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Mozilo No Villainy at Countrywide

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Six years after Angelo Mozilo lost control of the largest mortgage lender in the U.S., and days after news that the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles plans to sue him, the Countrywide Financial Corp. founder is baffled by a new effort to punish him, Bloomberg News reported today. Mozilo remains a defender of Countrywide, even after Bank of America Corp., which bought it in 2008, agreed last month to pay more than $16 billion to end probes into mortgage-bond sales on top of about $55 billion in fines that came before. Mozilo doesn’t understand why he and his firm, blamed by lawmakers and authorities for lax underwriting and predatory lending, have been seen as villains. “No, we didn’t do anything wrong,” he said, adding that a real estate collapse was the root of the crisis. “Countrywide or Mozilo didn’t cause any of that.”

New York Set to Accuse Evans Bank of Redlining

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New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman is expected to file a suit as early as today accusing Evans Bank of denying mortgages to African-Americans in Buffalo regardless of their credit, the New York Times reported today. The case, expected to accuse Evans Bank of violating the Fair Housing Act — a federal law intended to ensure equal access to credit — is a harbinger of other lawsuits that could be brought against some of the nation’s largest banks, several people briefed on the investigations said. In the suit, expected to be filed in state court, prosecutors were to outline how, since 2009, Evans Bancorp has created a map that defined the “trade area,” places in the Buffalo metropolitan region where the bank would make mortgages and other loans. The bank, prosecutors contend, deliberately excised much of Buffalo’s East Side.

Feds Find Racial Hostility Discrimination to Be Rampant Inside CFPB

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | August 28, 2014



 
  

August 28, 2014

 
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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

FEDS FIND RACIAL HOSTILITY, DISCRIMINATION TO BE RAMPANT INSIDE CFPB

America's newest federal agency, charged with regulating financial institutions to prevent another hostile economic downturn, is reportedly having trouble regulating hostilities and discrimination among its own employees, the Washington Times reported yesterday. Evidence gathered by congressional investigators, internal agency documents and Washington Times interviews with workers discloses scores of cases of U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau employees seeking protection from racially offensive, sexist or discriminatory behavior, including: (1) a naturalized U.S. citizen with more than a decade of service with the U.S. government was called an "f'ing foreigner" by management; (2) a department was internally dubbed "the Plantation" because of the number of African Americans working in it — all supervised by white managers — without any obvious promotional track or way to get transferred; (3) white employees were twice as likely as minorities to get the most favorable personnel ratings in employee reviews; and (4) managers intimidated and retaliated against employees for voicing complaints or offering an alternative point of view — from denying vacation requests to hiring unqualified friends to supervise jobs and then asking subordinates to train them. The CFPB acknowledges its employees' complaints about a hostile working environment and says it is working with the National Treasury Employees Union — which represents CFPB employees — to settle worker protests and iron out new performance reviews, which are at the heart of many of the protests. However, current CFBP employees say that more work needs to be done. Click here to read the full article.

SEC TIGHTENS RULES ON CREDIT RATING AGENCIES, ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES

The Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday approved final rules cracking down on credit rating agencies and asset-backed securities — two areas that SEC Chairwoman Mary Jo White said were "at the center of the financial crisis," according to an article in yesterday's ThinkAdvisor. In her opening remarks at the SEC open meeting at the agency's Washington headquarters, White said that the final rules in the "two closely related areas" give investors "powerful new tools" for independently evaluating the quality of asset-backed securities and credit ratings. "ABS issuers and rating agencies will be held accountable under significant new rules governing their activities," said White, adding that the issuance of "flawed credit ratings by certain credit rating agencies was a key contributor to the financial crisis." Since 2011, SEC staffers have annually examined each of the nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSROs) registered with the SEC, as required by the Dodd-Frank Act. "While the reports from these reviews have catalogued a number of improvements, they have also identified concerns that persist, including ones related to the management of conflicts of interest, internal supervisory controls, and post-employment activities of former staff of NRSROs," White said. Click here to read the full article.

EXECUTIVES TO BE HELD MORE RESPONSIBLE FOR GOING-CONCERN DISCLOSURES

Corporate managers will have to make more uniform disclosures when there is substantial doubt about their business's ability to survive, the Financial Accounting Standards Board said yesterday, according to a Wall Street Journal blog yesterday. The FASB updated U.S. accounting rules, effective by the end of 2016, to define management's responsibility for evaluating whether their business will be able to continue operating as a "going concern" and to make relevant disclosures in financial statement footnotes. Previously, there were no specific rules under U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, and disclosures were largely up to auditors. Investors, however, have grown frustrated with the lack of going-concern opinions during the financial crisis; such missing opinions, they believe, failed to warn them of impending bankruptcies. The FASB first issued a proposal at the peak of the financial crisis in 2008, but debate and revisions delayed the final standard, which didn't go up for a vote until May. Supporters of the changes have argued that corporate managers have better information about a company's ability to continue financing their operations than auditors do. Click here to read the full article.

