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Glenn Hubbard, Leading Academic and Mitt Romney Advisor, Took $1200 an Hour to Be Countrywide’s Expert Witness

Glenn Hubbard, Leading Academic and Mitt Romney Advisor, Took $1200 an Hour to Be Countrywide’s Expert Witness

Matt Taibbi, Rollingstone-

Karma is a bitch. Just ask Glenn Hubbard.

A few months ago, the Dean of Columbia’s business school was a leading economic advisor to Mitt Romney and a rumored (perhaps even consensus) candidate for the Treasury Secretary job.

Now Romney’s out of the presidential picture and Hubbard – well, he’s just yet another grasping jobholder who’s been exposed as a paid mouthpiece in a court proceeding.

Anyone who’s seen the movie Inside Job will recall the stupendously angering scene in which Hubbard pissily snaps at his interviewer for asking about his outside relationships with financial services industry.

[ROLLINGSTONE]

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Country Club Sopranos American banks are on a massive crime spree. Obama and Romney hope you won’t notice

Country Club Sopranos American banks are on a massive crime spree. Obama and Romney hope you won’t notice

Village Voice-

You wouldn’t know it by watching the news or reading the paper, but America’s banks are on the largest crime spree the country has ever known. Let’s go to the highlight reel, shall we?

In July, Wells Fargo paid a $175 million settlement after the feds caught its brokers systematically pushing minority customers into mortgages with higher rates and fees, even though they posed the same credit risks as whites.

One study found that Wells Fargo charged Hispanics $2,000 more in what the Justice Department called a “racial surtax.” The bank docked blacks nearly $3,000 extra for their own improper pigmentation.

But despite a colossal civil rights fraud perpetrated against 30,000 customers, the settlement amounted to just .011 percent of the San Francisco bank’s annual income. It was like forcing a $30,000-a-year working stiff to pay a $240 fine.

[VILLAGE VOICE]

image: Village Voice

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Mitt Romney Loves Foreclosures

Mitt Romney Loves Foreclosures

by on Oct 19, 2012

2012 Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is in favor of more people losing their homes because he believes it will help the economy and housing market. The Young Turks host Cenk Uygur explains.

 

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Housing crisis: Where Obama, Romney stand

Housing crisis: Where Obama, Romney stand

Not with you or they would have done something to keep you in your home.


Palm Beach Post-

Hundreds of thousands of Floridians, including more than 75,000 Palm Beach County homeowners, have faced a bank repossession since President Obama was elected in 2008 and despite $45.6 billion in government housing aid programs assembled to dampen a foreclosure explosion.

In Florida, the largest swing state with 29 electoral votes and 44.5 percent of mortgages underwater, housing was bound to be a key issue in this year’s contest between Obama and challenger former Gov. Mitt Romney.

Yet it has barely come up for discussion.

[PALM BEACH POST]

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In Presidential Debate, A Missed Opportunity For Romney To Press Obama On Foreclosure Policy

In Presidential Debate, A Missed Opportunity For Romney To Press Obama On Foreclosure Policy

There was a whole lot that should have gone down for both this night but thankfully it was only a bad Saturday Night Live skit….thankfully.

HuffPO-

He name-checked Big Bird, but didn’t once mention foreclosures.

In an hour-and-a-half debate on an economy still shell-shocked by the housing crisis, Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney’s sole critique of President Barack Obama’s policy was that regulators are taking too long to write new mortgage guidelines, and that this is holding back a full recovery of the market.

“It’s been two years,” Romney said. “We don’t know what a qualified mortgage is yet. So banks are reluctant to make loans, mortgages. Try and get a mortgage these days. It’s hurt the housing market.”

Obama, who decided to adopt his tedious law professor persona during the first presidential debate of the 2012 election, held Wednesday night in Denver, has taken the most flak from pundits for failing to press the attack against his rival. But Romney’s choice to focus on the speed at which regulators are writing new rules instead of hammering Obama for his disappointing foreclosure prevention programs also seems to be a missed opportunity.

[HUFFINGTON POST]

video by

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Better Know a Bundler: Romney’s Personal Predatory Lender

Better Know a Bundler: Romney’s Personal Predatory Lender

HuffPO-

Meanwhile, one of only two of Romney’s lobbyist-bundlers to reach the ‘Stars’ level is T. Martin Fiorentino Jr., of the Fiorentino Group. By May, he had raised over $325,000 for Romney.

One of Fiorentino’s most notorious clients is Lender Processing Services, a foreclosure mill that, as Matt Viser of the Boston Globe noted, was reprimanded in April for “unsound practices related to residential mortgage loan serving and foreclosure processing.” Viser went on:

[A]s he [Romney] has built his fund-raising machine, he has relied heavily on a man who has lobbied Congress on mortgage reform and anti-predatory lending legislation that contained strict rules aimed at preventing another subprime mortgage collapse.Fiorentino’s Jacksonville, Fla.-based firm, the Fiorentino Group, has been paid $180,000 by Lender Processing Services since late 2009, according to lobbying disclosure forms. The firm lobbied the House and Senate on the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act.

The legislation…came in response to the subprime mortgage crisis and was meant to prevent lenders from making loans that borrowers would have difficulty repaying. It was approved by the House in May 2009, but wasn’t taken up that year by the Senate.

Much of the legislation ended up being included last year in the Dodd-Frank Act, a larger overhaul of national financial regulations.

Lender Processing Services is one of the country’s largest mortgage service providers, claiming to handle more than half of all foreclosures and providing services for more than 1,000 financial institutions. The company came under scrutiny after admitting last year that one of its subsidiaries, DocX, had been improperly preparing some of the foreclosure documents.

DocX was ground zero in the massive “robosigning” fraud. Its founder and former president was indicted in Georgia on 136 fraud counts earlier this year, and is under indictment in other states as well. The robosigning scandal led to a call for investigations by all 50 state attorneys general; this is turn led to the National Mortgage Settlement agreement.

[HUFFINGTON POST]

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Gawker Exclusive: The Bain Files: Inside Mitt Romney’s Tax-Dodging Cayman Schemes

Gawker Exclusive: The Bain Files: Inside Mitt Romney’s Tax-Dodging Cayman Schemes

Gawker-

Mitt Romney’s $250 million fortune is largely a black hole: Aside from the meager and vague disclosures he has filed under federal and Massachusetts laws, and the two years of partial tax returns(one filed and another provisional) he has released, there is almost no data on precisely what his vast holdings consist of, or what vehicles he has used to escape taxes on his income. Gawker has obtained a massive cache of confidential financial documents that shed a great deal of light on those finances, and on the tax-dodging tricks available to the hyper-rich that he has used to keep his effective tax rate at roughly 13% over the last decade.

Today, we are publishing more than 950 pages of internal audits, financial statements, and private investor letters for 21 cryptically named entities in which Romney had invested—at minimum—more than $10 million as of 2011 (that number is based on the low end of ranges he has disclosed—the true number is almost certainly significantly higher). Almost all of them are affiliated with Bain Capital, the secretive private equity firm Romney co-founded in 1984 and ran until his departure in 1999 (or 2002, depending on whom you ask). Many of them are offshore funds based in the Cayman Islands. Together, they reveal the mind-numbing, maze-like, and deeply opaque complexity with which Romney has handled his wealth, the exotic tax-avoidance schemes available only to the preposterously wealthy that benefit him, the unlikely (for a right-wing religious Mormon) places that his money has ended up, and the deeply hypocritical distance between his own criticisms of Obama’s fiscal approach and his money managers’ embrace of those same policies. They also show that some of the investments that Romney has always described as part of his retirement package at Bain weren’t made until years after he left the company.

[GAWKER]

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Biden: Romney’s Wall Street will ‘put y’all back in chains’

Biden: Romney’s Wall Street will ‘put y’all back in chains’

Correction: Romney will allow Wall Street to set it’s own rules but it was Obama who in fact let the banks set their own rules, let the banks off the hook and break the bank rules over and over and over and over….So no rules have any effect on them.

Obama/Romney for Wall Street NOT Main Street!

Don’t vote for either.

CNN-

Vice President Joe Biden leveled a heavy charge at Mitt Romney on Tuesday, arguing the presumptive GOP nominee’s proposed policies on Wall Street reform would be detrimental for Americans. “(Romney) is going to let the big banks once again write their own rules, unchain Wall Street,” Biden said at a campaign event in Danville, Virginia. “He is going to put y’all back in chains.”

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Schneiderman Claims Romney Administration Would Shut Down Mortgage Fraud Investigations; Apparently, They Aren’t Shut Down Already

Schneiderman Claims Romney Administration Would Shut Down Mortgage Fraud Investigations; Apparently, They Aren’t Shut Down Already

FDL-

It has now been six months since the announcement of the foreclosure fraud settlement between multiple federal agencies, the state Attorneys General and the five leading banks. It has also been six months since the establishment of the RMBS working group, the task force inside the larger financial fraud unit at the Justice Department, which is supposed to be ferreting out fraud among the major banks in the securitization phase of the housing bubble. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman famously said that if nothing happened in the task force within six months, he would walk away in very loud fashion. I think it’s fair to say that nothing has happened. There has been no announcement of additional subpoenas since the first days of the working group. It took four months to get a coordinating director for the investigations. And basically, everything has gone silent.

So here’s how Schneiderman celebrated that six-month anniversary, last night on Capital Tonight in New York:

Schneiderman said he has a personal stake in the contest between Obama and Mitt Romney, predicting that the national mortgage fraud investigations he is continuing to pursue at the national level after being tapped by Obama to serve as one of five co-chairs on a Justice Department task force would come to a rapid halt if the GOP takes control of the White House.

“I will attend the convention,” the AG told me during a CapTon interview last night. “I want to join the crew enthusiastically supporting our president for re-election.”

“I assure you that if President Obama is not re-elected that support for the kinds of investigations of corruption in financial services or problems in the mortgage market probably will die down pretty quickly. I don’t think President Romney is that interested in going after his colleagues in finance and financial manipulation in particular.”

The investigations would die down pretty quickly, ay? So what we have now represents NOT coming dying down pretty quickly? You could have fooled me.

[FIRE DOG LAKE]

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Romney takes money from Major Michigan Foreclosure Firm Trott & Trott PC

Romney takes money from Major Michigan Foreclosure Firm Trott & Trott PC

Romney also profited from lenders foreclosing on thousands of floridians … winning support of BFF LPS and Pam Bondi.


FREEP-

A Farmington Hills law firm that represents mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in foreclosure and eviction cases has contributed $200,000 to a super PAC supporting Republican Mitt Romney for president.

That super PAC, Restore Our Future, has run ads against Romney’s GOP rival Newt Gingrich, attacking his ties to Freddie Mac and accusing him of “cashing in” on the foreclosure crisis.

The Dec. 27 contribution, disclosed Tuesday in a Federal Election Commission filing, was written from the corporate account of Trott & Trott PC. A 2010 Supreme Court decision allows corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts on independent campaigns to support or oppose federal candidates.

Managing partner David Trott is a member of Romney’s Michigan finance committee. He and his wife also contributed $7,500 to the Romney campaign, and his employees contributed more than $11,000 to Romney.

[FREEP]

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EXCLUSIVE: Romney Profited From Mortgage Lenders Foreclosing On Thousands Of Floridians

EXCLUSIVE: Romney Profited From Mortgage Lenders Foreclosing On Thousands Of Floridians

They’re all connected to Wall Street and against us.

Go ahead and vote for this winner who was cashing in on you getting booted out your home!

ThinkProgress-

A ThinkProgress examination of Mitt Romney’s presidential personal financial disclosuresfrom May 2011 reveal that the former Massachusetts governor and his wife own or owned millions of dollars worth of a Goldman Sachs investment fund invested heavily in mortgage-backed obligations. And the current owners of those mortgage debts began foreclosure proceedings against thousands of Floridians.

Along with his investments in Bain Capital funds linked to offshore tax havens, the Romneys have large investments in the Goldman Sachs Strategic Income Fund (institutional class). The firm’s March 2011 annual report for the fund notes that about 8 percent of the fund is invested in banks and 24.5 percent is invested in mortgage-backed obligations. Romney’s form says he has invested between $1,000,001 and $5,000,000 in the fund and his wife Ann has invested an additional $1 million-plus. Since the 2008 economic meltdown and the enactment of the Troubled Asset Relief Fund, this fund has done quite well, growing 7.88 percent between April 2010 and March 2011.

[THINKPROGRESS]

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MIHALYI v. LASALLE BANK, NA, Fla: Dist. Court of Appeals, 4th Dist.| The record reveals Mihayli is entitled to prevailing party attorney’s fees and to an evidentiary hearing on the reasonableness of the amount of fees

MIHALYI v. LASALLE BANK, NA, Fla: Dist. Court of Appeals, 4th Dist.| The record reveals Mihayli is entitled to prevailing party attorney’s fees and to an evidentiary hearing on the reasonableness of the amount of fees

 

ADRIANNA MIHALYI, Appellant,
v.
LASALLE BANK, N.A., Appellee.

No. 4D13-2447.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
October 29, 2014.
Mark Booth and Romney C. Rogers Jr. of Rogers Morris & Ziegler LLP, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.

Marc James Ayers and Mary Ann Couch of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Birmingham, for appellee.

CONNER, J.

Adrianna Mihalyi appeals the trial court’s order denying her motion for attorney’s fees, which she filed after LaSalle Bank voluntarily dismissed its foreclosure action. She argues that she is entitled to recover prevailing party attorney’s fees pursuant to section 57.105(7), Florida Statutes (2007), and the attorney’s fees provision in her mortgage. We agree.

