Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH - Monday, 6 February 2012 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)I THINK YVES WILL BE WRITING ANOTHER BOOK SOON...THIS POST WOULD QUALIFY AS ONE ON ITS OWN...
In case you had any doubts about what the mortgage settlement was really about and why banks that were so keenly opposed to it are now willing to go ahead, the news of the last two days should settle any doubts.
As we had indicated earlier, one of the many leaks about the settlement showed that there had been a major shift its parameters. Of the $25 billion that has been bandied about as a settlement total for the biggest banks, comparatively little (less than $5 billion) is in cash. The rest comes in the form of credits for principal modifications of mortgages.
Originally, that was to come only from mortgages held by banks, meaning they would bear the costs. The fact that this meant that whether a homeowner might benefit would be random (were you one of the lucky ones whose mortgage had not been securitized?) was apparently used as an excuse to morph the deal into a huge win for them: allowing the banks to get credit for modifying mortgages that they dont own.
The first rule of finance (well, maybe second, fees are not negotiable might be number one) is always use other peoples money before your own. So giving the banks permission to modify loans they dont own guarantees that that is where the overwhelming majority of mortgage modifications will take place, ex those the banks would have done anyhow on their own loans. And the design of the program, that securitized loans will be given only half the credit towards the total, versus 100% for loans the banks own, merely assures that even more damage will be done to investors to pay for the servicers misdeeds. ...
BUT WAIT! IT GETS WORSE! SEE LINK FOR FOLLOWUP
...The Obama Administration may have decided that investors have acted enough like patsies, given how they have failed to react to rampant servicer abuses, that they judge the risk of investor litigation and a related PR embarrassment to be small. But this battle is not yet over. The rumblings I am hearing from investor-land remind of the sections of the Lord of the Rings when the Ents were finally roused. It isnt yet clear that investors will act, but if they do, the Administration will be unprepared for the vehemence of their response.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012/02/schneiderman-mers-suit-and-huds-donovan-remarks-confirm-that-mortgage-settlement-is-a-stealth-bank-bailout.html