ANALYSIS: MORTGAGE CRISIS IS ABOUT TO FLARE UP AGAIN

We are nearly eight years removed from the beginnings of the foreclosure crisis, and since it began, more than five million homes have been lost. So it would be natural to believe that the crisis has receded. Statistics point in that direction. Financial analyst CoreLogic reports that the national foreclosure rate fell to 1.7 percent in June, down from 2.5 percent a year ago. But these numbers are likely to reverse next year, with foreclosures spiking again, according to an analysis in the New Republic Sunday. A series of temporary relief measures and legacy issues from the crisis will begin to bite in 2015, causing home repossessions that could present economic headwinds. In other words, the foreclosure crisis was never solved; it was deferred. The problem comes from many different angles. Home equity lines of credit will start to feature increased payments, as borrowers must pay back principal instead of just the interest. In addition, the relief offered by the government's Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), which provided temporary interest rate easing to borrowers, will start running out, and interest rates will start rising about 1 percent each year. Analysts also believe that the foreclosure backlog, mostly in states that require a court ruling to foreclose, will finally unclog in the coming years, which might already be happening. Despite the mostly rosy statistics, foreclosure activity did rise 2 percent from June to July after months of reductions, a potentially troubling omen of things to come. Click here to read the full analysis.

POOR CITIES CAN GET HIGH CREDIT RATINGS

Detroit's bankruptcy case cast a cloud of doubt over other U.S. cities with large populations of poor residents, but a surprising number of them are in relatively good financial shape, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. In a new report, Moody's Investors Service found that 27 of the 50 poorest large cities are rated relatively high in their ability to pay back debts and manage their long-term needs. "Poverty is something that we get asked about a lot," said Moody's Thomas Compton, an analyst and co-author of the report. "What we found is that contrary to what a lot of people may think, just because there is a high poverty rate it doesn't mean that you're going to have low credit quality." Poverty can lead to paltry tax revenues and an increased need for municipal services, making debt repayment a challenge. But the cities with high poverty rates and relatively high credit ratings — Provo, Utah, and Dayton, Ohio, among them — have achieved some combination of a large and diverse tax base, strong finances, stable government and controlled costs, according to Moody's. Cities with a lot of poor people also may have a lot of rich people, and other entities may chip in to pay for the kind of costly social services associated with the poor. But although many cities manage high poverty rates effectively, Moody's noted that poverty does remain a challenge to local governments. Click here to read the full article (subscription required).

COMMENTARY: HOW WOULD THE FED RAISE RATES?

While central bankers at the Jackson Hole symposium on Friday heard a lot of talk from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen about the labor market, over which central bankers have proved to have only limited influence, they heard very little about global asset inflation, over which they could have a lot of influence. Yet the Fed does not appear to be inclined to exercise such influence, according to a Wall Street Journal commentary Tuesday. Yellen said that the time is not yet right to raise short-term interest rates, which would end six years of a near-zero policy and restore something more closely resembling financial normality. Given the risks of a resulting stock market crash or political uproar, it may not happen even next year unless some crisis, internal or external to the Fed, forces Yellen's hand. Meanwhile, savers and investors will continue to be denied a proper return on their investments and multibillion-dollar pension funds will flirt with insolvency, according to the commentary. A question mostly unasked at Jackson Hole is a crucial part of today's when-will-it-happen guessing game: Exactly how will the Fed go about draining liquidity if a burst of inflation urgently presented that necessity?

Click here to read the full commentary (subscription required).

WHY PACER REMOVED ACCESS TO CASE ARCHIVES OF FIVE COURTS

PACER is most often the first stop for downloading public court records, which has led some freedom-of-information advocates to criticize the electronic service — and try to create some public archives outside of it. However, on Aug. 10, the database announced the removal of access to certain case files — and not just a handful, but entire categories of documents coming from five courts, according to a Washington Post blog Tuesday. The move affects archived files in Second, Seventh, Eleventh and Federal Circuit Courts of Appeals, as well as the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California. Charles Hall, a spokesperson for the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, said that the change was made in preparation for an overhaul of the PACER architecture, including the implementation of the next generation of the Judiciary's Case Management and Electronic Case Files System. However, as a result of the changes, the locally developed legacy case-management systems of some courts are no longer compatible with PACER, according to Hall, although he added that the dockets and documents no longer available through the system could still be obtained directly from the relevant court, and that "all open cases, as well as any new filings, will continue to be available on PACER." But that also means that it is much harder for the public to access historical records — and the lack of forewarning left some legal and technical experts reeling.

