Tuesday’s Regulatory & Legislative Roundup
- Enterprise submitted comments to HUD on the agency’s proposed transition to Small-Area Fair Market Rents in administering the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program. Enterprise also coordinated a similar comment letter on behalf of the High-Cost Cities Housing Forum, a peer-to-peer group comprised of the local housing commissioners from nine of the most expensive cities in the U.S.
August 16, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
August 15, 2016
Monday’s Adjudication Roundup
- A New York state judge on Friday granted approval of a $4.5 billion settlement to resolve institutional investors’ claims that JPMorgan & Chase Co. misled consumers into buying risky residential mortgage-backed securities in the lead-up to the financial crisis in 2007.
- Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. has struck a deal to end a long-running suit accusing RBS Securities Inc. of misrepresenting $235 million in sales of mortgage-backed securities, the latest in a string of settlements for the insurer over crisis-era woes, according to a filing posted Friday.
- Moody’s Corp. has urged the Supreme Court to overturn a First Circuit decision reviving a suit alleging the company fraudulently rated mortgage backed securities, arguing that a Massachusetts district court has no authority to transfer the case because it lacks personal jurisdiction.
- A New York appellate court on Thursday revived breach-of-contract and negligence claims brought against financial giant Morgan Stanley by a trust over nearly $111 million in losses suffered by investors in residential mortgage-backed securities
August 15, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
August 12, 2016
Friday’s Government Report Roundup
- Many government agencies are growing concerned about the noncompliance and data collection practices of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
- Supportive Housing reaches out to assist the mentally ill and individuals with chronic health conditions to ensure these individuals lead successful lives and are not left to homelessness.
August 12, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
August 11, 2016
Thursday’s Advocacy & Think Tank Roundup
- The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities completed a study analyzing the effectiveness of the Temporary Assistance for Needy (TANF) block grant and it’s impact on child poverty.
- Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies released a report examining housing prices across the United States. Nationally housing prices are on an upward trend, some areas of the country have yet to recover.
August 11, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
Wednesday’s Academic Roundup
- Quantitative Easing: The Challenge for Households Long-Term Savings and Financial Security, Christian Thimann, CESifo Working Paper Series No. 5976, 6, 2016
- Wage Flexibility and Employment Fluctuations: Evidence from the Housing Sector, Jorn Steffen Pischke, CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP11418, 7, 2016
- Managerial Myopia and the Mortgage Meltdown, Adam Kolasinski & Nan Yang
- How to Price Swaps in Your Head- An Interest Rate Swap & Asset Swap Primer, Nicholas Burgess
August 10, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments

August 16, 2016
Loan Mod Racketeering?
By David Reiss
James Cagney and Mae Clarke in “Public Enemy”
Bloomberg BNA Banking quoted me in BofA Must Face RICO Claims on Loan Modifications (behind paywall). It opens,
Bank of America must face claims that it and another company violated federal anti-racketeering laws by denying loan modifications to eligible borrowers, a federal appeals court said Aug. 15 ( George v. Urban Settlement Svcs., 10th Cir., No. 14-cv-01427, 8/15/16 ).
The ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit reinstates purported class claims by Richard George and other borrowers that Bank of America and Urban Settlement Services (“Urban”), a settlement company, feigned compliance with guidelines under the Home Affordable Modification program (HAMP) while modifying as few loans as possible.
A district court dismissed the claims, saying the plaintiffs failed to sufficiently allege the existence of an association-in-fact enterprise under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), but the Tenth Circuit reversed, saying they made a “facially plausible” claim.
The ruling sends the case back to the district court to consider that and other allegations.
Case Moves Forward
The decision is the latest in connection with HAMP, a 2009 Treasury Department effort aimed at stabilizing the housing market that was closely related to disbursement of government funds to banks under the Troubled Asset Relief Program. Bank of America received $45 billion in TARP funds.
The plaintiffs are represented by Steve Berman, Ari Y. Brown, Kevin K. Green, and Tyler S. Weaver in the Seattle and San Diego offices of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro.
“We are more than pleased the court has ruled our complaint has sufficiently alleged that Bank of America’s massive HAMP mortgage-modification program was in fact a RICO enterprise,” Berman, the firm’s managing partner, said in an Aug. 15 statement. “For years, we have tirelessly fought this major Wall Street kingpin to right the wrongs it committed against hundreds of thousands of homeowners and taxpayers who footed the $45 billion government bailout BoA took in, only to have it used to propagate a scheme to squeeze every dollar from BoA customers and wrongfully foreclose thousands of homes in the process.”
Bank of America spokesman Rick Simon said the bank denies the claims, which he said paint a false picture of the bank’s practices and its employees.
“In fact, Bank of America has been an industry leader in HAMP and other beneficial mortgage modifications,” Simon told Bloomberg BNA in an Aug. 15 e-mail. “We are reviewing the Circuit court’s decision and considering our options.”
The lawsuit, which involved loans originally held by Countrywide Home Loans, said Bank of America and Urban were part of a fraudulent scheme to keep borrowers from acquiring permanent HAMP loan modifications, allegedly because defaulted loans were more profitable.
They said Urban functioned as a “black hole” for HAMP-related documents submitted by borrowers, ensuring that trial modifications would not be made permanent.
Tenth Circuit Reverses
In its September 2014 ruling, the district court said the plaintiffs failed to allege, as required by RICO, that Bank of America was distinct from the alleged racketeering enterprise.
The Tenth Circuit reversed in a decision by Judge Nancy Moritz, who wrote for a three-judge panel. The plaintiffs, she said, “don’t contend that either a parent corporation or its subsidiary corporation is the enterprise. Rather, they assert that BOA and Urban—two separate legal entities— joined together, along with several other entities, to form and conduct the affairs of the BOA-Urban association-in-fact enterprise.”
According to the plaintiffs, she said, Bank of America and Urban “performed distinct roles within the enterprise while acting in concert with other entities to further the enterprise’s common goal of wrongfully denying HAMP applications.”
That is enough to “plausibly allege” that Bank of America meets the “enterprise” requirement, she said.
Crisis Cases Continue
Brooklyn Law School Professor David Reiss said the decision shows that financial crisis-era litigation is not over. “This case is an example of litigation that arises from the supposed fixes for the crisis—fixes that were often implemented poorly, as can be seen from a variety of cases and regulatory actions,” Reiss told Bloomberg BNA in an Aug. 15 e-mail.
The lawsuit alleged in part that documents submitted by borrowers were intentionally “scattered” across various computer databases and systems, allegedly with the goal of creating the appearance that borrowers had not completed the paperwork required to convert their trial plans into permanent modifications.
Reiss called it significant that the court accepted, for purposes of a motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs’ theory that the alleged “black hole” treatment of documents could rise to the level of a RICO violation.
“While courts have held against defendants in individual cases with similar facts, the possibility that they could hold against lenders and servicers in a class action raises the stakes quite a bit for defendants,” Reiss said.
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August 16, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments