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Krugman: “Let’s Not Be Civil”

Evans Liberal Politics
April 18, 2011

 

Krugman: “Let’s Not Be Civil”

Krugman: “Let’s Not Be Civil”, Daily Kos, April 18, 211, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Paul Krugman is most legitimately righteous, and his newspaper’s editorial board even more vehemently so, about the so-called budget “negotiations” between Democrats and Republicans (led by the “‘Gang of Six’ In The Senate Seeking A Plan On Debt“), in his spot-on column in Monday’s NY Times, entitled: “Let’s Not Be Civil.”

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Let’s Not Be Civil
By PAUL KRUGMAN
New York Times
April 18, 2011 Last week, President Obama offered a spirited defense of his party’s values — in effect, of the legacy of the New Deal and the Great Society. Immediately thereafter, as always happens when Democrats take a stand, the civility police came out in force. The president, we were told, was being too partisan; he needs to treat his opponents with respect; he should have lunch with them, and work out a consensus.

That’s a bad idea. Equally important, it’s an undemocratic idea…

Krugman walks through the past two week’s history reminding us of the House GOPer’s budget proposal, “…selling it to credulous pundits as a statement of necessity, not ideology — a document telling America What Must Be Done.”

He speaks of the Republican’s deficit/debt fear-mongering, and their focus upon maintaining low taxes among our nation’s wealthiest.

The bottom line is: “…it revealed a deep difference in views about how the world works.”

Krugman writes about how we should remember that the G.O.P. ran on fear-mongering regarding Medicare cuts during the mid-terms; but, somehow, they’re supporting a budget which would, eventually, “dismantle Medicare completely.”

In closing, he reminds us of recently publicized polls that “…suggest that the public’s priorities are nothing like those embodied in the Republican budget. Large majorities support higher, not lower, taxes on the wealthy. Large majorities — including a majority of Republicans — also oppose major changes to Medicare.”

Which brings me to those calls for a bipartisan solution. Sorry to be cynical, but right now “bipartisan” is usually code for assembling some conservative Democrats and ultraconservative Republicans — all of them with close ties to the wealthy, and many who are wealthy themselves — and having them proclaim that low taxes on high incomes and drastic cuts in social insurance are the only possible solution.This would be a corrupt, undemocratic way to make decisions about the shape of our society even if those involved really were wise men with a deep grasp of the issues…

…So let’s not be civil. Instead, let’s have a frank discussion of our differences. In particular, if Democrats believe that Republicans are talking cruel nonsense, they should say so — and take their case to the voters.

As I noted above, also in today’s edition, the Times’ editors talk of the Republicans and “…the full landscape of destruction that their policies would cause — much of which has already begun.”

The New Republican Landscape
Editorial
New York Times
April 18, 2011 Six months after voters sent Republicans in large numbers to Congress and many statehouses, it is possible to see the full landscape of destruction that their policies would cause — much of which has already begun. If it was not clear before, it is obvious now that the party is fully engaged in a project to dismantle the foundations of the New Deal and the Great Society, and to liberate business and the rich from the inconveniences of oversight and taxes.

At first it seemed that only a few freshmen and noisy followers of the Tea Party would support the new extremism. But on Friday, nearly unanimous House Republicans showed just how far their mainstream has been dragged to the right. They approved on strict party lines the most regressive social legislation in many decades, embodied in a blueprint by the budget chairman, Paul Ryan. The vote, from which only four Republicans (and all Democrats) dissented, would have been unimaginable just eight years ago to a Republican Party that added a prescription drug benefit to Medicare…

…President Obama, after staying in the shadows too long, is starting to illuminate the serious damage that Republicans are doing. Their vision, he said last week, “is less about reducing the deficit than it is about changing the basic social compact in America.” Other Democrats are also beginning to stand up and reject these ideas, having been cowed for months by the electoral wave. Their newfound confidence will give voters a clearer view of this bare and pessimistic landscape.

In yet another piece, from Sunday’s edition, we learn more about the current state of budget negotiations via the: “‘Gang of Six’ in the Senate Seeking a Plan on Debt.”

We’re told of  ”progressive” Illinois Democratic Senator Dick Durbin, the second-highest ranking senator in the majority party in that august body, and how he is working closely with two other Democrats (Warner of Virginia and Conrad of North Dakota), along with three Republicans (Chamblis of Georgia, Coburn of Oklahoma and Crapo of Idaho), and they’re “nearing consensus” on a $4-trillion debt reduction plan.

For over 30 years, the status quo’s minions in Washington have been eviscerating America’s middle and lower classes. As a result, we’re witnessing the greatest income inequality between our nation’s haves and have-nots since reliable metrics were first established, well before our nation’s Great Depression, to benchmark this inconvenient truth.

We now live in a world where the “bipartisan negotiation” meme is just another reminder that, inside the Beltway, as Joseph Stiglitz just noted it, it’s a government “Of The 1%, By The 1%, For The 1%.

The Pirates Of Capitol Hill,” the veritable foxes, guard the henhouse.

Since when did it become acceptable policy to negotiate with terrorists?

It is time for our government, from the White House on down, to focus their campaign financing efforts towards the same place where their mouths are directed.

Otherwise, at the end of the day–and it will be the very last “day” for many on Main Streets across this country, too–it’s just more of the same if Medicare is eviscerated and other economic transgressions against our country’s poor and those getting poorer are enabled under the moniker of “bipartisan negotiation.”

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F*ck that!

Never has Krugman been so spot-on as he is in today’s NY Times!

One more time, if for nothing else than EMPHASIS…

So let’s not be civil. Instead, let’s have a frank discussion of our differences. In particular, if Democrats believe that Republicans are talking cruel nonsense, they should say so — and take their case to the voters.

Take the case to the voters. They want what the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party wants. That’s what I would call the most important “consensus” of all.

And, while we’re at it, send a message to Conrad, Durbin, Warner and everyone at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue to drop this “bipartisan negotiation” bullshit!

What has “civility” done for our nation’s middle and lower classes over the past three decades?

This is Einstein’s definition of insanity, writ large: “Repeating the same action and expecting a different result.”

Democrats are at a crossroads. Right now. We can continue to do what we’ve done and we’ll get what we’ve got. Or, not!

“Let’s Not Be Civil!”

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Evans Liberal Politics would like to thank Bob Swern for permission to republish his work on an ongoing basis. Bob is our favorite progressive economics writer (along with Robert Reich). More than even Paul Krugman, Mr. Swern fleshes out his articles with lots of details and links, and so provides real grist for liberals and progressives to learn from. You are invited to email Bob Swern here.

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Johnson, Krugman, Nocera: Elizabeth Warren Is Getting Thrown Under The Bus

Evans Liberal Politics
March 21, 2011

 

Johnson, Krugman, Nocera: Elizabeth Warren
Is Getting Thrown Under The Bus

Johnson, Krugman, Nocera: Elizabeth Warren Is Getting Thrown Under The Bus, Daily Kos, March 20, 2011, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

MIT Professor, author and former International Monetary Fund (IMF) Chief Economist Simon Johnson noted, on Thursday, (See: “Who’s Afraid of Elizabeth Warren?“) that it’s certainly beginning to appear that–at least as far as the ongoing, Wall Street mortgage fraud settlement negotiations with our states’ 50 attorneys general are concerned–Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s quite perturbed with presidential advisor Elizabeth Warren and her Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for taking the lead in advocating Main Street’s position on the matter.

nice photograph of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau advocate Elizabeth Warren

But, over the weekend, in “Heroes As Villains: The Case of Elizabeth Warren,” and “An Advocate Who Scares Republicans,” even Paul Krugman and the NYT’s Joe Nocera, respectively, note that when political push comes to shove, Democrats from the administration on down, are more than ready to justify their inaction and tacitly feed Ms. Warren to the GOP wolves, as strong headwinds from the Wall Street go all out to vilify Warren.

As Johnson stated it–which should come as no surprise to anyone who’s been following Mr. Geithner’s ongoing, two-plus-year reign over all things financial in this country–after pointing out multiple comments which underscored general GOP disdain for Warren on Capitol Hill, many of Ms. Warren’s and Main Street’s economic hurdles lie on the other side of the aisle: “…Mr. Geithner at this stage is more pro-banking lobby than even Mr. Bachus.” Johnson was referring to House Financial Services Committee Chair Spencer Bachus (R-AL).

As a Democrat–even as a pragmatic Democrat–please take a few seconds to think about that.

Coming from the author of “13 Bankers,” “The Quiet Coup” and “The Two-Track Economy,” that’s really quite a statement.

To jog our memories, Johnson reminds us that Bachus is the person who recently said…

“In Washington, the view is that the banks are to be regulated, and my view is that Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks.”

