Let the Lawsuits Begin - Banks Brace For a Storm of Litigation
In an article in The San Francisco Chronicle in December 2007,
attorney Sean Olender suggested that the real reason for the subprime
bailout schemes being proposed by the U.S. Treasury Department was not
to keep strapped borrowers in their homes so much as to stave off a
spate of lawsuits against the banks. The plan then on the table was an
interest rate freeze on a limited number of subprime loans. Olender
wrote:
"The
sole goal of the freeze is to prevent owners of mortgage-backed
securities, many of them foreigners, from suing U.S. banks and forcing
them to buy back worthless mortgage securities at face value - right now
almost 10 times their market worth. The ticking time bomb in the U.S.
banking system is not resetting subprime mortgage rates. The real
problem is the contractual ability of investors in mortgage bonds to
require banks to buy back the loans at face value if there was fraud in
the origination process.
". . . The catastrophic consequences of
bond investors forcing originators to buy back loans at face value are
beyond the current media discussion. The loans at issue dwarf the
capital available at the largest U.S. banks combined, and investor
lawsuits would raise stunning liability sufficient to cause even the
largest U.S. banks to fail, resulting in massive taxpayer-funded
bailouts of Fannie and Freddie, and even FDIC . . . .
"What would
be prudent and logical is for the banks that sold this toxic waste to
buy it back and for a lot of people to go to prison. If they knew about
the fraud, they should have to buy the bonds back."1
The thought
could send a chill through even the most powerful of investment bankers,
including Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson himself, who was head of
Goldman Sachs during the heyday of toxic subprime paper-writing from
2004 to 2006. Mortgage fraud has not been limited to the representations
made to borrowers or on loan documents but is in the design of the
banks' "financial products" themselves. Among other design flaws is that
securitized mortgage debt has become so complex that ownership of the
underlying security has often been lost in the shuffle; and without a
legal owner, there is no one with standing to foreclose. That was the
procedural problem prompting Federal District Judge Christopher Boyko to
rule in October 2007 that Deutsche Bank did not have standing to
foreclose on 14 mortgage loans held in trust for a pool of
mortgage-backed securities holders.2 If large numbers of defaulting
homeowners were to contest their foreclosures on the ground that the
plaintiffs lacked standing to sue, trillions of dollars in
mortgage-backed securities (MBS) could be at risk. Irate securities
holders might then respond with litigation that could indeed threaten
the existence of the banking Goliaths.
STATES LEADING THE CHARGE
MBS
investors with the power to bring major lawsuits include state and
local governments, which hold substantial portions of their assets in
MBS and similar investments. A harbinger of things to come was a
complaint filed on February 1, 2008, by the State of Massachusetts
against investment bank Merrill Lynch, for fraud and misrepresentation
concerning about $14 million worth of subprime securities sold to the
city of Springfield. The complaint focused on the sale of "certain
esoteric financial instruments known as collateralized debt obligations
(CDOs) . . . which were unsuitable for the city and which, within months
after the sale, became illiquid and lost almost all of their market
value."3
The previous month, the city of Baltimore sued Wells
Fargo Bank for damages from the subprime debacle, alleging that Wells
Fargo had intentionally discriminated in selling high-interest mortgages
more frequently to blacks than to whites, in violation of federal law.4
Another
innovative suit filed in January 2008 was brought by Cleveland Mayor
Frank Jackson against 21 major investment banks, for enabling the
subprime lending and foreclosure crisis in his city. The suit targeted
the investment banks that fed off the mortgage market by buying subprime
mortgages from lenders and then "securitizing" them and selling them to
investors. City officials said they hoped to recover hundreds of
millions of dollars in damages from the banks, including lost taxes from
devalued property and money spent demolishing and boarding up thousands
of abandoned houses. The defendants included banking giants Deutsche
Bank, Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo, Bank of America and
Citigroup. They were charged with creating a "public nuisance" by
irresponsibly buying and selling high-interest home loans, causing
widespread defaults that depleted the city's tax base and left
neighborhoods in ruins.
"To me, this is no different than
organized crime or drugs," Jackson told the Cleveland newspaper The
Plain Dealer. "It has the same effect as drug activity in neighborhoods.