LaSalle Bank initiated foreclosure proceedings against Mihalyi, and she filed an answer and affirmative defense in which she sought attorney’s fees and costs “under the terms and conditions of the Note and Mortgage sued upon.” Approximately four years later, the trial court issued a notice of lack of prosecution, giving LaSalle Bank sixty days to create record activity. LaSalle Bank filed a notice of voluntary dismissal without prejudice and the court dismissed the case. A week later, Mihalyi filed her motion for attorney’s fees, citing the attorney’s fee provision in the note and mortgage. Section twenty-two of the mortgage provides that the “[l]ender shall be entitled to collect all expenses incurred in pursuing the remedies . . . including, but not limited to, reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.” The trial court denied her motion.

On appeal, Mihalyi argues she is entitled to recover prevailing party attorney’s fees pursuant to section 57.105(7) and the attorney’s fees provision in the note and mortgage, because LaSalle Bank voluntarily dismissed the foreclosure action. LaSalle Bank does not dispute that section 57.105(7) permits Mihalyi to claim fees as the prevailing party. However, LaSalle Bank argues that Mihalyi failed to provide any evidence as to the reasonableness of the fees.

A trial judge’s ruling on a motion for attorney’s fees “is a matter committed to sound judicial discretion which will not be disturbed on appeal, absent a showing of clear abuse of discretion.” Turovets v. Khromov, 943 So. 2d 246, 248 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006) (quoting DiStefano Constr., Inc. v. Fid. & Deposit Co. of Md., 597 So. 2d 248, 250 (Fla. 1992)) (internal quotation marks omitted). However, where entitlement depends on the interpretation of a statute or contract the ruling is reviewed de novo. Stevens v. Zakrzewski, 826 So. 2d 520, 521 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002).

A claim for attorney’s fees, whether based on statute or contract, must be pled. Stockman v. Downs, 573 So. 2d 835, 837 (Fla. 1991). A party pleading entitlement to attorney’s fees must also move the trial court for the same and present proof of fees within a reasonable time after the judgment is entered. McAskill Publ’ns, Inc. v. Keno Bros. Jewelers, Inc., 647 So. 2d 1012, 1012 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994). Once fee entitlement is determined, the party requesting the fees is entitled to an evidentiary hearing as to the reasonableness of the amount of fees. See Guyton v. Leonard Dewey Wilkinson Action Welding Supply, Inc., 707 So. 2d 885, 886 (Fla. 1st DCA 1998).

A plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal makes a defendant the “prevailing party” within the meaning of subsection 57.105(7), even if the plaintiff refiles the case and prevails. Nudel v. Flagstar Bank, FSB, 60 So. 3d 1163, 1165 (Fla. 4th DCA 2011). Subsection 57.105(7) states:

If a contract contains a provision allowing attorney’s fees to a party when he or she is required to take any action to enforce the contract, the court may also allow reasonable attorney’s fees to the other party when that party prevails in any action, whether as plaintiff or defendant, with respect to the contract.

The statute makes a unilateral contract clause for attorney’s fees bilateral in effect. Indem. Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Chambers, 732 So. 2d 1141, 1143 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999). Assuming the request for attorney’s fees is properly pled, “[t]he award is mandatory, once the lower court determines that a party has prevailed.” Holiday Square Owners Ass’n v. Tsetsenis, 820 So. 2d 450, 453 (Fla. 5th DCA 2002) (citation omitted).

Since LaSalle Bank voluntarily dismissed the foreclosure action against Mihalyi, she is the prevailing party. In her answer and affirmative defense, Mihalyi properly pled her claims for attorney’s fees, pursuant to the attorney’s fee provision in her mortgage.[1] Then she filed a motion for attorney’s fees within thirty days of the service of voluntary dismissal, in compliance with Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.525.

The trial court determined Mihalyi’s entitlement to attorney’s fees at a motion calendar hearing, which was most likely a non-evidentiary hearing. See D’Amato v. D’Amato, 848 So. 2d 462, 463-64 (Fla. 4th DCA 2003) (explaining that Broward County does not permit the introduction of evidence at “Motion Calendar” hearings). Therefore, contrary to LaSalle Bank’s arguments, Mihalyi did not have the opportunity to submit evidence and the trial court would not have reached the issue of the reasonableness of the fees at the hearing.

The record reveals Mihayli is entitled to prevailing party attorney’s fees and to an evidentiary hearing on the reasonableness of the amount of fees.

Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a determination of the reasonableness of the fees.

Reversed and Remanded for further proceedings

LEVINE and KLINGENSMITH, JJ., concur.

Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

[1] Mihalyi did not refer to section 57.105(7) in her answer and affirmative defense seeking an award of attorney’s fees. However, in Landry v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 731 So. 2d 137 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999), the court addressed a situation in which the defensive pleading sought attorney’s fees pursuant to section 57.105(2), Florida Statutes (1999) (subsequently renumbered as 57.105(7)) with no reference to the underlying contract. The court stated that because the promissory note was executed after the effective date of section 57.105(2), “appellants’ initial request for attorney’s fees was set forth in their answer with a specific reference to the applicable statute, and, by implication, to the contract, upon which the claim was made.” Id. at 140 (emphasis added). The court found the award of attorney’s fees proper even though the underlying contract was not mentioned in the pleading seeking fees. Here, Mihalyi’s answer and affirmative defense put LaSalle Bank on notice that she was seeking fees pursuant to the contract, and, by implication, put LaSalle Bank on notice that section 57.105(7) would be applicable. Moreover, “[w]here a party has notice that an opponent claims entitlement to attorney’s fees, and by its conduct recognizes or acquiesces to that claim or otherwise fails to object to the failure to plead entitlement, that party waives any objection to the failure to plead a claim for attorney’s fees.” Tri-County Dev. Grp., Inc. v. C.P.T. of S. Fla., Inc., 740 So. 2d 573, 574 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999) (citation omitted). LaSalle Bank did not move to strike the portion of the answer and affirmative defense seeking an award of attorney’s fees.

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This man made millions suffer: Tim Geithner’s sorry legacy on housing

This man made millions suffer: Tim Geithner’s sorry legacy on housing

Forget the book tour designed to polish his legacy. Tim Geithner’s record on housing will forever live in infamy


Salon-

As Salon pointed out yesterday, Bush-era economist and Romney advisor Glenn Hubbard claims former Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner lied in his book “Stress Test,” when describing a conversation from 2012 about Hubbard supporting tax increases. But while the he said/she said doesn’t interest me, a separate, throwaway statement by Hubbard does matter — in fact, it tells you plenty about Geithner and his policy preferences during Obama’s first term.

“I saw some of the excerpts about housing and I must say I split my side in laughter because Tim Geithner personally and actively opposed mortgage refinancing, constantly,” Hubbard told Politico. “And now he’s claiming this would be a great idea in the country.”

We aren’t obligated to believe Hubbard here, especially because his recollection of the tax conversation is probably misleading, if not untrue. And unfortunately, Hubbard declined to elaborate when I asked him for more detail. However, we have a ton of public information available to inform the debate over Geithner and housing.

[SALON]

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Wall Street To Obama: Now That You’ve Won, Let’s Be Friends Again

Wall Street To Obama: Now That You’ve Won, Let’s Be Friends Again

He never left you! Sillies.

Wall Street still runs the show.


HuffPO-

* Obama expected to name key financial regulatory heads

* Bank lobbyists to focus on regulators as well as issues

* Opportunities to reset relations with key policymakers

Wall Street firms gambled on Mitt Romney and lost. Now, faced with the prospect of even tougher regulations in President Barack Obama’s second term, they have to build better ties with the new financial regulators he will appoint.

[HUFFINGTON POST]

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Obama Will Fire FHFA Director Ed DeMarco In December, Wall Street Analyst Says

Obama Will Fire FHFA Director Ed DeMarco In December, Wall Street Analyst Says

AND we know whatever Wall Street wants, they shall get. This will also happen if Romney is elected.

BUT…It was the Obama Administration that allowed the banks to illegally foreclose on millions, did nothing to stop them and let them get away.

HuffPO-

Bank of America analyst Ralph Axel said Friday that he expects President Barack Obama to fire acting Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Ed DeMarco, should Obama win reelection. Firing DeMarco, Axel said, would unleash a “secret weapon” to boost the economy by allowing more borrowers to refinance their mortgages.

DeMarco has been embroiled in a public feud with the White House for most of 2012 over his refusal to allow principal reductions for troubled borrowers whose mortgages are owned by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Writing down the total debt burden these “underwater” borrowers owe would bring their mortgages in line with current home values, and reduce their monthly mortgage payments, giving them more money to spend on other economic activities.

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Kaptur says big banks are running the country

Kaptur says big banks are running the country

Kaptur/Warren 2016

Press Publication-

While speaking at Maumee Bay State Park, U.S. Representative Marcy Kaptur was asked what she thinks of the 2012 presidential campaign.

Kaptur turned the question around, asking the guests if they were satisfied with the way both Democratic President Barack Obama and Republican candidate Mitt Romney were running their campaigns.

She admitted she was not, suggesting that the amount of money both candidates have spent could have been better served if donated to food banks.

“They are almost like performers, and I don’t think it contributes to the dialogue like we are having right here. It is dissatisfying to the American people and they are spending all this money,” Kaptur said. “Ohioans should have questions answered about Ohio, rather than listening to all these canned speeches both sides give.

[PRESS PUBLICATION]

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Neil Barofsky: Presidential Election A Choice Between ‘Bad, Worse’ On Bank Regulation

Neil Barofsky: Presidential Election A Choice Between ‘Bad, Worse’ On Bank Regulation

Plain and simple: If you support any candidate who was backed by Wall Street, you also support those who caused Foreclosure Fraud. Another reason is because none of them did anything and I mean nothing from getting you or will eventually have you evicted out of your home.

