Cutting Medicare is bad, unless our guy does it

The Democratic establishment is out guns blazing today. Is it in response to the Washington Post report yesterday that President Obama would still take a deal that exchanged some modest (and imaginary) revenue increases for cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security?

No, of course not.

Predictably, it’s about Congressman Paul Ryan’s Version 2.0 budget. As with the last version, this one promises to gut Medicare and the rest of the social safety net, while providing massive tax cuts to the 1%.

Don’t get me wrong – the Ryan budget is a monstrosity and easily worse than any cuts proposed by President Obama, the Gang of Six in the Senate, or conservative House Democrats like Steny Hoyer and Heath Shuler.

But the notion that it’s a cataclysmic event when one major political party proposes destructive cuts to Medicare, but completely kosher for the other major political party to propose destructive cuts to Medicare is partisan absurdity. The reality is it’s a huge issue that both political parties agree in austerity and gutting the social safety net. The only difference is one of magnitude.

Keep in mind, Heath Shuler is working with House Republicans on a new “grand bargain” which would be put forward after the November election, so as to avoid public scrutiny. Elites in Washington want to embrace austerity, even as it’s clearly unpopular. It’s not clear that they will succeed, but obviously we’re heading back into deficit hysteria. Hopefully along the way, the White House, DNC, DSCC and DCCC figure out whether or not they support austerity so there can be honesty and consistency in their public messaging.

Congrats to Lynn Szymoniak

One of the few upsides of the mortgage settlement is that foreclosure fraud whistleblower Lynn Szymoniak will receive a large settlement for a suit she filed being rolled into this deal. Lynn is an amazing person – easily one of the individuals most responsible for making robosigning a national issue. Unfortunately her knowledge came through first hand experience of being persecuted by a bank that was willing to perpetrate fraud to try to steal her home. They picked the wrong woman to mess with and Lynn’s heroic work has helped expose the systemic criminality which is driving the foreclosure crisis.

Lynn’s story was featured on 60 Minutes, for those who want to hear about what she’s gone through. But even that report, from over a year ago, is just the tip of the iceberg for her story. Deutsche Bank has disgracefully pursued her for years, despite her winning numerous decisions which should have forced them to stop their attacks on her. Matt Stoller has a post that contextualizes the importance of Lynn’s work and what she’s been up against over the last number of years.

There are few people that I know who are more courageous and more deserving of compensation through this settlement than Lynn. It’s good to see that there is at least some small amount of unquestionable good coming out of this otherwise heartbreaking mortgage settlement.

Legalizing theft to save the banks

Abigail C. Field has a very important post, looking at the mortgage settlement and how the deal and changes to mortgage servicing will be monitored by regulators and law enforcement. Field identifies a series of thresholds and tolerance levels the federal government and state law enforcement set for how the well the servicers have to perform. In short, banks can charge extra money, miscount payments homeowners make, and generally have their records remain in a mess, as long as it isn’t more than a certain percentage of their total amount of mortgages. As bad as it is for the people allegedly representing the public to have agreed to tolerate these abuses, it gets much worse. I’m going to quote Field at length, because this is an important analysis:

Even metrics that look tough superficially turn out to be cruelly weak. For example, take the very first metric in the table, page E-1-1, “Foreclosure sale in error”. If it happens, that means the B.O.Bs [Bailed Out Banks] sold your house when they weren’t supposed to. On first glance, things look good: no loan level error is tolerated (Column C is N/A). Column D looks tough, but only if you don’t think much about it: only a 1% error is tolerated.

When 1 million homes are foreclosed, that’s 10,000 sold wrongfully. In 2011 banks foreclosed on nearly 2 million homes according to BusinessWeek (stat on p. 2 of story), so if that metric were in place last year, nearly 20,000 homes could’ve been effectively stolen from people and the B.O.Bs wouldn’t get in trouble. But that 1% isn’t the really big flaw in this metric. The biggest problems with this metric are hidden in the “Test Questions,” which are Column F.

Focus on the parenthetical qualifications that start with question 2:

1. Did the foreclosing party have legal standing to foreclose?

2. Was the borrower in an active trial period plan (unless the servicer took appropriate steps to postpone sale)?

Surprise! It’s not reportable error if the B.O.Bs sold your house during an active trial mod, if they tried to stop the sale from happening.

