Showing posts with label housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label housing. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Mitt Romney and the apparent triumph of big business Republicans

Take a look at the first 1:30 of the video above and consider what you hear (or read the transcript of the conversation below):

“As to what to do for the housing industry specifically — and are there things that you can do to encourage housing? One is, don’t try and stop the foreclosure process,” said Romney. “Let it run its course, and hit the bottom, allow investors to buy up homes, put renters in them, fix the homes up, and let it turn around and come back up.

“The Obama administration has slow-walked the foreclosure process that long existed, and as a result we still have a foreclosure overhang.

“Number two, the credit that was given to first-time homebuyers was insufficient and inadequate to turn around the housing market. I think it was an ineffective idea, it was a little bit like the Cash For Clunkers program — throwing government money at something, which was not market-oriented, did not staunch the decline in home values any more than it encouraged the auto industry to take off.” (Emphasis added).

The first thing to note is that Romney is here speaking with the editorial board of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, in Las Vegas, the foreclosure capital of the nation.  How’s that for the straight talk express, Romney Style? 

There’s been a lot of commentary today on Romney’s argument against stopping the foreclosure process, and while it is worthy of a blog post itself, I’d rather focus on the statements that follow that one.  The piece I’d like to point out here is quite simply how strange Romney’s comments are, given what’s happened in the housing market these past few years.  Romney is speaking here as a savvy investor might, one who has a wider view of the economic world and feels confident that his prescriptions are the right ones (as you’d expect a presidential candidate to do.)

The first bolded statement above denotes Romney’s appraisal of the housing situation as being a problem of pricing.  Investors would be happy to buy these foreclosed properties, in Romney’s mind, but the aftereffects of massively bubble-inflated prices combined with the HAMP program and others to support homeowners (despite the fact that they were never designed to “work” properly) mean that prices still have a ways to come down before they’ll be bargains. 

There is no mention of the suffering such aggressive inaction by the government would cause for homeowners struggling in this economy, rather there is a rather academic appraisal of the most efficient method for flipping homes.  There is no mention of the suffering because Romney’s default position is to see the world from the perspective of someone with capital to invest (leaving aside the obvious fact that he was a co-founder of a little firm called Bain Capital).  I mean, it must be difficult for someone with hundreds of millions of dollars in accumulated wealth to see the world differently, just as it is difficult for anybody to see the world through another’s eyes.  But one might at least hope for a bit of empathy from a presidential candidate; to hope that at least he/she understands the plight of others, no matter how alien the other’s experience might be to him/herself.  That is, I would think, a virtual prerequisite for being the leader of a nation that is as diverse and vast as America is – the ability to empathize.

Now for the second bolded piece above: ““The Obama administration has slow-walked the foreclosure process that long existed, and as a result we still have a foreclosure overhang.”  I read a lot of writing about economics on a regular basis from a broad range of thinkers, and a fair amount of writing on finance, and I believe that is the first time I’ve ever seen the term “foreclosure overhang” used, by anyone.  A quick Google search reveals that perhaps I just haven’t noticed the term before, or haven’t read any articles specifically referencing foreclosure overhang, because in any case, there’s quite a bit of literature out there on it! 

A useful definition of foreclosure overhang:

The term refers to the number of foreclosed properties that will wind up on the for-sale market. In the worst case, millions of foreclosed homes offered at fire-sale prices will cause an excess supply that will dampen prices for years to come.

The banks who made the loans, however, will not allow their entire stock of housing to sell at fire-sale pricing, so they are holding much of their stock in reserve until housing prices appreciate.  As well, each sale of a foreclosed home by a bank requires the bank to write down the face value of the original mortgage (that had been, until the resale, held as an (overinflated) capital asset) thus reducing the capital reserve ratio the bank must preserve to satisfy the regulators.  Refinancing mortgages en masse would similarly require writing down the value of the original mortgage, which clearly the banks are loath to do, so good luck getting any relief for homeowners.  Of course, there is the fact that it may make some sense for banks to allow homeowners to continue to occupy their homes, even if they are foreclosed upon:

Overgrown lawns are the least of the problems. It’s not uncommon for vacant homes to be stripped of copper and appliances. That’s why it isn’t nuts to keep homeowners in place even when they are severely delinquent if the local property market is so backed up that a home won’t be sold quickly (the Times says that average time to foreclosure is 400 days and another 176 days to sell it). The homeowner is still liable for property taxes if the home has not been seized by the lender and will maintain the property at a better level than the bank would.