Sorry you can’t have it one way and not the other.


HuffPO-

If you’ve been listening to Neil Barofsky gripe about the Obama administration’s handling of bank bailouts, you might think he’s got it in for President Obama. But he thinks Mitt Romney could be worse.

This is what you get when your democracy is so powerfully influenced by Wall Street money — no matter who wins the presidential election, chances are good that regulators will either be willfully captured by the banks they regulate, or bullied into submission.

[HUFFINGTON POST]

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The Green Party’s Jill Stein: Voting for more of the same is throwing away your vote

The Green Party’s Jill Stein: Voting for more of the same is throwing away your vote

CURRENT-

Current TV’s John Fugelsang, guest hosting for Eliot Spitzer, talks to Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein talks about her platform. Stein argues that voting for the Green Party is not a vote for Mitt Romney, but rather an opportunity to “drive us to the solutions we need.”

 

 

.

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Why Freddie Mac Resisted Refis

Why Freddie Mac Resisted Refis

by Jesse Eisinger
ProPublica, Oct. 25, 2012, 3:23 p.m.

Freddie Mac, the taxpayer-owned mortgage giant, made it harder for millions of Americans to refinance their high-interest-rate mortgages for fear it would cut into company profits, present and former Freddie Mac officials disclosed in recent interviews.

In closed door meetings, two Republican-leaning board members and at least one executive resisted a mass refi policy for an additional reason, according to the interviews: They regarded it as a backdoor economic stimulus.

Freddie’s policy was financially brutal: During the worst years of the Great Recession, when homeowners most needed the savings they could have gotten from refinancing to lower interest rates, Freddie helped keep millions of borrowers locked in high-interest-rate mortgages.

A more aggressive refi program by both Freddie and its sister company Fannie Mae would have helped an additional nine million homeowners to refinance, saving them nearly $75 billion in interest payments to date, Columbia University housing economist Christopher Mayer estimates. In addition, it would have prevented hundreds of thousands of delinquencies and foreclosures, he says.

Freddie’s resistance to refis highlights a central conflict of interest that plagues both Freddie and Fannie. That conflict is even more pronounced now that they are owned by taxpayers. The companies, which own or back about 60 percent of U.S. home mortgages, have a mandate to help expand homeownership and also to generate profits. These goals can work at cross purposes.

Freddie and Fannie maintained and erected barriers to refinancings when the Obama administration launched a program in early 2009 specifically designed to make refinancing more accessible u2014 the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP. Freddie continued to hinder refinancings through a late 2011 relaunch of HARP designed to further slash refi costs and paperwork. At that point, Fannie began opening its gates more widely, but Freddie still kept barriers in place.

Only in the last few months, under a new chief executive, has Freddie loosened many of its restrictions on refinancing.

“Almost immediately after taxpayers bailed them out, Fannie and Freddie imposed unprecedented restrictions on refinancing, preventing millions of people from saving money on their mortgages and leaving hundreds of thousands of people to lose their homes unnecessarily,” says Mayer. Then after the 2011 HARP relaunch, “Freddie was worse” than Fannie, he said.

The Internal Debate

Now, interviews with former board members and an executive have revealed two reasons why Freddie dragged its feet.

According to interviews, these officials feared that mass refinancing would hurt the company’s bottom line and therefore its ability to repay taxpayers, who had bailed out Freddie and Fannie in 2008 to the current tune of almost $142 billion. Fears that borrowers who got refis would suffer high rates of default anyway, costing Freddie, have not been borne out.

Internally, Freddie debated its compliance with HARP for years. Robert Glauber, who left Freddie’s board in March, contended in board meetings that aspects of the refinancing program were “designed to be a stimulus” for the economy, said John Koskinen, who served as Freddie Mac’s chairman from 2008 to 2011, during which time he also served briefly as its interim chief executive.

Glauber, director Linda Bammann and head of risk management Paige Wisdom resisted mass refis. One executive viewed their objections as colored by partisan unwillingness to help the economy recover, something that would benefit President Obama.

But Koskinen did not regard the discussion as partisan. “I don’t think we ever had a discussion of whether this was good for a Democratic administration.”

Glauber was a Republican appointee to the Treasury Department under President George H. W. Bush and has had a career in various Wall Street roles. In a brief email to ProPublica, he disputed a quotation attributed to him but did not comment on the substance of the internal debates. He wrote that “it is an outrage that what claim to be confidential discussions in the board room are aired in your publication.”

Bammann, who donated $250 to the National Republican Congressional Committee this year, declined to comment. Wisdom did not respond to requests for comment.