Johnson’s Geithner reference was with regard to a piece that appeared in the New York Post, around eight days ago, prior to Warren’s appearance before the House Financial Services Committee, earlier this past week. In that article, we learn that Secretary Geithner “isn’t happy” with Warren’s CFPB taking the lead advocacy position in the ongoing mortgage/foreclosure fraud settlement talks.

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Warren ripped again
By MARK DeCAMBRE
New York Post
Last Updated: 4:57 AM, March 11, 2011 …Geithner has privately told others that he isn’t happy with Warren’s involvement in the talks either, according to sources familiar with the matter…

…To be sure, one CFPB insider insisted that the agency only got involved in the mortgage negotiations after being “sought out as advisers” by state attorneys general.
“Politicizing the funding of bank supervision would be a dangerous precedent, and it would deprive the CFPB of the predictable funding it will need to examine large and powerful banks consistently and to provide a level playing field with their non-bank competitors,” Warren said in a recent speech.

To say that Geithner’s been “annoyed” by Warren, despite spin and related public statements to the contrary, from virtually the very first day he was in office, is to put the matter quite kindly. The facts are that she’s been a thorn in his side since day one, IMHO.

As I noted above, we’ve reached a point where even folks like Krugman and Nocera are making significant note of how our party’s leaders are conspicuously silent at this critical juncture:

Krugman, in his blog, yesterday (see link, above)…

…Warren has clearly faced a lot of hostility from within the administration, too. And as I see it, this also comes precisely because she was right: that gives her the kind of credibility that, in turn, makes her something of an independent force — which some people don’t like at all.Of course, that very credibility could make her an important asset to the Obama administration, for whom she could serve both as an able administrator and as a symbol of commitment to reform. But so far, the administration seems eager to avoid drawing any contrasts with the GOP, even when it has both justice and public opinion on its side.

Nocera, in Saturday’s NYT (see link, above)….

…It’s not just the House Republicans either. Already the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has reverted to form, becoming once again a captive of the banks it is supposed to regulate. (It has strenuously opposed the efforts of the A.G.’s to penalize the banks and reform the mortgage modification process, for instance.) The banks themselves act as if they have a God-given right to the profit they made precrisis, and owe the country nothing for the trouble they’ve put us all through. The Justice Department has essentially given up trying to make anyone accountable for the crisis.Thank goodness, then, for the attorneys general — and for Ms. Warren. On Main Street, where the attorneys general operate, it is pretty obvious that problems persist…

…Let’s face it: there isn’t anybody in Washington more fearless about standing up to the big banks. No wonder they don’t like her…

…Senate Republicans have vowed to block her appointment if President Obama nominates her. Yet even if her nomination goes down in flames, Senate confirmation hearings would be clarifying. Americans would get to hear Ms. Warren explain why the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has the potential to help Americans. And they would get to hear Republicans explain why the status quo — including the everyday horror of the foreclosure mess — is just fine.

It has been much noted in recent months that President Obama seems unwilling to start a fight with Republicans. Maybe that’s why he has shied away from nominating Ms. Warren to a job for which she is so clearly suited. But if protecting financial consumers — and helping the millions of Americans struggling to hold onto their homes — isn’t worth fighting for, then what is?

As some reading this might note, and as I’ve pointed it out in numerous posts — and as recently as in a diary in the past 24 hours — I think that even this woefully inadequate demand for $20 or $30 billion in mortgage modifications that the President and advisor Warren are now trying to squeeze out of Wall Street is quite pathetic, and really not much more than a charade once one realizes that the Treasury Department already has access to at least this amount in unspent, preapproved funds to accomplish this task.

It’s been widely reported, and as I’ve noted it in my own diaries of late via a recent ProPublica investigation, the government’s efforts to keep people in their homes via the HAMP program has been nothing short of a dismal failure.

From a practical standpoint, it’s now being projected by many of our country’s leading experts on residential real estate valuations, that as many as half of our nation’s mortgageholders will be underwater (owing more on their homes than they’re worth) by year’s end. Then again, much to the chagrin of those promoting our corporatocratic recovery (while Main Street languishes in pain), this situation was projected to come to fruition two years ago by experts at Barclays and Deutschebank. So, it’s not exactly new information.

The truth is that very little’s been accomplished to ameliorate Main Street homeowner suffering over the past couple of years.

As Johnson notes…

…[Geithner's] team agreed to Basel III, which requires banks to have less equity funding than Lehman had the day before it failed. There is no sign that systemically important financial institutions will be required to have a significant extra capital buffer – although this is supposedly not yet decided. And despite the undecided capital standards and large evident problems still facing banks (the foreclosure fiasco, commercial real estate woes, continuing high unemployment), the Financial Stability Oversight Council – which Mr. Geithner chairs – is about to sign off on letting banks increase their dividends.This makes no sense at all in terms of economic policy, but this is exactly what Mr. Geithner is presiding over. (If anyone you know at Treasury thinks this assessment is unfair, send them to Anat Admati’s webpage at Stanford.)

And having Elizabeth Warren on the scene – providing an alternative pro-consumer perspective – is apparently increasingly inconvenient to Mr. Geithner. For example, he has expressed displeasure at her engagement in the mortgage settlement process.

President Obama missed his best opportunity to reform the financial system when advisers – including Mr. Geithner – recommended that he defer to the top 13 bankers in March 2009. His team further punted when they failed to push for real change in spring and summer 2010, when the financial legislation was before the Senate. Mr. Geithner and his people were instrumental in defeating the Brown-Kaufman Amendment, which would have limited the size and the leverage (debt relative to equity) of the largest banks in the United States.

Will Mr. Geithner go for the trifecta? He was instrumental in bailing out the big banks without any strings. He held back serious attempts at legislative reform. Will he now prevent Elizabeth Warren, our potentially most effective modern regulator, from even coming up for a vote in the Senate?

When Geithner leaves the Treasury Department, he will return to the vampire squid’s lair from whence he came, upgrading his former, $500,000+ per-year gig as President of the NY Federal Reserve for a $10- or $20-million-a-year chairmanship with one of the too-big-to-fail firms that he’s done more to enrich over the past few years than any other U.S. citizen, save for–perhaps–Ben Bernanke. But, that’s certainly an arguable point, if ever there was one.

What’s inarguable here, however–White House apologists aside–is that, once again, when it comes down to a critical choice between Wall Street and Main Street, we’re dealing with a political party — OUR party — whose leadership is almost as much in thrall to Wall Street as the G.O.P.

Perhaps nowhere is that more self-evident than with regard to what’s happened to Elizabeth Warren over the past few days.

This country’s leading advocate for Main Street is being fed to the wolves, as our party’s leaders standby and, at the very least, witness this mugging in broad daylight.

IMHO, it’s the political version of the Kitty Genovese story, writ large.

In the words of Joe Nocera this weekend: “…if protecting financial consumers — and helping the millions of Americans struggling to hold onto their homes — isn’t worth fighting for, then what is?”

IMHO, Elizabeth Warren is being thrown under the bus…by both parties…and, it is unacceptable.

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Naked Capitalism: Anonymous’ Whistleblower Charges BofA With Large Scale Insurance Scheme

Evans Liberal Politics
March 14, 2011

 

Naked Capitalism: Anonymous’ Whistleblower
Charges BofA With Large Scale Insurance Scheme

Progressive Economist Bob Swern on Evans Liberal Politics

Naked Capitalism: Anonymous’ Whistleblower Charges BofA With Large Scale Insurance Scheme, Daily Kos, March 14, 2011, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Kossack deepsouthdoug has posted a diary entitled, “BREAKING ‘Operation LeakS’ Releases Initial BofA Emails,” which I’m assuming is on the Rec List as you read this. (If it isn’t, it should be; and, Naked Capitalism Publisher Yves Smith explains why in her post from the last few minutes, as presented in full, below.)

Rather than give you a recap of this story, as it’s developing now, I urge you to read deepsouthdoug’s post, linked above, and then follow Yves, below, to get up to date.

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(IMPORTANT NOTE! The validity of this story’s contents are by no means officially confirmed to the audience, as of this post. That being said, as Yves notes, below–and based upon my own experience in terms of my professional dealings with the mortgage industry–I would be somewhat surprised if this latest whistleblower’s allegations and evidence were not confirmed as legitimate.)

As Yves also notes, below: “And if these allegations are indeed accurate, they make a mockery of the settlement charade underway among 50 state attorneys general, Federal regulators, and what amount to banking industry crooks, aka servicers.”

See my post from February 24th, for more from Yves on this tangential story: Yves Smith: $20B “Mortgage Fraud Whitewash.”