But of course, as usual the banks are just dancing around the rampant fraud that plagued their activities (as I’ve documented fairly extensively on this blog) and it is interesting that Romney says nothing about that fraud.  Again, his concern is for the macro-effects of widely depressed housing prices and how that may or may not affect investment conditions and bank balance sheets, with no mention of what resolving the “foreclosure overhang” will do to families all across America.

This is more “invisible hand of the market” mumbo-jumbo, more laissez-faire, more Randian nonsense.  The market imbalance that caused this mess, the housing bubble, was caused by a combination of Alan Greenspan’s cheap money polices and a deregulatory regime started by Clinton and perfected under Bush.  Leaving the market to its own devices got us into this, and Romney’s solution is to once again leave the market to its own devices.  He is, truly, a creature of Wall Street; do we truly want such a creature in the White House?  It seems more and more likely he’ll be the Republican nominee, what does that mean for those of us in the 99%?

Thursday, October 6, 2011

We don’t need a redistribution of wealth, we need a redistribution of speech (#OccupyWallStreet)

 

Bank Consolidation; h/t Angry Black Lady

As noted in last night’s post, Occupy Wall Street is an inchoate (I haven’t seen that word used as often in the popular press as I have these past two weeks) movement that drives the mainstream media kind of nuts with its inchoateness.  What are they protesting?  Why are they occupying?  What are their demands?  WHICH SIDE OF THE POLITICAL SPECTRUM CAN WE CLAIM THEY INHABIT???

Last night I wrote that:

This protest, the fact that people from all walks of life feel that the most effective method of expressing their outrage is a purposely undefined and undirected occupation of a public space, reflects the profound disillusionment in and failure of institutions in our society.

I think I dropped the thread of that argument a little bit prematurely, forgive me.  Why would so many people feel such a disillusionment with the institutions of our society?  My claim is that many of the institutions of which Americans at one time felt themselves to be a part of, both public institutions (as voters, taxpayers, and citizens) as well as private (as mortgage-holders, investors, or lessees) have systematically become more and more invested in conducting business for each others’ good, rather than for the common good.  The collusion between government and private institutions, to the detriment of the voter/consumer, has been rampant in the past decade.  From government officials leaving their posts to immediately go work as lobbyists, to government “regulators” proving their total capture to the interests they are supposedly regulating, and actively covering up negative information on behalf of their industry friends, there appears to be no separation between those who theoretically represent taxpayers and the industries they oversee.  Everybody is bought off.

While I would never claim to speak for the OWS movement, I think that the inchoate anger expressed in this movement is at least in part fueled by such resentments.  Who does government actually work for, anyways?  I have focused a lot of attention on this blog to the housing market, but allow me to address a timely blog post by financial analyst Barry Ritholtz:

This is no accident. Indeed, it was by design that execs in the banking sector, and their outside accountants, hatched a scheme in 2008 to hide their balance sheets from public view. The bankers had been lobbying the Financial Accounting Standards Board to change the rules that governed “Fair Value Measurements” also known as FAS157 (September 2006).

You may recall during 2008 this was referred to as “Mark-to-market” accounting.

Banks loved m2m during a boom period. M2M made the more unusual balance sheet holdings  — derivatives, the mortgage-backed securities (MBS), exotic liabilities, and other assets — look fantastic. The fair value measurements of these items — essentially, yesterday’s closing price — allowed the accounts to show enormous profits. Those were the underlying basis for huge bonuses, stock option grants and of course, company share prices.