3. Was the borrower offered a loan modification fewer than 14 days before the foreclosure sale date (unless the borrower declined the offer or the servicer took appropriate steps to postpone the sale)?

Again, it’s not reportable error if the B.O.Bs sold your house while you were evaluating or responding to their mod offer, if they tried to stop the sale.

4. Was the borrower not in default (unless the default is cured to the satisfaction of the Servicer or investor within 10 days before the foreclosure sale date and the Servicer took appropriate steps to postpone sale)?

Wow–it’s not reportable error to sell your house even though you weren’t in default, so long as you foolishly cured the default too close the sale date and the B.O.Bs tried to stop the sale of your home.

5. Was the borrower protected from foreclosure by Bankruptcy (unless Servicer had notice of such protection fewer than 10 days before the foreclosure sale date and Servicer took appropriate steps to postpone sale)?

Again, you can have the law on your side–you’re protected by the bankruptcy court–but the B.O.Bs can sell your house anyway if you dawdled in declaring bankruptcy and the bank tried to stop the sale. I wonder what a bankruptcy judge would make of that provision?

See, in four of the five questions the B.O.Bs have found a way to make yes mean no: Yes, we violated the bankruptcy stay; No, it doesn’t count toward the 1% error rate. As a result, 1% of the foreclosure sales checked by the monitor isn’t the real threshold for getting bankers in trouble. It’s 1% plus all the wrongful sales that this settlement says are ok anyway. [Bold emphasis added]

Let’s be clear: the settlement makes it allowable for banks to foreclose on people who were current on the mortgage, just so long as it’s not more than 1% of their total foreclosures. This is a big part of the bank behavior the settlement was supposed to stop and it is actually legalizing it.

At Naked Capitalism, Matt Stoller looks at other ways the settlement continues to reveal itself as a sweetheart deal for banks:

Beyond these reports (and the complaint by DOJ showing that Holder and the other attorneys general knew and understood what the banks were doing), the mortgage settlement is incoherent. The settlement will be challenged in court by investors. And the formula for settlement credits is bizarre and full of easter eggs for the banks. For instance, banks will now get credit for houses they were going to bulldoze anyway, essentially being allowed to unload low-value properties with clouded title on a dollar-for-dollar basis, which are actually worth pennies on the dollar (or perhaps value negative in areas where there are fines for not keeping up properties). Banks will also get credit for not going after deficiency judgments, which means they get credit when they choose not to sue foreclosed families who have no money. They aren’t suing for deficiency judgments anyway, by and large, because suing people who have nothing is, surprise, not profitable! But they’ll get billions in credit for this regardless.

Seeing how insanely pro-bank and anti-rule of law (let alone anti-homeowner) the settlement is turning out to be, I’m reminded of this passage from a post by Stoller at Salon shortly after the settlement was announced:

Rather than settling anything, this agreement is simply a continuation of the policy framework of both the Bush and the Obama administrations. So what, exactly, is that framework? It is, as Damon Silvers of the Congressional Oversight Panel, which monitored the bailouts, once put it, to preserve the capital structures of the largest banks. “We can either have a rational resolution to the foreclosure crisis or we can preserve the capital structure of the banks,” said Silvers in October, 2010. “We can’t do both.” Writing down debt that cannot be paid back — the approach Franklin Roosevelt took — is off the table, as it would jeopardize the equity keeping those banks afloat.

What we are seeing is a deal that seeks to preserve the capital structure of the banks. Having thresholds were the banks can continue to behave exactly as the have, even in the face of temporary new servicing standards, makes sense as long as we remember that this is about making sure the banks don’t go bust and we can move on past these inconvenient consequences of the housing bubble.

Early reactions to the finally real mortgage settlement deal

The national mortgage settlement finally happened yesterday, over a month after it was triumphantly announced by the Obama administration. The documentation for the deal is long and confusing, so analysis is coming out slowly, but early indications are that the deal is just as bad as it looked like it would be and potentially quite worse.

David Dayen pulls out the long lists of crimes and abuses the servicers have committed. The list is so full of failures that it forces Dayen to ask:

You might ask why any industry with this kind of performance record would be allowed to stay in business. It would be a good question.