After reading about why this latest whistleblowing effort presented via hacker group Anonymous may very well be a bit more of a smoking gun than I even thought (after first reading about it over the past couple of hours), checkout Krugman’s latest on the incredible fail of our states’ attorneys general, in their supposed effort to “get tough” with the mortgage industry. He refers to it in his headline in Monday’s NY Times as: “Another Inside Job.” (Gotta’ love that.)

Here’s Yves: “Wikileaks Whistleblower Charges BofA With Large Scale Force Placed Insurance Scheme With Cooperation of Servicers.”

(“Can you say: ‘RICO Act?’ Sure you can!”)

Take it away, Yves…

(Diarist’s Note: Diarist has received written authorization from Naked Capitalism Publisher Yves Smith to reprint her blog’s posts in their entirety for the benefit of the DKos community.) (Bob Swern has given Evans Liberal Politics to republish his work on an ongoing basis.)

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Wikileaks Whistleblower Charges BofA With Large Scale Force Placed Insurance Scheme With Cooperation of Servicers
Yves Smith
Naked Capitalism
Monday, March 14, 2011  2:09AM Ooh, this is ugly.

The charge made in this Wikileaks release (via  BankofAmericaSuck) is that Bank of America, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Balboa Insurance and the help of cooperating servicers, engaged in a mortgage borrower abuse called “force placed insurance”. This is absolutely 100% not kosher.

Famed subprime servicer miscreant Fairbanks in 2003 signed a consent decree with the FTC and HUD over abuses that included forced placed insurance. The industry is well aware that this sort of thing is not permissible. (Note Balboa is due to be sold to QBE of Australia; I see that the definitive agreement was entered into on February 3 but do not see a press release saying that the sale has closed)

While the focus of ire may be Bank of America, let me stress that this sort of insurance really amounts to a scheme to fatten servicer margins. If this leak is accurate, the servicers at a minimum cooperated with this scheme. If they got kickbacks, um, commissions, they are culpable and thus liable.

As we have stated repeatedly, servicers lose tons of money on portfolios with a high level of delinquencies and defaults. The example of Fairbanks, a standalone servicer who subprime portfolio got in trouble in 2002, is that servicers who are losing money start abusing customers and investors to restore profits.

Fairbanks charged customers for force placed insurance and as part of its consent decree, paid large fines and fired its CEO (who was also fined).

Regardless, this release lends credence a notion too obvious to borrowers yet the banks and its co-conspirators, meaning the regulators, have long denied, that mortgage servicing and foreclosures are rife with abuses and criminality. Here’s some background courtesy Barry Ritholtz:

When a homeowner fails to keep up their insurance premiums on a mortgaged residence, their loan servicer has the option/obligation to step in to buy a comparable insurance policy on the loan holder’s behalf, to ensure the mortgaged property remains fully insured….Consider one case found by [American Banker's Jeff] Horwitz. A homeowner’s $4,000 insurance policy, was paid by the loan servicer, Everbank via escrow. But Everbank purposely let that insurance policy lapse, and then replaced it with a different policy – one that cost more than $33,000. To add insult to injury, the insurer, a subsidiary of Assurant, paid Everbank a $7,100 kickback for giving it such a lucrative policy — and, writes Horwitz, “left the door open to further compensation” down the road.

That $33,000 policy — including the $7,100 kickback – is an enormous amount of money for any loan servicer to make on a single property. The average loan servicer makes just $51 per loan per year.

Here’s where things get interesting: That $33,000 insurance premium is ultimately paid by the investors who bought the loan.

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And the worst of this is….the insurance is often reinsured by the bank/servicer, which basically means the insurance is completely phony. The servicer will never put in a claim to trigger payment. As Felix Salmon noted,

This is doubly evil: it not only means that investors are paying far too much money for the insurance, but it also means that, as both the servicer and the ultimate insurer of the property, JPMorgan Chase has every incentive not to pursue claims on the houses it services. Investors, of course, would love to recoup any losses from the insurer, but they can’t bring such a claim — only the servicer can do that.

Note there are variants of this scheme where insurance is charged to the borrower (I’ve been told of insurance being foisted on borrowers that amounts to unconsented-to default insurance, again with the bank as insurer; this has been anecdotal with insufficient documentation, but I’ve heard enough independent accounts to make me pretty certain it was real).

One reason I am predisposed toward taking this at face value is I have been hearing widespread complaints from readers about forced place insurance. And the industry experts I consulted with thought BofA was a likely candidate since it already owned a large insurer. The narrative from BankofAmericaSucks is a bit wobbly on the roles of some of the parties:

Balboa Insurance Group, and it’s largest competitor, the market leader Assurant, is in the business of insurance tracking and Force Placed Insurance (aka Lender Placed Insurance, FOH, LPI, etc). What this means is that when you sign your name on the dotted line for your loan, the lienholder has certain insurance requirements that must be met for the life of the lien. Your lender (including, amongst others, GMAC, Aurora Loan Services [a subsidiary of Lehman Bros Holdings], IndyMac Federal Bank [a subsidiary of OneWest Bank], Saxon, HSBC, PennyMac [a collection agency started by former Countrywide Home Loans executive Stan Kurland after CHL and Balboa were sold to BAC], Downey Savings and Loans, Financial Freedom, Select Portfolio Services, Wells Fargo/Wachovia, and the now former owners of Balboa Insurance themselves…Bank of America) then outsources the tracking of your loan with them to a company like Balboa Insurance.

Yves here. Um, he names a long list of servicers, not lienholders, but we’ll continue.

Balboa makes some money by charging these companies to track your insurance (the payment of which is factored into your loan). If you do not meet the minimum insurance requirements set by your lienholder, Balboa Insurance places a force placed insurance policy on your loan. You are sent a letter telling you that you do not have insurance, and your escrow account is then adjusted for the inflated premium of a full coverage policy placed by Balboa’s insurance tracking group, run by Steven Ramsthel, Sr Vice President of Loan Tracking Operations & Customer Care at Balboa Insurance Group….

The release also alleges that regulators were complicit (click to enlarge): (Diarist’s Note: See Naked Capitalism’s original post, linked above, for this screenshot.)

And if these allegations are indeed accurate, they make a mockery of the settlement charade underway among 50 state attorneys general, Federal regulators, and what amount to banking industry crooks, aka servicers.

The writing style of the author (some typos, not that yours truly is one to make much of that sort of thing) and the errors regarding the roles of key parties will lead to questions regarding validity. But as indicated, previous abuses in this area, the past behavior of underwater servicers, and the complaints I have been hearing make this all too credible.

For more on this, checkout some of my recent diaries:

Anonymous To Announce “Operation ‘Empire State Rebellion.’” Demands Bernanke’s Ouster. (3/13/11)

Stealing Home: Main Street’s Final Sacrifice (3/12/11)

Friday’s Kaufman Hearing Transcript: The Must-Read Mother Of All Corporate Kleptocracy Posts (3/8/11)

Elizabeth Warren’s CFPB Comes Out Swinging On Mtge. Mod/Fraud Fight! (3/5/11)

Here’s background on the recent 50 states’ attorneys general report:

Yves Smith: $20B “Mortgage Fraud Whitewash” (2/24/11)

And, here are a couple of links to my diary commentary on BofA subsidiary Countrywide’s epic fail dating all the way back to Nov./Dec. 2007:

Why Helping People Facing Foreclosure Is A Bad Idea…/rebuttal (12/2/07)

Business Week: AFSCME $ in deep on Countrywide collapse (11/29/07)

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Leverage For Main Street? It’s In Front Of Your Nose.

Evans Liberal Politics
March 4, 2011

 

Leverage For Main Street?
It’s In Front Of Your Nose.

Leverage For Main Street? It’s In Front Of Your Nose., Daily Kos, March 3, 2011, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

A week ago, I posted a diary about the government’s proposed $20B “Mortgage Fraud Whitewash,” wherein we learned it was being floated by the Obama administration, the soon-to-be-official Consumer Financial Protection Bureau staff, and others that Wall Street would receive a $20 billion wristslap for pillaging Main Street via the mortgage industry for the past decade, and bankers would end up in a “…get-out-of-jail-free program…” and they would “…be excused for the abundant mortgage fraud they’ve committed.”

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In a lead story in the Business section of (Thursday) morning’s NY Times (SEE: “Officials Disagree on Penalties for Mortgage Mess“), we’re once again reminded that when one initiates negotiations with the status quo at such a pathetically low mark–essentially, at a point where it’s a travesty from the get-go–it’s all downhill from there.