The reality was quite a bit different. These were not equities or treasuries or corporate bonds — they were thinly traded items whose prices were ramping upwards on a sea of delusional optimism. As soon as the credit bubble ended and housing began to retreat, these assets would free fall like an Acme anvil in a Roadrunner cartoon — and the bankers were the Coyote.

Uh-oh, this was gonna be a problem. So the bankers began to lobby FASB to change the rules governing Fair Value Accounting. Sure, it was hugely helpful on the way up, but now, reporting actual holdings — previously marked at all time highs — was becoming problematic.

I had referenced this little-noticed, but highly significant accounting standards change in a posting from last year, which provides a fascinating segue into the point of this post:

As Eskow said above, the bankers just want to make it seem that they’ve actually produced some semblance of profits for their shareholders so they can continue to collect their exorbitant bonuses.  That greed leads the bankers to convince regulators to help them avoid realizing the losses they should rightfully incur for such terrible investments.  That dynamic then leads to continued uncertainty in the market, which causes the banks not to lend to businesses, individuals, or even to each other. Greed has never run so rampant in the streets, and it is now manifestly clear that it is the greed of the privileged few that is genuinely handcuffing any sort of economic recovery for the rest of us.  Government regulators have bought into this system for years – when Eliot Spitzer began to make a stink, he was publicly disgraced and muzzled quickly, lest his accusations about the rotting core of the financial system lead people to look too closely so that the house of cards fell. 

Government has been complicit in this scheme since day one, which is the real reason none of the fraudsters have been put in prison yet – the circle would likely extend too widely and might ensnare some of those who are supposed to be on the “good” team.  We can’t have change in this country until we have an honest accounting of the mistakes of the past, and I surely hope that the state Attorneys General are allowed to run their investigations as they see fit, with no White House interference.  The President’s actions in confronting this crisis, including the actions of his deputies, will show just how committed to change he really is.  (emphases mine)

Okay, well the incredibly flawed 50-state Attorneys General settlement deal appears to be fatally wounded, despite the Obama Administration’s best efforts to protect the precious constituents banks from having to own up to the rampant fraud they perpetuated throughout the mortgage market in the 2000s.  My hope last year was misplaced, truly.  Ritholtz on mark-to-market again:

The bottom line is this: Investors do not really have a clear idea of how healthy any of these banks truly are. We do not know the state of their balance sheets. We do not know what their exposures are to mortgages, to Europe, to Greece, etc. They could all be technically insolvent, as far as any investor can tell.

And that is exactly how the bankers wanted it.

But given the trouble in Europe, and the likely problems in housing if the US goes into a recession, Investors have decided they cannot take the risk of a holding an opaque, possibly under-capitalized probably over-leveraged financial firm blindly. They are telling the banks no thanks, we are not interested, we are going to be prudent and we have to assume the worst. Hence, for the second half of 2011, they have been selling off their holdings in these opaque, potentially insolvent too big to succeed entities.

Bankers, enjoy your beds. You made them, now lay in them . . .(emphasis mine)

And not to put too fine a point on it, but in the same post from last year I had quoted at length economics blogger Steve Waldman about a meeting he attended with Treasury officials and other prominent bloggers in Washington, which touched on the Home Affordable Mortgage Program, or HAMP, the mortgage-modification program:

The conversation next turned to housing and HAMP. On HAMP, officials were surprisingly candid. The program has gotten a lot of bad press in terms of its Kafka-esque qualification process and its limited success in generating mortgage modifications under which families become able and willing to pay their debt. Officials pointed out that what may have been an agonizing process for individuals was a useful palliative for the system as a whole. Even if most HAMP applicants ultimately default, the program prevented an outbreak of foreclosures exactly when the system could have handled it least. There were murmurs among the bloggers of “extend and pretend”, but I don’t think that’s quite right. This was extend-and-don’t-even-bother-to-pretend. The program was successful in the sense that it kept the patient alive until it had begun to heal. And the patient of this metaphor was not a struggling homeowner, but the financial system, a.k.a. the banks. Policymakers openly judged HAMP to be a qualified success because it helped banks muddle through what might have been a fatal shock. (emphases mine)

Sad to say, we know VERY WELL now that the patient has not even begun to “heal” – as noted in Ritholtz’ quotation from above.  Well-functioning markets require some measure of transparency in order to facilitate price discovery; the banking and housing sectors are far from transparency, even to this day.