Dayen also flags a passage which seems to suggest that the servicers can force any homeowner who takes a modification or compensation for relief to waive their due process rights. Not only do we have to trust the banks to handle things correctly, despite having a record of being completely incapable or unwilling to follow the law, this settlement will empower them to make needed aid — aid that is coming to buy a release from liability! — contingent on further insulating themselves from liability from individuals pursuing legal action against them. To put it differently, one of the things the AGs and the Obama administration long promised is that any settlement wouldn’t forestall individuals from bringing their own suits. This seems to suggest exactly the opposite.

Isaac Gradman of The Subprime Shakeout has one of the more comprehensive analyses I’ve seen. There’s a lot to go through but a few passages merit promotion.

On the tiny size of the settlement’s aid to underwater homeowners:

The first problem is that, as the Wall Street Journal recently noted, the actual amount of loan forgiveness isn’t large relative to the problem of underwater debt. The WSJ attributes to Ted Gayer, co-director of economic studies at the Brookings Institution, the estimate that the settlement’s complex set of requirements mean that about 500,000 borrowers, or 5% of those who are underwater, may be eligible for help. Let me repeat that so it sinks in – if you are one of this nation’s 10 million underwater borrowers, you have only a 1 in 20 chance of getting any semblance of relief.

For a very long time, the public was promised that a release for bank liability would be narrow. Now that we see the deal, that turns out to not be true.

We now have the language of the actual release, which the banks have been given in return for the penalties and reforms discussed above. As expected, the release is fairly broad in the arena of servicing activities, releasing essentially any claim that any regulator may have based on mortgage servicing, loss mitigation, collection or accounting of borrower payments, or foreclosure or bankruptcy practices. In other words, this is the last we’ll see of any government agency digging into the who, what, where, when and how of robosigning and forged affidavits.

That is, this goes well beyond mere robosigning, even if claims related to origination and securitization are not released. Gradman goes on to note, “But here’s the rub. In the face of the litany of charges brought against them, the banks are not forced to admit to any wrongdoing.” This practice, which is very common with the federal government’s regulation of Wall Street, has recently come under scrutiny and will likely be under even more scrutiny in this deal. After all, why should a judge sign off on a $25 billion settlement when the people paying the money aren’t admitting any wrongdoing? How could a judge possibly determine if this is a fair deal?

Yves Smith has a fairly deep dive into how the settlement will almost certainly screw investors in mortgage backed securities – making it so it is more likely that public pensions, union pensions, and 401ks pay for the settlement than the banks who are ostensibly being punished.

And since the banks are held to a total dollar target, and can use mods of other people’s mortgages to meet this target, they are using other people’s money to pay off their misdeeds. There is no two ways about it.

Remember, the investor beef is not that they are anti-mod per se, but they want the seconds wiped out before the first mortgages are touched. The second lien investors knew they were second in line and got a higher interest rate as a result. Moreover, had investors had a seat at the table, you can be sure there are other servicing abuses they would have insisted be corrected, so railroading them benefits the banks in other ways too.

There’s a big problem here. It just doesn’t seem possible that trustees can agree to changing the rules of the road regarding first and second liens and magically allow modifications to the firsts while not totally wiping out the seconds first. It’s not clear at all that investors have approved these dealings and it’s not clear at all that the trustees have the power to make such a deal without approval from the investors. That is, at least according to most of the PSAs governing these trusts.

There will presumably be lots more analysis and investigation coming out of the foreclosure and economic blogosphere. But one high level perspective that’s worth flagging is by Matt Stoller at New Deal 2.0:

Beyond that, there is no coherent organizing principle behind the deal. It’s not like you can explain this as “we’re going to write down debts for people who can’t pay them and foreclose on those that can’t pay anything,” or “we’re going to foreclose on people who aren’t paying their debts, period,” or “we’re going to force the banks to stop using accounting fraud.” It’s a mish-mash of claims and releases, some of which seem to contradict each other. Some of the signature lines are left blank. If this doesn’t become a “catalytic” event, and banks don’t write down debts after the credits run out, oh well. Get ready for a policy and legal mess on top of a housing market that is in and of itself a policy and legal mess. There is precedent for a deal like this: the alphabet soup of housing programs from the Bush and Obama administrations.

Given what we’re seeing so far, this seems to be right. It’s not surprising, given what we’ve seen over the last three years, but it certainly isn’t encouraging either. It doesn’t inspire confidence that even this weak tea will be served properly and what little aid has been secured will be delivered in a timely and fair fashion to homeowners in need.

