and victimizes millions of Americans yet again by rubbing salt into their wounds suffered at the hands of banker/wall st thieves and parasites.

"The president has packed his economic team with Wall St insiders intent on turning the bailout into an all-out giveaway” – and this mortgage deal is an extension of that direction and apparent commitment!

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/12/13-8
10:28 AM on 01/11/2012
fannie and freddie loans are exempt from this settlement so as far as CA goes this "deal" wont amount to much of anything because fannie and freddie own most of the loans in CA, even though it was banks like b of a that serviced these loans and committed all the fraud. Obama is a wall st sell out . As much as I hate republicans, obama is proving to be no different from them at all. He is a complete sell out and his lip service wont get him very far in this coming election.
10:19 AM on 01/11/2012
This settlement may be the banksters get out of jail free card.

The following was the public officials who actas agents of the banks get out of jail free card.

The elimination of the Independent Council Law, which was supported by both parties and abused by Republicans.

"In 1978, a Democratic Congress was determined to curb the powers of the President and other senior executive branch officials due in part to the Watergate scandal and related events such as the Saturday Night Massacre. They drafted the Ethics in Government Act, creating a special prosecutor (later changed to Independent Counsel) position, which could be used by Congress or the Attorney General to investigate individuals holding or formerly holding certain high positions in the federal government and in national Presidential election campaign organizations.
The prosecutor, who was appointed by a special panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, could investigate allegations of any misconduct, with an unlimited budget and no deadline, and could be dismissed only by the Attorney General for "good cause" or by the special panel of the court when the independent counsel's task was completed. As the president could not dismiss those investigating the executive branch it was felt that the independence of the office would ensure impartiality of any reports presented to Congress. However, there have been many critics of this law including Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Office_of_the_Independent_Counsel
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
notdarkyet
End the Drug War.
01:38 PM on 01/11/2012
I always thought it was a mistake, but the Repubs abused it. Remember ken Starr?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeW CA
Rule of Law - it works for all
09:31 AM on 01/11/2012
Without rule of law, property ownership has no value. Without value in property ownership, the housing market can't recover. Without a recovering housing market, the economy will continue to struggle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
notdarkyet
End the Drug War.
01:41 PM on 01/11/2012
And we aren't even close to the end.

A new report from Lender Processing Services estimates there are still over two million properties in the late foreclosure pipeline. Foreclosure starts outnumber foreclosure sales by two to one and "the trend toward fewer loans becoming delinquent, which dominated 2010 and the first quarter of 2011, appears to have halted," according to LPS.

http://www.lpsvcs.com/Pages/default.aspx
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cleverboots
08:29 AM on 01/11/2012
And for this kind of governance we should reward him with a second term?
08:58 AM on 01/11/2012
Going to see Jack tonight
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cleverboots
04:03 PM on 01/11/2012
Lots and lots of adorable pictures, please! Is he walking/talking yet?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cleverboots
04:05 PM on 01/11/2012
No fair! You get to have all the fun! LOL!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Martha Fair
05:02 PM on 01/11/2012
Do you really think that any of the Republican Candidates will see that justice is done? If you know otherwise bring me facts. I've seen nothing discussed on justice whatsoever...all I've seen discussed is gay marriage, the deficit, god in schools and illegal immigration problems, so why is Obama any worse than the Republican candidates. Seems to me that none are interested in justice by their very actions. Actions speak louder than words so who are taking action towards seeking justice at this time?