And yet, it was quite distinctly government actions, government interventions, which have helped prop up the zombie banks, despite the very real possibility that a number of them may be effectively insolvent.  Those banks have rewarded their executives with exorbitant bonuses and have lobbied hard against any regulations to rein in their excessive risk-taking, despite all of the government help they have willingly received (and asked for!) 

That our government, which supposedly is voted into power by us and represents us, is actively working against the interests of a broad range of Americans in perpetually siding with the banks is, I believe, a strong part of the Occupy Wall Street movement’s anger.  The people have no voice any longer in this schema – the “change agent” we voted into power in 2008 is perhaps as captive, if not even more so (and more subtly, I might add) to the moneyed interests of the country than was his predecessor.  And that’s saying something; something deeply unsettling. 

The conversation in this country between the institutions and the masses has been one-way for far too long, and I believe therein lies the power of Occupy Wall Street; they do not seek to add to the cacophony of voices that fill up the perpetually dead air of cable news, but rather simply, to be.  That is their protest, the being en masse, as I referenced last night.  It is to reclaim public spaces, and through their continued and determined presence, public discourse. 

JW Mason spoke to this dynamic movingly yesterday:

Most of us very seldom experience ourselves as political agents, in the sense of being active participants in the collective decision-making of our community. For better or worse, most of the time we delegate collective decision-making to specialists who represent us more or less faithfully, as the case may be. The only reason for protest -- for any kind of mass politics -- is that this system has broken down. The message of any protest is: There is a political subject, a We, that is not being represented. This, in the broadest possible way, is what the "99%" rhetoric is saying, and why it resonates. At some point, if a when movements like this are successful, some new more legitimate form of representation will be established, as people form new collective identities and new norms of collective action. But it's foolish to criticize an assertion of the failure of representation for not itself being an effective representative, with a specific set of demands and a strategy to carry them out. (emphasis mine)

The 99% want justice, we want rules to govern fair play, and we want to regain the sense that the odds are not stacked against us, as they have been for so long.  We cannot rely on elected officials to do our bidding, as their competing interests (primarily the overriding interest in re-election) will guarantee that the peoples’ interests are not fully represented.  The interests of the few tend to run counter to the interests of the many; how much more is this dynamic amplified when we are talking about the interests of the 1% in relation to the interests of the 99%?  “Policy” as currently constructed, is not working in favor of the polis, as one might hope, and the failure is so widespread, so systemic, that it is difficult to put the diagnosis into one coherent message. 

The inchoateness of the Occupy Wall Street “message” stems from that sheer magnitude of failure in our society, at all levels.  If we are going to vote and be taxed to pay for “representation” we better damn well get some adequate representation.  Alas, that is most definitely not happening at this stage in history. 

I plan on going to the local Occupy LA gathering tomorrow evening; I will share my thoughts afterwards on what I hope will be an inspiring event. 

Thursday, October 14, 2010

The foreclosure fraud mess – a day of reckoning at last?

Foreclosure Message The foreclosure fraud case is one of the BIG stories I’ve been trying my best to follow lately.  We learned today that all 50 state Attorneys General have opened an investigation into mortgage industry practices:

The state attorneys general are looking at allegations some banks did not properly review files or submitted false statements to evict delinquent borrowers from their homes during a foreclosure crisis that is one of the most visible wounds of the 2007-2009 recession.

"We are in the fourth year of a housing and economic crisis that was brought on by lax practices of the mortgage lending industry," Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson said in a statement.

"The latest allegations of corner-cutting and slipshod paperwork are troubling, but perhaps not surprising."

--

The states are investigating the use of "robo-signers" -- people who sign hundreds of affidavits a day -- by banks and companies that collect monthly mortgage payments. It is alleged they did not properly review the documents they were signing.