The tragedy of our circumstances

To close out a very strong piece on the lack of honesty in public discourse around housing and the economy, Matt Stoller writes:

There is no honesty among our political elites, and by that statement, I don’t mean that they are liars. There are liars everywhere, and truthtellers as well. Most of us are concurrently both. What I mean is that the culture of the political elite is one in which a genuine conversation about the actual problems we are facing as a society simply cannot be held with any integrity. Instead, we have to chalk up problems in a very busted housing market, and a generation saddled with indentured servitude disguised as a debt, as one of “hormones”.

It sounds cute that way, I guess. Eventually, we will see integrity in our discourse. It’s unavoidable. You can’t operate a society solely on intellectual dishonesty because eventually all your bridges fall down, even the ones the rich use. For a moment, from 2008-2009, there was real discourse about what to do. We’ll see a moment like that again. Only, the environment won’t be nearly as conducive to having a prosperous democratic society as it was in 2008. There will be a lot more poverty, starvation, violence, and authoritarianism when the next chance comes around. Catastrophic climate change, devastating supply chain disruptions, political upheaval, geopolitical tensions and/or war – one more more of these will be the handmaidens of honest dialogue.

The tragedy is not that our circumstances will worsen dramatically, but that it just didn’t have to be this way.

I think that this is one of the most important aspects of what’s happening in America today. I also think the forceful, honest description of what is wrong with our society is what propelled the Occupy movement to popularity last fall. What we need now is not just accurate descriptions of the problems we face, though, but honest discourse on what we need to do to get out of this situation. Stoller’s right – it’s a tragedy that we’re in a moment where it is not happening and only by things getting worse is it likely to change.

SEC hope – or missing the point – on Wall Street prosecutions

It’s being reported that the SEC and the mortgage fraud task force co-chaired by Eric Schneiderman that “[f]urther legal action is likely before the end of the year against firms involved in the origins of the housing bubble.” Obviously seeing criminal prosecutions of banksters would be a good outcome, as would much larger civil suits than anything we’ve seen so far.

But what stands out to me is this line from the SEC chair about what she thinks they’ve already done when it comes to holding bank executives accountable.

Schapiro noted that her agency already has “named over 100 individuals in financial crisis cases, many of them CEOs and CFOs and other senior executives.”

But to date, what has actually been done when it comes to prosecution is the pursuit of insider trading which hurt banks’ bottom lines, not accountability for hurting homeowners or defrauding pensions and 401ks. It reminds me of the absurd Time Magazine cover which holds up Preet Bharara as a feared Wall Street cop.

The simple reality is that the SEC’s toothless and ineffective no-fault settlements with banks and people like Bharara going after the people which cost banks money (not the other way around), law enforcement and regulators have continually taken accountability in the opposite direction of what the public wants. The state of holding bankers accountable in America actually reminds me of this brilliant I see a happy face panel:

The Iceland Example

Bloomberg has an article about Iceland’s remarkable recovery since the economic collapse of 2008. The tiny island was the victim of a massive, bank-driven bubble that produces massive debt levels. Unlike every other country facing the economic crisis, Iceland chose to prioritize the needs and well-being of their citizenry over their creditors. This included writing down all debts where mortgages were worth over 110% of the value of the house, essentially eliminating all seriously underwater properties and freeing up homeowners to have mobility.

After Iceland defaulted on their debt, their economy briefly contracted, but has grown at a substantially greater rate than the rest of Europe since. Additionally, Iceland has actually prosecuted bank executives who criminally inflated the housing bubble.

Iceland’s approach to dealing with the meltdown has put the needs of its population ahead of the markets at every turn.

Once it became clear back in October 2008 that the island’s banks were beyond saving, the government stepped in, ring-fenced the domestic accounts, and left international creditors in the lurch. The central bank imposed capital controls to halt the ensuing sell-off of the krona and new state-controlled banks were created from the remnants of the lenders that failed.

It’s shocking and sad that Iceland’s response – to prioritize the needs of its population! – is unique. Only in a truly broken and corruption economic system are the needs of banks considered more important than the needs of people.

The help Iceland provided to their citizens, the prosecutions of banksters, the changing of the rules of the economic road to protect the country from further damage at the hands of reckless banks, and the resulting strong economic growth stemming from a stabilized housing and banking system should be a blue print that could be deployed not only in Europe, but here in the US. Instead, austerity and the perpetual bailout of the banks who caused this crisis is the norm and Iceland is functionally ignored by elite policy makers.