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Showing posts with label Settlement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Settlement. Show all posts

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Federal Blockbusters : By the Numbers: the New $26B Homeowners Settlement

× Like us and you'll find top breaking news in your Facebook newsfeed. Sign up for our daily email newsletter and get top stories and breaking news delivered to your inbox. Thursday, February 9, 2012, by Sarah Firshein

Screen-shot-2012-02-09-at-10.36.38-AM.jpgGraphic via the New York Times; click to expand!

In negotiations that lasted past midnight last night, five banks—Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Ally Financial—agreed to a $26B settlement designed to relieve 2M homeowners from mortgage debt. While some are saying the figure isn't nearly enough—and certainly not a Panacea, according to one Barclays analyst—others view the unprecedented deal as a step in the right direction. It's about "righting the wrongs that led to the housing market collapse,” said U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder. “With this settlement, we recover precious taxpayer resources, fix a broken system and lay a groundwork for a better future.” The chart above visually maps out the settlement, and here's a breakdown by the numbers:

Of the $26B:
· $5B paid to states and federal authorities
· $17B paid to homeowners
· $3B allocated for refinancing
· $1B paid to the Federal Housing Administration

Settlement will be distributed over three years and:
· 1M homeowners will have reduced mortgage debt or will able to refinance.
· 750K people who have lost their homes to foreclosure (Jan. 2008 through 2011) will receive $2K each.
· More than 46,000 people in New York State will benefit; of those, 21,000 will owe less on their homes.
· Average aid to homeowners: $20K.

General stats:
· 1 in 5 Americans are owe more on their homes than their homes are worth.
· Average of $50,000 underwater each.
· Collective negative equity equals $700B.

· Settlement Worth $26 Billion Reached for Homeowners [New York Times]


View the original article here

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

‘Robo’ Foreclosure Settlement Turns Political

At a meeting of Mayors Wednesday, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Shaun Donovan, mentioned that a settlement would include principal reduction for about a million borrowers.

For over a year now, state attorneys general have been negotiating some kind of settlement deal with the nations four largest lenders, as well as several smaller ones.

The settlement pertains to faulty foreclosure processing, first uncovered in October of 2010 and now commonly referred to as “Robo-signing.”

Rather than dozens of lawsuits, the states initially were looking to assess one great punishment on the lenders and thereby appease borrowers who felt they were wronged. The banks were looking for wider immunity from securitization issues, and that is largely what has held up the negotiations for so long.

Now, suddenly, after umpteen “we’re close to a deal”s, apparently we’re now really close to a deal, largely because the State of the Union address is next Tuesday, and this is an election year. So at a meeting of Mayors Wednesday, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Shaun Donovan, mentioned that a settlement would include principal reduction for about a million borrowers.

“With few other tools to help housing, the administration sees the deal as a way to take credit for helping underwater borrowers without exposing taxpayers to loss,” says Jaret Seiberg at Guggenheim partners, noting that the deal may not fully be in place by Tuesday, but a “framework” could be announced. “If this deal does score enough political points, then it will dampen calls for the administration to roll out more housing help such as a mass refinancing. As we remain dubious about the real impact of a deal, our view is that the administration will face pressure this spring to do more. That means more refinancings of GSE loans will still be on the table,” he adds.

Of course we already know the basic framework of the deal, which would involve up to $25 billion from the banks, though only a small portion of that would be a cash settlement. The bulk of the money would be used to do principal write downs, short sales, and more aggressive loan modifications. Unfortunately, several key states, including Massachusetts, California, New York, Delaware and Nevada have expressed serious concerns about the deal currently on the table, and some bank sources are telling us that without California and New York, it’s hard to see how there would be a deal.

If there is a deal, beyond the politics, it could have a larger effect on the state of the housing market and its recovery. Remember, this deal is about foreclosure processing, which has been nearly stalled in many states. “To that end, it will give banks some increased certainty about their ability to foreclose in those states that sign on to the agreement. As a result, we may see foreclosures ramp up fairly quickly in those states,” says Josh Rosner of Graham-Fisher.

Rosner calls the deal “somewhat nonsensical,” even without knowing the full details, as he believes it offers no assurances to any state regarding specific amounts of relief, not to mention leaving questions about the credibility of the monitoring, oversight, compliance and enforcement of the deal terms. “The expected political calculus is that the public will see the headline and will not bother to watch the operationalization or follow-through,” says Rosner.

My concern is about this principal reduction headline. Yes, the banks processed foreclosures using improper methods, having one person sign off on thousands of documents that were never read. Yes, there was a huge breakdown in accountability and a huge lack of attention paid to struggling borrowers. The trouble is, after going over these cases, the bottom line is that the vast majority of the foreclosures were and are valid. People didn’t pay their mortgages. So now you’re offering cash back to these borrowers, perhaps even their homes back, while others in the very same position, who may have had their foreclosures processed correctly, get nothing.

Questions?  Comments?  document.write("");document.write("RealtyCheck"+"@"+"cnbc.com");document.write('');And follow me on Twitter @Diana_Olick


View the original article here