"What we have seen are not mere technicalities, as some suggest," Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray said.

So if there was systematic fraud perpetrated throughout the mortgage lending industry, one would hope we’d finally see some of these scoundrels locked up for awhile. 

Incidentally, one of the last times that all 50 state Attorneys General agreed to pursue a coordinated investigation, guess what the alleged crime was?  Predatory lending.  And guess who took the lead in making the public case for the investigation – then-Governor of New York Eliot Spitzer.  Spitzer came out swinging against the mortgage lending industry and the banks at large in a February 14, 2008 Washington Post piece that is worth excerpting from at length (but well worth a read in its entirety):

Several years ago, state attorneys general and others involved in consumer protection began to notice a marked increase in a range of predatory lending practices by mortgage lenders. Some were misrepresenting the terms of loans, making loans without regard to consumers' ability to repay, making loans with deceptive "teaser" rates that later ballooned astronomically, packing loans with undisclosed charges and fees, or even paying illegal kickbacks. These and other practices, we noticed, were having a devastating effect on home buyers. In addition, the widespread nature of these practices, if left unchecked, threatened our financial markets.

Even though predatory lending was becoming a national problem, the Bush administration looked the other way and did nothing to protect American homeowners. In fact, the government chose instead to align itself with the banks that were victimizing consumers.

--

Let me explain: The administration accomplished this feat through an obscure federal agency called the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). The OCC has been in existence since the Civil War. Its mission is to ensure the fiscal soundness of national banks. For 140 years, the OCC examined the books of national banks to make sure they were balanced, an important but uncontroversial function. But a few years ago, for the first time in its history, the OCC was used as a tool against consumers.

In 2003, during the height of the predatory lending crisis, the OCC invoked a clause from the 1863 National Bank Act to issue formal opinions preempting all state predatory lending laws, thereby rendering them inoperative. The OCC also promulgated new rules that prevented states from enforcing any of their own consumer protection laws against national banks. The federal government's actions were so egregious and so unprecedented that all 50 state attorneys general, and all 50 state banking superintendents, actively fought the new rules. (emphasis mine)

The Bush Administration intervened to stop the states from investigating and enforcing their own predatory lending laws, which I think just might qualify as an egregious breach of the sacredness of “states’ rights” in GOP doctrine, eh?

But as we all now know, hubris brought Spitzer’s gubernatorial reign down (but he’s not out, have you seen him on CNN recently?) with the high-priced call girl scandal he was ensnared in just a few weeks after he wrote his Valentine’s Day article.  Let me make a quick aside at this point and say in no uncertain terms that I am not arguing that what Spitzer did was by any means acceptable.  Now, that being said, could there be any coincidence between his article broadcasting the Bush Administration’s outrageous actions on behalf of predatory lenders and his being outed as a john?  Let’s look a bit further:

Spitzer's fall was all the more stunning because he had been elected in November 2006 with 69 percent of the vote, the most ever in a New York gubernatorial race, and some Democrats even said he could possibly become the country's first Jewish president.

But his life and career began unraveling last week, when federal agents, acting on wiretaps, busted a high-class New Jersey-based prostitution ring, called Emperors Club VIP, and arrested four people. The criminal complaint listed an anonymous "Client 9," who was heard calling the escort service to arrange for a call girl named "Kristen" to meet him for a Feb. 13 tryst at Washington's Mayflower Hotel.

The client allegedly paid for the woman's train fare from New York to Washington and $4,300 for a two-hour session. Law enforcement sources confirmed this week that Client 9 was Spitzer.

--

There are also questions about the identities of the other wealthy clients of the Emperors Club VIP. The criminal complaint unsealed last week made reference to 10 clients without naming them; only Spitzer has been identified as Client 9. (all emphases mine)

Interesting that Spitzer was the only client whose name was leaked identified to the press, especially because he was later cleared of all charges:

The details of Mr. Spitzer’s financial transactions — how he took money from his personal accounts and sent it to the prostitution ring’s front company, QAT International — were always the crucial questions in the case. Prosecutors, from the start, were trying to determine whether there was ample evidence to charge Mr. Spitzer with a crime called structuring, which makes it illegal to conduct financial transactions in a way intended to conceal their source and purpose.