Freddie Mac declined to make an executive available. The company is “always trying to find a balance to stimulate borrowing on responsible terms at prices that protect us from risk,” a spokesman said. The new CEO, Donald Layton, has made it clear that making changes to the company’s refi program is “a major priority,” the spokesman said. And he pointed out that Freddie has streamlined its refi process outside of the HARP program as well.

The spokesman declined to comment on Freddie’s internal discussions.

HARP was intended to lower barriers to refinancing for borrowers, especially for those who have high loan balances or owe more than their homes are worth, known as being under water. But HARP has disappointed in part because of Freddie and Fannie’s restrictive refi rules.

When the program was overhauled late last year, Freddie retained more restrictions than Fannie, puzzling many housing experts.

Still, after the HARP overhaul, refis have risen. Freddie Mac has done more than 284,000 HARP refis this year through August, compared with 185,000 for all of last year. Fannie has done 334,000 in the same period, compared with 215,000 last year. In all, the two companies have done more than 1.6 million refis under the program. The administration’s initial goal was to help four to five million.

Concerns about providing a stimulus were not the only reason for Freddie’s restrictions. Several company executives and board members worried that doing mass refis would hurt Freddie Mac’s bottom line.

To appreciate this concern, it’s crucial to understand Freddie’s and Fannie’s business. The companies are two-headed beasts: One part is an insurance company with a public mission to help the housing market and the other is an investment fund that generates profits by trading mortgage investments. The investment side existed originally to keep the mortgage securities markets flowing. But as the portfolios grew in the years leading up to the financial crisis, the tail began to wag the dog. The huge profits from the portfolios inflated executives’ pay packages and began to overshadow the public mission of helping homeowners, critics say.

Refinancings can hurt the value of those portfolios. When a new, lower rate mortgage is issued, the old loan is paid off. The ultimate backer of that original loan u2014 in this case Freddie or Fannie u2014 takes a loss because the loan was “pre-paid,” meaning it was paid off earlier than expected. Mortgage securities make money from interest rates paid over time, so they decline in value if the flow of interest payments gets cut off, such as when a refi allows the original loan to get paid off early.

Glauber was concerned about Freddie incurring such losses, because taxpayers were ultimately on the hook. “Bob’s position would have been if it has a cost, it is not consistent with conservatorship,” Koskinen said.

Bammann, a former executive of JPMorgan Chase, and Wisdom voiced similar objections. Wisdom criticized the refi program, saying that it was “policy, not business,” according to the executive.

Board member Nicolas Retsinas, who served in various housing policy positions for the Clinton administration, argued consistently for an expansive refinancing policy, according to people familiar with the meetings. He argued that in calculating the costs of the refi program, Freddie should take into account the benefit from lowering defaults and foreclosures and the improved housing market and stronger economy that would come from refinancings.

Retsinas declined to comment.

Koskinen, a Democrat who served in the Clinton administration, said it was prudent for the board to discuss the costs of a refi program. “The board’s view was you could decide to categorize it or ignore it but couldn’t say it didn’t exist. The intellectually honest thing was to say, ‘How large was that cost?'” he said.

Freddie Frustrates Its Regulator

Early in the Great Recession, support for a mass refi program was bipartisan. Refis help borrowers who are current on their loans, scoring them prevailing rates.

Columbia economist Glenn Hubbard, now an economic advisor to Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, co-authored op-eds in the Wall Street Journal and later in the New York Times with his colleague Mayer, proposing a mass refi program. Many congressional Republicans supported it.

But the Wall Street Journal editorialized against it in February 2009, arguing a mass refi program amounted to undue government interference with the marketplace and would cause huge losses for taxpayers. Republicans turned against it.

The Obama administration and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which oversees Fannie and Freddie, didn’t fix HARP for years.

Under conservatorship, the FHFA has the responsibility to regulate the companies and to approve their major business decisions. Ed DeMarco, the acting head of the agency, has become a political lightning rod, criticized for having been too timid in helping the housing market. Critics contend he underestimated how much such an overall improvement would eventually help Fannie and Freddie’s bottom lines.

At the same time, DeMarco has been frustrated by Freddie Mac, according to people who are familiar with his tenure.

“Freddie is the party of ‘no.’ Fannie is the party of u2018let’s make it work,'” said a person familiar with DeMarco and the FHFA.

The FHFA was frustrated when Freddie Mac announced its guidelines in November 2011 because they restricted refis more tightly than Fannie’s did.

One example: Freddie was not going to allow certain well-situated borrowers into HARP, borrowers with a “loan-to-value” ratio of 80 or below. In other words, if a borrower had a $100,000 home and had a mortgage loan of $80,000 or less, he or she would not be eligible.