Click here to read the full article.

NEW TO THE LAW PROFESSION? LAW FIRM RECENTLY ADD NEW ASSOCIATES TO THE RANKS? BE SURE TO PRE-ORDER ABI'S SURVIVAL GUIDE FOR THE NEW LAWYER!

Available now for pre-order in ABI's Bookstore is the Survival Guide for the New Lawyer: What They Didn't Teach You in Law School. The Survival Guide provides real-world guidance on the everyday aspects of practicing law, with a special emphasis on bankruptcy law. Full of anecdotal examples and hard-earned advice, this Guide is perfect for the aspiring lawyer fresh out of law school, or for any firm that wants to give its associates a leg up on the competition. Click here to pre-order, and be sure to log in first to obtain the ABI member discount!

NEW CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: MERUELO V. REORGANIZED MERUELO MADDUX PROP. INC. (IN RE MERUELO MADDUX PROP. INC.; 9TH CIR.)

Summarized by Elie Herman

The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel vacated the order of the bankruptcy court for abuse of discretion in applying the "reasonableness" standard under § 502(b)(4) to a post-petition claim for administrative expense based on an unpaid severance and unpaid bonus, rather than the "actual and necessary" standard set forth in § 503(b)(1), and the BAP remanded for application of the proper standard.

There are more than 1,400 appellate opinions summarized on Volo, and summaries typically appear within 24 hours of the ruling. Click here regularly to view the latest case summaries on ABI's Volo website.

NEW ON ABI'S BANKRUPTCY BLOG EXCHANGE: HOW THE MOMENTIVE RULING HAS SHAKEN UP DEBT MARKETS

A recent post discusses Tuesday's ruling in the Momentive Performance Materials Inc. case, and how it has rattled the distressed-investing world.

Be sure to check the site several times each day; any time a contributing blog posts a new story, a link to the story will appear on the top. If you have a blog that deals with bankruptcy, or know of a good blog that should be part of the Bankruptcy Exchange, please contact the ABI Web team.

ABI Quick Poll

SARE cases should not be allowed in chapter 11.

Click here to vote on this week's Quick Poll. Click here to view the results of previous Quick Polls.

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2014

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An Unfinished Chapter at Countrywide

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Co-founder and former Countrywide Financial chief executive Angelo Mozilo has largely escaped accountability for his outsize role in the mortgage crisis, but he may soon face a civil lawsuit from the Justice Department, The New York Times reported on Saturday. The possibility of a new case against him came almost exactly seven years after the subprime mortgage machine that he created and oversaw began to sputter and stall. That process began in earnest on Aug. 16, 2007, when the company disclosed that it was drawing down its entire $11.5 billion revolving credit line. It is unclear if prosecutors will indeed take action against Mozilo. In 2011, the Justice Department mysteriously decided to drop a criminal case against the former executive after a two-year investigation. If he is back in the hot seat, it may be instructive to revisit some of his, and his company’s, contributions to the mortgage crisis.

Analysis Bank of America Papers Show Conflict and Trickery in Mortgages

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Documents released as part of the $16.65 billion settlement between Bank of America and the Justice Department read like a highlight reel of the mortgage sins that fed the 2008 financial crisis, according to an analysis in today’s New York Times. As part of the deal, the bank and the Justice Department agreed to a “statement of facts” that offers a window into some of the darkest corners of the Countrywide and Merrill mortgage machine that was responsible for funneling a stream of troubled loans that helped devastate the global financial system. The settlement comes as federal prosecutors in Los Angeles are preparing a lawsuit against Mozilo, who built Countrywide into one of the nation’s largest mortgage lenders before Bank of America acquired the company in 2008. According to the statement of facts, Mr. Mozilo sent an email to a Countrywide executive on Aug. 1, 2005, warning about a collapse in some condominium markets in Las Vegas and Florida, which were then swarming with speculators looking for quick profits. “I am becoming increasingly concerned about the environment surrounding the borrowers who are utilizing the pay option loan and the price level of real estate in general but particularly relative to condos,” Mozilo wrote, according to the Justice Department documents. Mozilo said Countrywide should stop holding those loans on its books. Yet for the next two years, according to the documents, Countrywide continued to originate pay option loans — which had interest rates that would reset after a few years — and sell them to Wall Street. The Justice Department documents also show the failings of the government’s efforts to protect itself against insuring defective mortgages.