Michael Horowitz, another former chief of the public corruption unit in Manhattan, said that it was rare for prosecutors to pursue a structuring charge without a substantive underlying crime like money laundering or drug trafficking. He suggested that a prostitution case, which the government was unlikely to prosecute anyway, was not enough to undergird a structuring charge. (emphasis mine)

So the government knew that Spitzer’s crimes were not going to lead him to prison, and yet it is uncommon for sitting politicians involved in sex scandals to be forced out of office, look at South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, US Senator from Nevada John Ensign, and US Senator from Louisiana David Vitter (who was also caught in a prostitution scandal – the DC Madam case).  None of them were forced out of their jobs; do the rules bend when Republicans are involved, or was Spitzer more the exception to the rule in being forced out?  And why does it appear that some people in high places decided to drop the axe on Spitzer to muzzle him just after he publicly charged that the Bush Administration aided and abetted predatory lenders?

That line of questioning leads us back to the now-unfolding foreclosure fraud situation, explained in great detail here by Mike Konczal of the Roosevelt Institute.  The banks, as we all are well aware, benefited from a massive infusion of taxpayer largess in the form of the bailout (TARP) of October 2008 (remember it was Bush’s bailout folks, no matter what the Tea Party may wrongly claim) and that the bailouts served to rehabilitate a good chunk of the banks’ balance sheets.  But the banks still were forced to contend with the problem of widespread despair in the housing markets, and with the fact that many of the houses that they owned were, in fact, overvalued assets due to the nationwide plunge in home values. 

Because the banks have gotten “too-big-to-fail” (which is what necessitated the bailouts in the first place) as I’ve discussed in a previous posting at length, the government has continued to help prop the banks up, lest the entire financial apparatus collapse entirely.  Programs such as the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) that are ostensibly designed to incentivize banks to help homeowners renegotiate their mortgages on more favorable terms, have been shown to serve the banks’ interests entirely.  From a report by Steve Waldman on a meeting Geithner and other top Treasury officials had with financial bloggers over the summer:

The conversation next turned to housing and HAMP. On HAMP, officials were surprisingly candid. The program has gotten a lot of bad press in terms of its Kafka-esque qualification process and its limited success in generating mortgage modifications under which families become able and willing to pay their debt. Officials pointed out that what may have been an agonizing process for individuals was a useful palliative for the system as a whole. Even if most HAMP applicants ultimately default, the program prevented an outbreak of foreclosures exactly when the system could have handled it least. There were murmurs among the bloggers of “extend and pretend”, but I don’t think that’s quite right. This was extend-and-don’t-even-bother-to-pretend. The program was successful in the sense that it kept the patient alive until it had begun to heal. And the patient of this metaphor was not a struggling homeowner, but the financial system, a.k.a. the banks. Policymakers openly judged HAMP to be a qualified success because it helped banks muddle through what might have been a fatal shock. I believe these policymakers conflate, in full sincerity, incumbent financial institutions with “the system”, “the economy”, and “ordinary Americans”. Treasury officials are not cruel people. I’m sure they would have preferred if the program had worked out better for homeowners as well. But they have larger concerns, and from their perspective, HAMP has helped to address those. (all emphases mine)

There you go, policymakers playing kabuki with taxpayers in order to help keep the banks who got us into this mess alive…what a grotesque situation!

And yet, after all of this has happened, some are saying, like former financial executive RJ Eskow, that the foreclosure fraud scandal may just show that the emperor (the banks in this case) has no clothes:

The foreclosure fraud scandal is a big deal (or a big "effin'" deal, as Joe Biden might say). But its real significance is an even bigger deal. Foreclosure fraud is one domino, and if it falls others will follow. The result could be an end to the "invisible bailout" -- the one you never hear about, the one that forces millions of people to subsidize bad lending practices in order to prop up Wall Street.