That wasn’t the only restriction. Freddie sometimes required properties to be re-appraised, which added cost and delay. And it hindered the ability for borrowers to get a refi from a new bank rather than from the one that had given them the original loan. “We were adding barriers to the homeowner,” says the Freddie executive.

Freddie’s risk management operation, the division in charge of making sure Freddie doesn’t take decisions likely to incur heavy losses, was particularly active in raising concerns over allowing more refis. For example, when Freddie insures a mortgage, it retains the right to void its guarantee and force the bank that made the loan to be responsible for it under certain circumstances, such as if the bank had done poor underwriting and the borrower’s income was misrepresented. Facilitating refis under HARP could require giving up those rights. Wisdom, the risk officer, argued that Freddie should not give up such rights lightly, because surrendering them could cost Freddie dearly.

But since many borrowers on these Freddie-backed loans had been making regular payments for a number of years, others argued there would likely be only a relatively small number of cases in which Freddie would need to force banks to take back loans. Thus, Freddie wouldn’t be giving up anything of much value.

Freddie Mac produced a memo in the fall of 2011, which was described to ProPublica, estimating that HARP would cause hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. The memo estimated big losses on the portfolio as well as from giving up the rights to return the loans. It minimized the benefits to Freddie’s insurance business from an improved housing market and improved economy. It also minimized the costs to the company of trapping homeowners in mortgages with interest rates so high they would eventually default.

That analysis appears to have been overly cautious. A recent New York Federal Reserve study estimated how much refinancings can help reduce future defaults and found that the benefits were greater than expected. “We were too conservative and that’s been subsequently borne out,” says the Freddie executive.

DeMarco has said he instructed Freddie and Fannie not to take into consideration portfolio losses. In a letter to Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) in May, DeMarco wrote that “FHFA specifically directed both [Fannie and Freddie] to exclude from consideration changes in their own investment income as part of the HARP evaluation process.”

The existence of the memo raises a question of whether Freddie ignored that instruction from its regulator. It also raises the question of why FHFA did not act immediately to prevent Freddie from imposing its tighter rules.

DeMarco and the FHFA did not respond to requests for comment.

Freddie’s 80 percent loan-to-value barrier had spillover effects. Mortgage experts say it led banks to reject out of hand borrowers who were close to that threshold. If a borrower initially appeared to qualify for a refi, but then the appraisal of the home pushed him below the barrier, Freddie would reject the refi and the mortgage company would have wasted time and money. So banks avoided a wide swath of homeowners whose loan-to-value ratio was near 80 percent.

At the FHFA, “nobody was happy with Freddie under 80 percent but we decided to deal with it later. And we dealt with it,” says a person familiar with the FHFA’s efforts.

Today, more refis are being done under HARP and the barriers at Freddie have started to come down. The new CEO, Donald Layton, deserves some credit, says the Freddie executive: “Don made important changes in the program and is willing to override narrow risk management. He took a broader view of the benefits and wasn’t focused wholly on the costs.”

© 2010-19 FORECLOSURE FRAUD | by DinSFLA. All rights reserved.



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Ben Bernanke To Close Friends: I’m Leaving… Won’t Stay At The Fed For A Third Term

Ben Bernanke To Close Friends: I’m Leaving… Won’t Stay At The Fed For A Third Term

HuffPO-

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has told close friends he probably will not stand for a third term at the central bank even if President Barack Obama wins the Nov. 6 election, the New York Times reported.

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has already said he would not re-nominate Bernanke if he wins the presidency. Bernanke’s term as chairman ends in January 2014.

Bernanke, who was first appointed to run the U.S. central bank by former president George W. Bush and was given a second term by Obama, has declined to comment publicly on whether he would accept another four-year term.

“I am very focused on my work, I don’t have any decision or any information to give you on my personal plans,” he told a news conference last month after the Fed announced a new and open-ended round of bond buying to support the U.S. economy.

[HUFFINGTON POST]

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CBS News affiliate calls 2012 presidential race for Barack Obama weeks ahead of election

CBS News affiliate calls 2012 presidential race for Barack Obama weeks ahead of election

Via- Daily Caller

The CBS News graphic showed Obama winning the election with 43 percent of the vote nationwide to Romney’s 40 percent -– or 40,237,966 votes to 38,116,216. It is unclear who garnered the other 17 percent in the fictional election results.

[DAILY CALLER]

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William K. Black | Jobs Now Teach-in Video by Jerry Schmidt

William K. Black | Jobs Now Teach-in Video by Jerry Schmidt

by

Outlaw Economics 2.0 lecture by William K. Black at the Jobs Now – Community Teach-In at UMKC.

Video should be called: How Obama and Romney cater to the elite.

“on a long enough lifeline the survival rate for everyone drops to zero


 

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