After we review this latest status quo turd, we’ll do a slightly deeper dive on a fairly simple proposal by Yves Smith which would actually enable our government to–at the very least–put a very real threat of incarceration on the table for many of these assh*les, virtually overnight; and, if nothing else, humiliate these sociopaths in $4000 suits into ponying up a few hundred billion to cover some real mortgage relief for us poor and unwashed types on Main Street, too.

What? Leverage for Main Street? It’s right in front of our collective nose.

In between, some background from my diary from last week; words that give us hope that at least one of President Obama’s new appointees to the Federal Reserve might just have the spine we’ve been looking for; and then coverage of this latest Wall Street bullsh*t (i.e.: the feigned indignation(s) of a financial services sector that comprehensively owns the agencies that regulate it); and, finally, Yves Smith, with an awesome, Wall-Street-ass-kicking concept.

As I noted in >my diary, (Wednesday), it is now widely-acknowledged that the U.S. mortgage/residential real estate sector is in a double-dip recession which has already reached and/or eclipsed levels set during our country’s Great Depression. When one realizes that equity in one’s home — not stock market investments, where over 95%+/- of all marketable securities are owned by the top 10% of our society — represents the largest single asset for most Americans,  one may begin to achieve some factual context for the state of our economy and the housing industry’s depressing effect upon Main Street, today.Late yesterday, as Naked Capitalism’s Yves Smith and FireDogLake’s Marcy Wheeler note, below, the Obama administration proposed a $20 billion “…get-out-of-jail-free program…” so, in the words of FDL’s Wheeler, “…banks could be excused for the abundant mortgage fraud they’ve committed.”

HAMP II: The $20 Billion Get Out of Jail Free Card

By: emptywheel
FireDogLake
Wednesday February 23, 2011 6:44 pmA day after the Case-Shiller Index confirmed that the housing market is in a double dip, the Powers that Be (a subsidiary of the Masters of the Universe, currently CEOed by one Barack Obama) have floated their proposal for a mortgage fraud settlement.

The settlement terms remain fluid, people familiar with the matter cautioned, and haven’t been presented to banks. Exact dollar amounts haven’t been agreed on by U.S. regulators and state attorneys general.

For the low, low price of $20 billion, the Administration proposes, banks could be excused for the abundant mortgage fraud they’ve committed….

…$20 billion won’t even begin to compensate those victims of fraudulent appraisals for the fraud committed on them.

IMHO, in light of the fact (as I also noted in my diary, Wednesday) that it’s projected by some of our country’s most highly-respected housing finance experts that approximately half of all U.S. mortgageholders will be underwater (owing more to the bank than the value of their home) on their mortgages by mid-year, this represents the equivalent of a minor wristslap to Wall Street, as our country’s middle class faces ongoing pillaging at the hands of a status-quo-gone-wild; all thanks to the unbridled, ongoing support of our bought-and-paid-for federal government…

So, a week passes, and here we have the already-pathetic narrative becoming an even greater travesty than it was just a week ago: “Officials Disagree on Penalties for Mortgage Mess.”

Officials Disagree on Penalties for Mortgage Mess
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ and DAVID STREITFELD
New York Times
March 3, 2011 Even as state attorneys general and regulators in Washington approach the end of their investigation into abuses by the nation’s biggest mortgage companies, deep disputes are emerging over how much to punish the banks as well as exactly who should benefit from a settlement.

The newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is pushing for $20 billion or more in penalties, backed up by the attorneys general and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

But other regulators, including the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which oversees national banks, and the Federal Reserve, do not favor such a large fine, contending a small number of people were the victims of flawed foreclosure procedures.

As the negotiations grind on, there are signs that the banks still have not come to grips with the problems plaguing the foreclosure process….

…The nation’s largest mortgage servicer, Bank of America, is already readying what will be among the industry’s main arguments: that it is unfair to reward homeowners who are delinquent or underwater but cannot point to specific errors in their case…

(It’s definitely worth reading this whole article!)

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So, let me get this right…Bank of America, one of the biggest recipients of taxpayer bailouts and ongoing government backstops, to the tune of billions upon billions of dollars, even to this day, is saying it’s unfair to reward homeowners that have been royally screwed over–and moreso by BofA’s own Countrywide Financial subsidiary, perhaps, than any other corporate entity on the planet–but, when it comes to Main Street, f*ck ‘em?

The Times’ piece quotes a spokesman for the bank who’s “concerned” that…“Too broad a rescue package, he said, ‘could forestall the housing market recovery or even create perverse incentives.’”

And, to get a picture of how pathetically “captured” Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s former righthand man, Ass’t Treasury Secretary Michael Barr, truly is, we have this gem in the article…

“There has been a tension in this country during the financial crisis,” said Michael S. Barr, a former Treasury official now at the University of Michigan Law School. “People want those who are in economic trouble to get a fair shake. But they don’t want them bailed out for making their own mistakes, like buying too big a home.”

So, in Mr. Barr’s view of the universe (as long as we overlook origination fraud, appraisal fraud, investor fraud, conveyance fraud, ratings agency fraud, foreclosure fraud, and on and on…), it’s okay for the too-big-to-fail, Wall Street banks to get permanent, trillion-dollar taxpayer backstops for committing rampant fraud, but when it comes to Main Street, “…they don’t want them bailed out for making their own mistakes, like buying too big a home.”

Uh, huh.

While regulators worry about how punitive any eventual settlement should be, lawyers and other advocates for the foreclosed who were hoping for criminal charges are set to be disappointed. That sanction, everyone seems to agree, is off the table. In testimony in December about the improper foreclosures by banks, Daniel K. Tarullo, a Federal Reserve governor, floated the notion of imposing fines on individuals found responsible for violations or banning them from banking, but officials involved in the talks said this idea had not gotten much traction either.

Well, Yves Smith has come up with a GREAT idea to obtain some “traction” for our government and for Main Street as far as obtaining some leverage with Wall Street is concerned. It’s a great concept: jail the bastards! (SEE: “A Straightforward Criminal Case Against Wall Street CEOs and Senior Executives.”)

(Or, at least threaten to do so with some real teeth in that effort, for a change!)

(Diarist’s Note: Naked Capitalism Publisher Yves Smith has provided written authorization to diarist to reprint her blog’s posts in their entirety for the benefit of the DKos community.)

A Straightforward Criminal Case Against Wall Street CEOs and Senior Executives
Yves Smith
Naked Capitalism
Wednesday, March 2, 2011 4:04 AM Various people who ought to know better, such as the New York Times’ Joe Nocera, have taken to playing up the party line of the banking industry and I am told, the SEC, that we should resign ourselves to letting senior financial services industry members get away with having looted their firms and leaving the rest of us with a very large bill.

It is one thing to point out a sorry reality, that the rich and powerful often get away with abuses while ordinary citizens seldom do. It’s quite another to present it as inevitable. It would be far more productive to isolate what are the key failings in our legal,
prosecutorial, and regulatory regime are and demand changes.

The fact that financial fraud cases are often difficult does not mean they are unwinnable. And a prosecutor does not need to prevail in all, or even most, to serve as an effective cop on the beat.

Contrary to prevailing propaganda, there is a fairly straightforward case that could be launched against the CEOs and CFOs of pretty much every US bank with major trading operations. I’ll call them “dealer banks” or “Wall Street firms” to distinguish them from very big but largely traditional commercial banks like US Bank.

Since Sarbanes Oxley became law in 2002, Sections 302, 404, and 906 of that act have required these executives to establish and maintain adequate systems of internal control within their companies. In addition, they must regularly test such controls to see that they are adequate and report their findings to shareholders (through SEC reports on Form 10-Q and 10-K) and their independent accountants. “Knowingly” making false section 906 certifications is subject to fines of up to $1 million and imprisonment of up to ten years; “willful” violators face fines of up to $5 million and jail time of up to 20 years.

The responsible officers must certify that, among other things, they:

(A) are responsible for establishing and maintaining internal controls; (B) have designed such internal controls to ensure that material information relating to the issuer and its consolidated subsidiaries is made known to such officers by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which the periodic reports are being prepared; (C) have evaluated the effectiveness of the issuer’s internal controls as of a date within 90 days prior to the report; and

(D) have presented in the report their conclusions about the effectiveness of their internal controls based on their evaluation as of that date;

These officers must also have disclosed to the issuer’s auditors and the audit committee of the board of directors (or persons fulfilling the equivalent function):

(A) all significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls which could adversely affect the issuer’s ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial data and have identified for the issuer’s auditors any material weaknesses in internal controls; and (B) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the issuer’s internal controls

The premise of this requirement was to give assurance to investors as to (i) the integrity of the company’s financial reports and (ii) there were no big risks that the company was taking that it had not disclosed to investors.

This section puts those signing the certifications, which is at a minimum the CEO and the CFO, on the hook for both the adequacy of internal controls around financial reporting (to be precise) and the accuracy of reporting to public investors about them. Internal controls for a bank with major trading operations would include financial reporting and risk management.

It’s almost certain that you can’t have an adequate system of internal controls if you all of a sudden drop multi-billion dollar loss bombs on investors out of nowhere. Banks are not supposed to gamble with depositors’ and investors’ money like an out-of-luck punter at a racetrack. It’s pretty clear many of the banks who went to the wall or had to be bailed out because they were too big to fail, and I’ll toss AIG in here as well, had no idea they were betting the farm every day with the risks they were taking.

Not surprisingly, it isn’t difficult to find widespread shortcomings in risk management at major dealer banks. Risk management deficiencies most relevant to Sarbanes Oxley are related to pricing. The accuracy of the accounts, meaning the valuations, is the primary focus. Risk management weaknesses that impact reportable disclosures (in the accounts or the notes) have highest relevance. However, crappy risk management that leads to poor positioning may not be germane to the Sarbanes Oxley violations issue.

We discussed the issue at some length in ECONNED. Risk management was kept weak; if push came to shove, it was subordinate to the producers. Richard Bookstaber, a former chief risk officer, discussed at some length how most chief risk officers were engaged in what amounted to busywork. While they might indeed prevent particularly egregious excesses, their form over substance exercises also provided useful cover for the top brass and the board of directors. As he noted in 2007:

If you are the Chief Risk Officer and everything blows up, don’t you bear some responsibility?…In the CRO job 99% of the days there is nothing going wrong. The only test you get of how well you are doing – short of pouring out risk reports and looking ponderous and prudent in meetings – is what happens to the firm during times of market crisis. Every few years something calamitous happens in the market; if the firm gets blown away, that suggests you did not do a very good job.

Readers may have better suggestions of where to start, but I’d target Lehman. First, it already has a smoking gun: a May 2008 letter written by former senior vice president Michael Lee to senior management, including the CFO Erin Callan. It describes numerous accounting shortcomings, none of which look to be new and many of which look to be Sarbanes Oxley violations.

Second, its derivatives books were by all accounts an utter disaster at the time of its collapse:  multiple non-integrated systems, to the point where the bank did not even have a good tally of how many positions it had (bankruptcy overseers Alvarez & Marsal first said the bank had 110,000 positions; they later changed their tally to 120,000). This is important because despite all the efforts to identify why the Lehman losses were so massive, most analysts have focused on the asset side, and the numbers don’t add up. That means understatement of positions and/or gross understatement of risk on the liability side is the probable culprit.

This is an egregious accounting 101 control breakdown, It indicates that the most basic operatonal controls, reconciliation of accounts, were not effective (see here for further support). Lehman would have to take the position that its basic control weaknesses were all immaterial. At all times there’s an inventory of control weaknesses that exist. That inventory must be constantly monitored and reviewed (and attested to in the 404 internal control assessments signed by the responsible officers). Materiality determinations are decided by managers, internal and external audit and ultimately the CFO and CEO. Dick Fuld also made statements in Congressional testimony about his ignorance of his ignorance of Repo 105 and a failure to include commercial real estate in stress tests starting with the end of 2007 that also seems consistent with a lack of adequate risk controls.

At other banks, prosecutors will probably need to proceed in a bottom’s up manner. The structured credit and CDO desks are targets even now for criminal securities fraud actions (the statue of limitations has not expired). These units, as Bloomberg’s Jonathan Weil has pointed out, were also ground zero of misreporting at Citigroup. The bank’s defenders claim it has a free pass by virtue of a letter from the bank lapdog OCC that did not rise to the level that would force disclosure but its basis was that the valuations Citigroup used were with market ranges. This seems a dubious argument.

The fact that a defective speedometer happened to provide a 60 mile per hour reading when the car was going 57 miles per hour does not prove the device was reliable.

Moreover, anyone with an operating brain cell knows “market prices” were being gamed by dealer banks passing small trades between them or with friendly clients, typically hedge funds who might also like to show high valuations, to establish flattering marks. If the marks Citi was relying on were the result of collusion, and the bank was either involved in or aware of the collusion, this undermines the OCC view of the validity of the marks at Citi and other banks. If yours truly knew of this practice, it had to be widespread and well known at the firms themselves.

My understanding (and reader input is welcome here) is that the authorities could file a civil suit for Section 302 certification violations. If they prevailed in that, a criminal case under Section 902 should be an easy win. The 906 certification basically says the reports are fully compliant with all regulations, including those specifically certified in the 302.

(Note that the SEC initiated a criminal case against HealthSouth CEO Richard Scrushy which included Section 302 charges. Scrushy was acquitted in a jury trial, but having followed the proceedings a bit, and also seeing another example of a trail in Birmingham, I’d be careful of generalizing from Alabama courts to other jurisdictions. The deck, even more than in other jurisdictions, is stacked in favor of the local bigwigs).

Will any of this happen? Of course not. The decision was made at the time of the TARP, and reaffirmed early in the Obama administration when there was serious talk of resolving Citigroup and Bank of America, that no one at the helm of the senior banks would be subject to serious scrutiny, much the less actually expected to be held accountable for actions that wrecked the economy and have imposed serious costs on ordinary Americans.

The case we described above is relatively simple to explain to a jury and has the advantage of being the sort where the plaintiffs could build on their experience in one action in subsequent cases.

But that sort of truth, that most, probably all, of the major Wall Street banks were engaged in the same sort of misconduct and the violations extended to the very top of the firms, would expose numerous other parties as complicit. So we’ll permit the cancer in our society to metastasize rather than threaten the power structure. But at least we citizens can make it clear, even if we cannot change the outcome, that we are not buying the canard that nothing can be done to fight this disease.

Leverage for Main Street?

It’s more than just a concept.

In fact, it’s staring us in our face.

Please feel encouraged to visit Bob Swern’s blog on Daily Kos.

Krugman: Is Tucson “A Turning Point” or “Just The Beginning?”

Evans Liberal Politics
January 10, 2011

 

Krugman: Is Tucson “A Turning Point”
or “Just The Beginning?”

Krugman: Is Tucson “A Turning Point” or “Just The Beginning?”, Daily Kos, January 9, 2011, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Paul Krugman opens up his column, “Climate of Hate,” in Monday’s New York Times, asking his readers if they were surprised by the events in Arizona this past Saturday, or if they were, like him, “…expecting something like this atrocity to happen?”

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He then posits that it’s disingenuous for anyone to think that this act has nothing to do with “the national climate.”

His main theme in Monday’s NYT op-ed: “…it’s the saturation of our political discourse — and especially our airwaves — with eliminationist rhetoric that lies behind the rising tide of violence.”The editors of the NY Times, in their lead editorial in Monday’s edition, generally agree with Krugman’s assessment, as well: “Bloodshed and Invective in Arizona.”

Bloodshed and Invective in Arizona
Editorial
New York Times
January 10, 2011…It is facile and mistaken to attribute this particular madman’s act directly to Republicans or Tea Party members. But it is legitimate to hold Republicans and particularly their most virulent supporters in the media responsible for the gale of anger that has produced the vast majority of these threats, setting the nation on edge. Many on the right have exploited the arguments of division, reaping political power by demonizing immigrants, or welfare recipients, or bureaucrats. They seem to have persuaded many Americans that the government is not just misguided, but the enemy of the people…

Krugman…

Climate of Hate
By PAUL KRUGMAN
New York Times
January 10, 2011….Where’s that toxic rhetoric coming from? Let’s not make a false pretense of balance: it’s coming, overwhelmingly, from the right. It’s hard to imagine a Democratic member of Congress urging constituents to be “armed and dangerous” without being ostracized; but Representative Michele Bachmann, who did just that, is a rising star in the G.O.P.

And there’s a huge contrast in the media. Listen to Rachel Maddow or Keith Olbermann, and you’ll hear a lot of caustic remarks and mockery aimed at Republicans. But you won’t hear jokes about shooting government officials or beheading a journalist at The Washington Post. Listen to Glenn Beck or Bill O’Reilly, and you will.

Krugman continues on to note that people like Beck and O’Reilly are “…responding to popular demand.” A few sentences later, he admonishes: “…that doesn’t excuse those who pander to that desire. They should be shunned by all decent people.”

He then comments how these “…purveyors of hate have been treated with respect, even deference, by the G.O.P. establishment.”

He concludes…

So will the Arizona massacre make our discourse less toxic? It’s really up to G.O.P. leaders. Will they accept the reality of what’s happening to America, and take a stand against eliminationist rhetoric? Or will they try to dismiss the massacre as the mere act of a deranged individual, and go on as before?If Arizona promotes some real soul-searching, it could prove a turning point. If it doesn’t, Saturday’s atrocity will be just the beginning.