The invisible bailout is the reason why the government isn't pushing to freeze foreclosures. If the foreclosure process is halted and lending practices are thoroughly investigated, it might eventually force bankers to own up to their own lawlessness -- and write down billions of dollars in artificially inflated assets. How are they going to pay themselves record bonuses if that happens?

This is where it gets really ugly – our somewhat/perhaps/maybe/kinda recovering economy could well be plunged into another, perhaps deeper financial downturn if widespread fraud is in fact found among the banks’ mortgages.  If nobody knows who rightfully holds the title to a home, how could they possibly know its market value?  The entire financial system has been rebuilt (if one could even call it that) after the 2008 financial crisis on a foundation of nearly worthless and potentially fraudulent mortgages, and “irresponsible homeowners” have been to blame for not only their own troubles, but those of the entire financial system.  Eskow continues:

Nobel prizewinner Joseph Stiglitz, who also bears the distinction of having been correct about the housing bubble, thinks it's time for the banks to write down the excess value of these loans. As Stiglitz observes, that will be painful for the banks in the short term, although it would be "nothing in comparison to the suffering they have inflicted on people throughout the rest of the global economy."

But the administration's reluctant to do that. That's why we heard such tepid remarks from the White House about the foreclosure fraud scandal over the weekend. If the foreclosure fraud issue is pursued too aggressively, it throws 41% of all expected housing sales into question. It raises even more questions about the ownership of millions of loans in good standing, potentially giving homeowners leverage to renegotiate based on the actual market value of their homes. And it reopens the issue of "writedowns."

Illegal submission of foreclosure documents was part of a larger cover-up. People need to be arrested for it -- but that, of course, would open up a larger can of worms. The legal process could very well reveal the extent of the title problem, as well as other potentially widespread criminal practices.

So there you have it folks, the states are now going after the big Wall Street fish again, perhaps following up on the forestalled investigations they were set to launch back in 2003 when all of this mortgage madness could have been nipped in the bud.  In case you are in any doubt about just what was produced by the collusion between government and Wall Street, Ezra Klein interviewed financial analyst Janet Tavakoli last week, and here’s her response when being asked what this all means for the banks (after calling this crisis “the biggest fraud in the history of the capital markets”):

When we had the financial crisis, the first thing the banks did was run to Congress and ask for accounting relief. They asked to be able to avoid pricing this stuff at the price where people would buy them. So no one can tell you the size of the hole in these balance sheets. We’ve thrown a lot of money at it. TARP was just the tip of the iceberg. We’ve given them guarantees on debts, low-cost funding from the Fed. But a lot of these mortgages just cannot be saved. Had we acknowledged this problem in 2005, we could’ve cleaned it up for a few hundred billion dollars. But we didn’t. Banks were lying and committing fraud, and our regulators were covering them and so a bad problem has become a hellacious one. (emphases mine)

As Eskow said above, the bankers just want to make it seem that they’ve actually produced some semblance of profits for their shareholders so they can continue to collect their exorbitant bonuses.  That greed leads the bankers to convince regulators to help them avoid realizing the losses they should rightfully incur for such terrible investments.  That dynamic then leads to continued uncertainty in the market, which causes the banks not to lend to businesses, individuals, or even to each other. Greed has never run so rampant in the streets, and it is now manifestly clear that it is the greed of the privileged few that is genuinely handcuffing any sort of economic recovery for the rest of us.  Government regulators have bought into this system for years – when Eliot Spitzer began to make a stink, he was publicly disgraced and muzzled quickly, lest his accusations about the rotting core of the financial system lead people to look too closely so that the house of cards fell. 

Government has been complicit in this scheme since day one, which is the real reason none of the fraudsters have been put in prison yet – the circle would likely extend too widely and might ensnare some of those who are supposed to be on the “good” team.  We can’t have change in this country until we have an honest accounting of the mistakes of the past, and I surely hope that the state Attorneys General are allowed to run their investigations as they see fit, with no White House interference.  The President’s actions in confronting this crisis, including the actions of his deputies, will show just how committed to change he really is.