Barclays to Pay 23 Million to Settle Thornburg Lawsuit

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The court-appointed trustee overseeing the liquidation of Thornburg Mortgage Inc. has reached a deal with Barclays Capital Inc. to settle a subprime-era lawsuit alleging the bank made improper margin calls that helped drive the mortgage lender into bankruptcy, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. According to the terms of the proposed settlement filed Wednesday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Baltimore, Barclays would pay the trustee $23 million for the benefit of Thornburg's creditors.

Bank of America to Pay 17 Billion in Justice Department Settlement

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Bank of America Corp. is set to pay a record settlement of nearly $17 billion over its mortgage lending, capping a legal odyssey that has dogged it since the depths of the financial crisis, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The deal will resolve a government investigation that stems largely from the bank's purchases of Merrill Lynch & Co. and Countrywide Financial Corp. as they teetered in the housing crisis. More than $1 billion of the payout from the Charlotte, N.C.-based bank could go to a handful of states. The settlement amount is the largest ever reached between the U.S. and a single company, and is approximately equal to the bank's total profit for the past three years. Bank of America has spent more than $60 billion on legal woes stemming from the financial crisis, and the latest settlement would push the tab to close to $80 billion. (Subscription required.)

Countrywides Mozilo Said to Face U.S. Suit over Loans

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Countrywide Financial Corp. co-founder Angelo Mozilo hasn’t entirely escaped prosecutors’ wrath for his company’s risky lending, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. A U.S. government task force wielding an innovative legal strategy plans to bring a civil case against him over the excesses of the subprime-mortgage boom. The last-ditch effort comes three years after the Justice Department abandoned a criminal probe of Mozilo. In 2012, public anger over the lack of prosecutions stemming from the financial crisis spurred the Obama administration to create a team devoted to investigating fraud in mortgage-backed securities. The group has wrestled at least $20 billion from Wall Street banks using a law with a relatively low threshold for suing and a long period to bring cases. Relying on the same anti-fraud law, the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act, the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles is preparing to sue Mozilo and as many as 10 other former Countrywide employees. The case may be helped along by an imminent U.S. settlement with Bank of America Corp., which acquired Countrywide in 2008.

Bank of America Settles Taylor Bean Bankruptcy Case for 26.4 Million

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Bank of America Corp. will hand over $26.4 million in mortgage loans to the bankruptcy liquidation trustee for defunct Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp., the Daily Business Review reported on Friday. Ocala, Fla.-based Taylor Bean and ex-CEO Lee Farkas perpetrated a $2.9 billion fraud, causing the collapse of Montgomery, Ala.-based Colonial Bank in the process. Taylor Bean was the nation's largest private mortgage origination company when it filed for bankruptcy protection in 2009 after being cited for manufacturing fake loans and failing to service 528,000 others. Farkas is serving a 30-year prison sentence. A settlement plan was approved by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Jerry A. Funk in Orlando in 2011, and liquidating trustee Neil F. Luria has been pursuing clawback lawsuits to reimburse creditors, including Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mac. The settlement with Bank of America calls for the trust to pay $10.3 million and receive the $26 million mortgage pool. The lawsuit against the bank claimed it failed to pay Taylor Bean $40 million under forward-purchasing agreements pending at the time of the bankruptcy filing.

Ackmans Pershing Square Sues U.S. Over Fannie Freddie

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Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP sued the U.S. government claiming revised terms of the 2008 bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac cheat investors of the profit from the mortgage-financing entities, Bloomberg News reported today. The Federal Housing Finance Agency “purportedly acting as conservator” of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the Treasury Department “agreed between themselves to strip all profits from the companies,” depriving shareholders “of any economic value in their shares,” according to the complaint filed yesterday in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in Washington. Taxpayers rescued Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with a bailout that swelled to $187.5 billion. While the firms have sent more than that amount back to the Treasury, funds were counted as a return on the U.S. investment rather than full repayment of the aid. The issue for investors is that the Treasury Department decided in 2012 to keep all the companies’ profits. Pershing Square’s complaint is at least the 20th lawsuit challenging the government’s decision to divert Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac profits to the Treasury.