The editors of the NY Times on Jared Loughner…

…[he] appears to be mentally ill. His paranoid Internet ravings about government mind control place him well beyond usual ideological categories. But he is very much a part of a widespread squall of fear, anger and intolerance that has produced violent threats against scores of politicians and infected the political mainstream with violent imagery. With easy and legal access to semiautomatic weapons like the one used in the parking lot, those already teetering on the edge of sanity can turn a threat into a nightmare…

And, on our country’s newest ground zero….

…Anti-immigrant sentiment in the state, firmly opposed by Ms. Giffords, has reached the point where Latino studies programs that advocate ethnic solidarity have actually been made illegal.Its gun laws are among the most lenient, allowing even a disturbed man like Mr. Loughner to buy a pistol and carry it concealed without a special permit. That was before the Tucson rampage. Now, having seen first hand the horror of political violence, Arizona should lead the nation in quieting the voices of intolerance, demanding an end to the temptations of bloodshed, and imposing sensible controls on its instruments.

Amen to that!

Must Read: Bone-chilling prescience from Matt Taibbi, Daily Kos, January 9, 2010, by thereisnospoon.

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Was It As Good For You As It Was For Bank of America?

Evans Liberal Politics
January 5, 2011

 

Was It As Good For You
As It Was For Bank of America?

Another $100 Billion Wall Street Bailout – Ripoff

Was It As Good For You As It Was For Bank of America?, Daily Kos, January 5, 2011, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

IMHO, the most outrageous, surreal Wall Street bailout story since September 2008 has started to play out over the past 48 hours and, chances are, you haven’t even heard about it. (Funny how that happens, isn’t it?) Concurrent with the advent of the Citizens United SCOTUS decision, the topic of corporate personhood has rightfully become the rage of the blogosphere and our intelligentsia, in general, of late. And, right about now, if Bank of America was a person, they’d be propped up on a pillow, naked in bed, smoking a cigarette, sipping a glass of wine, smiling as they looked into your eyes while tritely asking: “Was it as good for you as it was for me?”

What am I referencing you might ask? I’m talking about the reality that our nation’s largest bank announced on Monday that it just “settled” with taxpayer-owned, government-sponsored enterprises (GSE’s) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for roughly the equivalent of one penny on the dollar, in terms limiting Bank of America’s exposure to mortgage fraud put-backs (100% refunds) by Wall Street investors, going forward, which are expected to amount to scores of billions of dollars (if not hundreds of billions, once you add the other major mortgage lenders into the mix) in coming months and years. What!?!? You might then ask: “Is Fannie bailing out the banks?“IMHO, you betcha! (And, this is from one of Wall Street’s friendliest media outlets.)

Is Fannie bailing out the banks?
Posted by Colin Barr
Fortune Magazine
January 3, 2011 10:11 pm
Financial stocks just caught fire. Someone must be getting bailed out, right?

Why yes, say critics of the giant banks. They charge that Monday’s rally-stoking mortgage-putback deal between Bank of America (BAC) and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is nothing more than a backdoor bailout of the nation’s largest lender…

Monday’s arrangement, according to this view, will keep the banks standing — but leave taxpayers on the hook for an even bigger tab should a weak economic recovery falter. Sound familiar?

You know it’s a pathetic Wall Street meme when the lead quote in the piece supporting this travesty is from “…Edward Pinto, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

…Pinto says truly holding BofA responsible for all the mortgage mayhem tied to its 2008 purchase of subprime lender Countrywide would likely drive it into the arms of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which has enough problems to deal with. Though BofA would surely dispute that analysis, it’s easy enough to see where the feds don’t want that outcome.

But, once again, we get the great counterfactual. You see, that line is pure, unadulterated bullshit. And, that’s because it would be the investors and bondholders that would suffer most if BofA went under. And, ultimately, it’s the U.S. banking community — not taxpayers — that’s required to provide funding for the FDIC. (Yes, given the FDIC’s history, the U.S. Treasury would front the money to the FDIC, while simultaneously implementing a longer-term payback plan to U.S. taxpayers from the coffers of our nation’s banks.)

But, we absolutely, positively cannot let that happen, now can we? Crisis? What crisis? Bank stocks rallied,  bigtime, on Monday.

“This looks to me like a gift from Tim Geithner,” said Chris Whalen of Institutional Risk Analytics. “There’s politics all over this…”

As award-winning business writer Colin Barr asks: “…how sharp is Freddie if all it can do is squeeze a $1.28 billion payment out of a giant customer in exchange for relinquishing fraud claims on $117 billion worth of outstanding loans?”

But, just when you thought this story couldn’t get more reprehensible, there’s this twist: “Tim Mayopoulos Recused Himself In Discussions Over Bank Of America Settlement With Fannie.”

Tim Mayopoulos Recused Himself In Discussions Over Bank Of America Settlement With Fannie
Zero Hedge
01/04/2011 09:54 -0500
When we first heard news about the partial settlement between Fannie and Bank of America, we assumed, naturally, that the current Fannie General Counsel Tim Mayopoulos, and former spurned Bank of America General Counsel, would have been front and center in such discussions. After all he is the damn general counsel, who just happens to know all the dirt there is about Bank of America. We also assumed that any non-disparagement, and/or related trade secrets clauses would be obviously very much irrelevant. We were wrong. It appears that the man who more than anyone should have been able to put two and two together and actually derive some benefits to his bosses, the American taxpayers, and generate a better settlement…. decided to recuse himself from the negotiations! We wonder then just on what grounds this man, who it seems Ken Lewis may very well have had a justifiable reason for getting rid of, was awarded $3 million in compensation for doing nothing to protect taxpayer interests in America’s most (openly) insolvent company.

From the WSJ’s Heard on the Street:

Sometimes it is great to have an ex-colleague across the negotiating table. Sometimes not. Bank of America must have breathed a sigh of relief when Fannie Mae general counsel Timothy Mayopoulos recused himself from negotiations over soured loans. No wonder. Mr. Mayopoulos was once BofA’s general counsel. He was dumped in December 2008 and succeeded briefly by Brian Moynihan, now CEO. That would have been an awkward reunion.

This is an absolute travesty…

Again, without exaggeration, this could, conceivably, amount to a $100 billion stealthy Wall Street bailout, for just this one Bank of America deal, alone. Of course, as the article notes…

“They’re sending a signal to the banks that now is the time to do a deal and put this stuff behind you,” said Pinto.

(Read: Claims against Citigroup, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase, and many others, aren’t even discussed in this story. That’s because they’re yet to be negotiated.)

This past October 13th, I asked this rhetorical question in my diary headline: “Guess who’s going to pay the bill for the foreclosure crisis?

Now we know…

#            #            #

For more background on this story, here are links to a few more (and there are lots more links on this topic where these came from, too) of my posts:

Has The Mortgage/ Foreclosure Fraud Crisis Gone Surreal?” 10/18/10

Are We So Poor, We Can’t Even Afford To Pay Attention?” 10/23/10

Stiglitz: ‘Corruption, American-style.’ (Where’s Liz Warren?)”  11/9/10

Killer Myopia: In D.C., The Trees Are Obscuring The Forest” 11/11/10

The Great Unravelling: Is Bank of America Done?” 11/22/10

Hell To Pay: Bank of America’s Double Trouble” 12/1/10

Commentary by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: Yesterday we posted the article Grayson: GOP ‘a hopeless sellout party’. American hero Grayson is gone now, which is highly suspicious in and of itself. In Ohio, which will lose two seats in the House of Representatives, redistricting may well proceed so as to freeze another fighter for justice, Dennis Kucinich, out of his seat. Decency and true liberalism are in retreat everywhere, and Americans – ordinary people, at least – are getting royally screwed.

Judging from what Obama and the Democrats have done in following Bush’s lead in re Wall Street and corruption with corporate America, we have to ask: Are BOTH PARTIES hopeless sellouts? My answer as one who has followed the news rather closely is, very reluctantly, YES, Democrats talk a good game, but are a dried husk of what the party used to represent under FDR. They are hopeless corrupt now, too. As far as it seems, if we’d been anything other than fully naive and blind hero worshipers, we would have known that Obama was fully complicit and corrupt the moment he brought in Geithner, Summers and Bernanke. On the other hand, maybe Obama is simply doing the best he can do to deal with this corrupt Congress and stay alive. The real question is, what are ordinary working Americans going to do about it??

Also In the News:

See Republicans Take Over House, The New York Times, January 5, 2011, by Michael D. Shear: The 112th Congress begins today at noon. Oh, Goody. This should be great fun.

See Darrell Issa asks business: Tell me what to change, Politico, January 3, 2011, by Darren Goode, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) wants the oil industry, drug manufacturers and other trade groups and companies to tell him which Obama administration regulations to target this year.

The incoming chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee – in letters sent to more than 150 trade associations, companies and think tanks last month – requested a list of existing and proposed regulations that would harm “job growth”.

Comment by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: Issa looks to be nothing less than the point man for corruption in Washington and the Chamber of Commerce. The beautiful part of it is that he actually will chair the reform committee. A stroke of genius, don’t you think? Look for this guy to be in the news plenty this year. If you love your nation, if you are for ordinary Americans and decency, Issa is a guy you gotta hate.

Also, Watch if you Dare: Monty Python – Psychiatry: Hey it’s my blog…

Two Hot Tracks by Our Featured Artists
Avalanache

thumbnail of President Bush giving America the 'finger' serves as a link to this newly remastered rock hit by Avalanche, about Wall Street, greed and 'where the money went' "Tell Us Where the Money Went:" — Avalanche had something close to an internet hit with this political hard rocker about Wall Street, greed and ‘where the money went,’ a remaster from May 1st of 2010. — 4:18

new music by the classic rock phenomenon Avalanche, a hard driving, sarcastic political song called 'Excessive' "Excessive:" NEW! Recorded January 25th, 2010, this is the master for Avalanche’s new album, soon to be out, a hard driving, sarcastic political song about the self centered side of the American psyche, mindless greed, and excessive over-consumption. — 5:24

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The Smell of Christmas: Fresh Nuts Roasting On The Open Fire

Evans Liberal Politics
December 25, 2010
Merry Christmas!

 

The Smell of Christmas:
Fresh Nuts Roasting On The Open Fire

The Smell of Christmas: Fresh Nuts Roasting On The Open Fire, Daily Kos, December 24, 2010, by Bob Swern, photo of Santa courtesy of Wikipedia and NORAD, article used with permission, quoted verbatim: Merry Christmas to Everyone!!!

Paul Krugman, who’s been on quite the Orwellian rant over the past couple of weeks, had a little post on his blog Wednesday, entitled: “Arsonists Prosecuting Firefighters.” In it, he gives us this gem from George, himself…

…Gary Younge reminds us of another great Orwell essay, In Front of Your Nose:

The point is that we are all capable of believing things which we know to be untrue, and then, when we are finally proved wrong, impudently twisting the facts so as to show that we were right. Intellectually, it is possible to carry on this process for an indefinite time: the only check on it is that sooner or later a false belief bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield.

Yep.

NORAD has apparently scrambled a jet escort for Santa Claus of two jet fighters as he makes his way south from the North Pole

Speaking of “in front of your nose,” I don’t quote much from Brett Arends, but checkout his latest from MarketWatch, from earlier this week: “The great bank heist of 2010.”

The great bank heist of 2010
Commentary: Wall Street wins, Main Street pays--again
By Brett Arends, MarketWatch
December 21, 2010 12:01AM

This was the year America finally took on the power and greed of the Wall Street banks.

And the banks won.

They dodged the bullet of real reform, probably for all time. They bounced back to post huge profits, helped by legal theft from the middle class. They completed their takeover of both political parties -- and bought themselves a new Congress even more pliable than the old one.

Middle-class America is flattened, devastated and broke. The bankers that caused it all have escaped punishment. They're raking in huge profits. Oh, and the tax cuts just got extended for high earners, too!

Game over...

--SNIP--

Think of the lavish campaign checks. The lucrative hedge fund "adviser" jobs. The pervasive influence of pinstriped "progressives" like Larry Summers and Bob Rubin.

This was the year the investment paid off. Big time.

--SNIP--

...It was the greatest heist in history. The bankers pulled it off under everyone’s nose.

Bold type is diarist’s emphasis.

And, here’s more from Krugman on that smell in front of everyone’s nose….

ON THE DEFICIT BULLSHIT…

…The hypocrisy of the centrists: Just two weeks ago, the deficit was the great evil, and all the VSPs insisted that we needed fiscal austerity now now now. Then, magically, a big tax cut — increasing federal debt by more than the original Obama stimulus, and substantially raising the probability of making unaffordable tax cuts permanent — was the greatest thing since sliced bread.

Why, it’s almost as if all the concern about the deficit was a front for opposing anything progressives might want, to be dropped as soon as debt was being run up on behalf of conservative goals. But that can’t be true, can it?

ON THE GOPer’s “BIG GOVERNMENT” BULLSHIT…

(From his column in today’s NY Times: “The Humbug Express.”)

…If you listen to the recent speeches of Republican presidential hopefuls, you’ll find several of them talking at length about the harm done by unionized government workers, who have, they say, multiplied under the Obama administration…

–SNIP–

….Horrors! Except that according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, government employment has fallen, not risen, since January 2008. And since January 2009, when Mr. Obama actually did take office, government employment has fallen by more than 300,000 as hard-pressed state and local governments have been forced to lay off teachers, police officers, firefighters and other workers.

So how did the notion of a surge in government payrolls under Mr. Obama take hold?

–SNIP–

…anyone paying attention knew why public employment had risen — and it had nothing to do with Big Government. It was, instead, the fact that the federal government had to hire a lot of temporary workers to carry out the 2010 Census — workers who have almost all left the payroll now that the Census is done.

Is it really possible that the authors of those articles and speeches about soaring public employment didn’t know what was going on? Well, I guess we should never assume malice when ignorance remains a possibility.

There has not, however, been any visible effort to retract those erroneous claims. And this isn’t the only case of a claimed huge expansion in government that turns out to be nothing of the kind…

ON THE ANTI-KEYNESIAN BULLSHIT…

…”We’re living in a dark age of macroeconomics,” Krugman said during his lecture, before an audience of several hundred students (and several of his former MIT colleagues) in the Stata Center. “Economists themselves are confused,” he added. “It’s been really amazing within the economics profession to see how much has been lost.”

What has been lost above all, Krugman argued, is an appreciation of ideas developed in the 1930s — most notably the economist John Maynard Keynes’s broad view that in certain circumstances government spending is the best tool to instigate an economic recovery. At a time when interest rates are minimal and can hardly be lowered to spur private investment, Krugman argued, Keynesian thought is especially vital, despite some loud arguments to the contrary.

–SNIP–

“We are caught in a situation more than a little reminiscent of the mid-1930s,” Krugman emphasized. “How can we be replaying the past so badly?” he added. “That is the question that has worried me a lot.”

–SNIP–

….The problem, in his view, is that “political people tend to always look part-way. If you say you need to do this big [bill], they’ll say, `All right, let’s do part of it.’ … That’s very difficult to do in a situation where half a loaf may be not much better than nothing. And that is the situation we face with this crisis. If you do a half-hearted policy, even if economists think you should do more, the conclusion will be, `Well that policy failed.’”

As Krugman sees it, then, the government did too little to fight the recession, and now it’s too late to reverse course…

Yes, you can just smell the holiday season in the air (among other things)!

GROWTH/GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT: “Why The Upward Revision in Third Quarter GDP Growth is Not Good News.”

Why The Upward Revision in Third Quarter GDP Growth is Not Good News
By Mark Thoma
Professor of Economics
University of Oregon
Maximum Utility Blog
December 22, 2010

The growth rate for GDP for the third quarter was revised upward from 2.5 percent to 2.6 percent, but a closer look at the numbers reveals it’s actually not such good news. Dean Baker explains why:

Inventories and the Wonders of GDP Accounting, by Dean Baker: The news stories are coming out on the Commerce Department’s release of revised data on 3rd quarter GDP and it seems that almost everyone has missed the story. The headlines of the articles are telling us that GDP growth was revised up slightly from 2.5 percent to 2.6 percent. While that may sound like at least somewhat positive news a more careful review of the data shows the opposite.

While the rate of GDP growth was revised up, the rate of final demand growth was revised down. Final demand, which is GDP excluding inventory accumulations, grew at just a 0.9 percent annual rate in the 3rd quarter, the same as its growth rate in the second quarter. The reason that GDP growth was revised upward was a more rapid reported growth in inventories.

The reported rate of inventory accumulation in the 3rd quarter was $121.4 billion (in 2005 dollars), the fastest pace ever. This added more than 1.6 percentage points to the rate of GDP growth in the quarter.

It is very unlikely that this pace of inventory growth will be sustained…, because the upward revision to GDP growth was based on more rapid accumulation of inventories it should not be viewed as a positive for the economy’s growth prospects.

A graph may help. This is a graph of business inventories from the Cleveland Fed: Business Inventories October 2010

WHEN IS A FULL-TIME JOB NOT? Stockman: “Jobs outlook worse than people think”

Stockman: “Jobs outlook worse than people think”
by gjohnsit
Daily Kos
Sun Dec 12, 2010 at 04:01:29 PM EST

We’ve heard a lot about how the economy has created one million jobs since the end of the recession in 2009, but until recently we haven’t heard anyone break down what those jobs are like. That changed last week when David Stockman appeared on CNBC.

“The jobs that they count every month and people get excited about are really part-time jobs,” he said.

THE LINK BETWEEN MORTGAGES AND SMALL BUSINESS: “The Effect of Falling Home Prices on Small Business Borrowing.”

The Effect of Falling Home Prices on Small Business Borrowing
Mark Thoma
Professor of Economics
University of Oregon
Economist’s View Blog
Tuesday, December 21, 2010

I didn’t realize how much small businesses depend upon home equity to finance their business operations:

The Effect of Falling Home Prices on Small Business Borrowing, by Mark E. Schweitzer and Scott A. Shane, Economic Commentary, FRB Cleveland: Small businesses continue to report problems obtaining the financing they need. Because small business owners may rely heavily on the value of their homes to finance their businesses (through mortgages or home equity lines), the fall in housing prices might be one of the causes of their difficulty. We analyze information from a variety of sources and find that homes do constitute an important source of capital for small business owners and that the impact of the recent decline in housing prices is significant enough to be a real constraint on small business finances.

A persistent issue throughout the recovery has been the reported inability of small businesses to get the financing that they need. To better understand the sources of any shortfall, the Federal Reserve System undertook a project in 2010 to meet with representatives from banks and small businesses.1 In some of the focus groups…, participating small business owners explained that the reduced value of their homes has made it difficult for them to provide the necessary collateral for small business loans. Other participants said that the reduced value of homes has made home equity borrowing as a source of business capital more difficult to come by, also contributing to the difficulty many small businesses face in obtaining sufficient capital to finance their operations. While the small business owners’ message of a link between home values and small business borrowing came through loud and clear in the focus groups, the process did not provide estimates on the magnitude of the effect of declining home values on small businesses’ access to capital…

WALL STREET FRAUD: “Deutsche Bank Agrees to Pay $553.6 Million to Settle U.S. Tax Shelter Case.”

Deutsche Bank Agrees to Pay $553.6 Million to Settle U.S. Tax Shelter Case
By David Glovin, David Voreacos and Bob Van Voris – Wed Dec 22 00:01:01 GMT 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Deutsche Bank AG, Germany’s largest bank, admitted criminal wrongdoing and agreed to pay $553.6 million to avoid prosecution in the U.S. over fraudulent tax shelters that generated $29 billion in “bogus” tax losses.

The U.S. Justice Department, under an agreement yesterday, won’t prosecute the Frankfurt-based bank for fraud or tax evasion for enabling wealthy U.S. citizens to avoid $5.9 billion in taxes, after the bank admitted criminal wrongdoing.

The settlement includes a $149 million civil penalty, the fees that Deutsche Bank generated from the shelters, and the taxes and penalties the Internal Revenue Service was unable to collect from taxpayers because of the misconduct, according to the agreement.

From 1996 to 2002, “Deutsche Bank assisted high net worth United States citizens, who, through 2005, reported approximately $29.3 billion in bogus tax benefits on their tax returns,” according to the agreement. “DB acknowledges that it was wrong and unlawful to have engaged in these transactions and regrets having done so…”

Bold type is diarist’s emphasis.

And, then there’s this, just up on Naked Capitalism over the past couple of hours: “Fraud Ruling Against Wells Fargo in Minnesota Points to Widespread Abuses in Securities Lending Program.”

Fraud Ruling Against Wells Fargo in Minnesota Points to Widespread Abuses in Securities Lending Program
Yves Smith
Naked Capitalism
Friday, December 24, 2010 12:44AM

A fraud and breach of fiduciary duty ruling against Wells Fargo in a major scandal in Minnesota may have much broader ramifications for this sanctimonious bank.

The facts are not pretty. Wells Fargo, in its investment management operation, used securities lending to boost returns. But the returns it increased appeared to be only those of the bank. Institutional investors in various programs lost money as a result of this activity. Four Minnesota plaintiffs, including two of the state’s high profile charities, sued. A jury had already awarded the plaintiffs $29.9 million for fraud. A post trial ruling by the judge has added costs, interest, and reimbursement of fees that looks set to more than $15 million to the total.

District Judge M. Michael Monahan concurred with the jury’s main findings:

Wells Fargo breached its duty of full disclosure by not adequately disclosing that it was changing the risk profile of the securities lending program, that it breached its duty of impartiality by favoring certain participants over other participants, and that it breached its duty of loyalty by advancing the interest of the borrowing brokers to the detriment of one or more of the plaintiffs.

What makes this ruling interesting is that although it set aside a minor part of the jury award, a $1.6 million issue, to be subject to a new trial, is that it was punitive as a result of the judge’s determination that the fraud was systematic. It is unusual to award the payment of the plaintiff’s attorney’s fees, or to order disgorgement of fees paid for services (the other component of the additional $15 million plus is interest on the $29.9 million). The basis for awarding attorneys’ fees? The bank is such a menace to society that having counsel root it out is a public service…

Which brings me to the last portion of my post, tonight: What Were They Smoking? The 10 Dumbest Stories of 2010.”

(Please note below, per New Deal 2.0, the number one dumbest story of the year…a story near and dear to me, and a topic upon which I’ve written numerous diaries.)

What Were They Smoking? The 10 Dumbest Stories of 2010
Thursday, 12/23/2010 – 9:04 am by Tim Price, New Deal 2.0

It’s been an unpredictable year, and if our pundits and policymakers could do it all over again, there are some moments they’d probably love to take back. Unfortunately for them, the Internet never forgets, and the ND20 team has decided to look back over 2010 by counting down the dumbest headlines, decisions, and predictions. There was a lot of dumb to cover, so if you think we missed something, be sure to let us know.

10. One and done: To be a great president, Obama should not seek reelection in 2012 (WaPo)

9. Heritage Foundation and the “Luck” of the Irish (OurFuture.org)

8. The Health Care Bill is Dead (Weekly Standard)

7. Off-Message Watch: “I Don’t Know That for Sure” (Economist’s View)

Austan Goolsbee brought a lot of good will with him to the Council of Economic Advisers, but when he turned out to be agnostic about the benefits of a bigger stimulus package, it made us wonder if he was off-message or if the entire administration was.


6. Robert Rubin: `Virtually Nobody’ Saw Crisis Coming, Bush Deserves Much Of The Blame (HuffPo)

5. The war recovery? (WaPo)

4. Christine O’Donnell TV Ad: “I’m Not a Witch… I’m You” (CBS)

3. President Obama: Drill, Baby, Drill (ABC)

2. The Politics of Foreclosure (WSJ)
When the foreclosure scandal broke, the Wall Street Journal argued that liberals were making too big a fuss about “the pain that results when the anonymous paper pusher who kicks you out of your home is not the anonymous paper pusher who is supposed to kick you out of your home.” The editorial stated that the good folks at the Journal were “not aware of a single case so far of a substantive error.”

And…drumroll please…without a doubt, THE dumbest story of not just 2010 (per New Deal 2.0), IMHO, but of 2009 and 2008, too.

1. Welcome to the Recovery (NY Times)
Tim Geithner probably didn’t mean for the title of his now-infamous op-ed to sound sarcastic, but as Wall Street’s profits soared and the middle class continued to sink, it was hard for anyone to take it seriously…

# # #

So, what lies ahead, in 2011? Just look at a few of the lies left behind (up above)…

Stiglitz: What Lies Ahead in 2011?” h/t Mark Thoma

Stiglitz: What Lies Ahead in 2011?
ProjectSyndicate.org
Monday, December 13, 2010

…The problem is politics: in the US, the Republican Party would rather see President Barack Obama fail than the economy succeed…

In both Europe and America, the free-market ideology that allowed asset bubbles to grow unfettered – markets always know best, so government must not intervene – now ties policymakers’ hands in designing effective responses to the crisis. One might have thought that the crisis itself would undermine confidence in that ideology. Instead, it has resurfaced to drag governments and economies down the sinkhole of austerity.

If politics is the problem in Europe and America, only political changes are likely to restore them to growth. Or else they can wait until the overhang of excess capacity diminishes, capital goods become obsolete, and the economy’s internal restorative forces work their gradual magic. Either way, victory is not around the corner…

# # #

Yes, our fresh nuts are being roasted on the open fire…and Jack Frost’s nipping at our door.

Merry Christmas…to you!

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