It's a form of organized crime that happens to be legal in many
respects." He added in a videotaped interview, "This lawsuit said,
'You're not going to do this to us anymore.'"5
The Plain Dealer
also interviewed Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann, who was considering a
state lawsuit against some of the same investment banks. "There's
clearly been a wrong done," he said, "and the source is Wall Street. I'm
glad to have some company on my hunt."
However, a funny thing
happened on the way to the courthouse. Like New York Governor Eliot
Spitzer, Attorney General Dann wound up resigning from his post in May
2008 after a sexual harassment investigation in his office.6 Before they
were forced to resign, both prosecutors were hot on the tail of the
banks, attempting to impose liability for the destructive wave of home
foreclosures in their jurisdictions.
But the hits keep on coming.
In June 2008, California Attorney General Jerry Brown sued Countrywide
Financial Corporation, the nation's largest mortgage lender, for causing
thousands of foreclosures by deceptively marketing risky loans to
borrowers. Among other things, the 46-page complaint alleged that:
"'Defendants
viewed borrowers as nothing more than the means for producing more
loans, originating loans with little or no regard to borrowers'
long-term ability to afford them and to sustain homeownership' . . .
"The
company routinely . . . 'turned a blind eye' to deceptive practices by
brokers and its own loan agents despite 'numerous complaints from
borrowers claiming that they did not understand their loan terms.'
".
. . Underwriters who confirmed information on mortgage applications
were 'under intense pressure . . . to process 60 to 70 loans per day,
making careful consideration of borrowers' financial circumstances and
the suitability of the loan product for them nearly impossible.'
"'Countrywide's high-pressure sales environment and compensation system encouraged serial refinancing of Countrywide loans.'"7
Similar
suits against Countrywide and its CEO have been filed by the states of
Illinois and Florida. These suits seek not only damages but rescission
of the loans, creating a potential nightmare for the banks.
AN AVALANCHE OF CLASS ACTIONS?
Massive
class action lawsuits by defrauded borrowers may also be in the works.
In a 2007 ruling in Wisconsin that is now on appeal, U.S. District Judge
Lynn Adelman held that Chevy Chase Bank had violated the Truth in
Lending Act by hiding the terms of an adjustable rate loan, and that
thousands of other Chevy Chase borrowers could join the plaintiffs in a
class action on that ground. According to a June 30, 2008 report in
Reuters:
"The judge transformed the case from a run-of-the-mill
class action to a potential nightmare for the U.S. banking industry by
also finding that the borrowers could force the bank to cancel, or
rescind, their loans. That decision was stayed pending an appeal to the
7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is expected to rule any day.
"The
idea of canceling tainted loans to stem a tide of foreclosures has
caught hold in other quarters; a lawsuit filed last week by the Illinois
attorney general asks a court to rescind or reform Countrywide
Financial mortgages originated under 'unfair or deceptive practices.'
".
. . The mortgage banking industry already faces pressure from state and
federal regulators, who have accused banks of lowering underwriting
standards and forcing some borrowers, through fraud, into costly
adjustable loans that the banks later bundled and sold as high-interest
investment vehicles."
The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) is a 1968
federal law designed to protect consumers against lending fraud by
requiring clear disclosure of loan terms and costs. It lets consumers
seek rescission or termination of a loan and the return of all interest
and fees when a lender is found to be in violation. The beauty of the
statute, says California bankruptcy attorney Cathy Moran, is that it
provides for strict liability: the aggrieved borrowers don't have to
prove they were personally defrauded or misled, or that they had actual
damages. Just the fact that the disclosures were defective gives them
the right to rescind and deprives the lenders of interest. In Moran's
small sample, at least half of the loans reviewed contained TILA
violations.8 If class actions are found to be available for rescission
of loans based on fraud in the disclosure process, the result could be a
flood of class suits against banks all over the country.9
SHIFTING THE LOSS BACK TO THE BANKS
Rescission
may be a remedy available not only for borrowers but for MBS investors.
Many loan sale contracts provide by their terms that lenders must take
back loans that default unusually quickly or that contain mistakes or
fraud. An avalanche of rescissions could be catastrophic for the banks.
Banks were moving loans off their books and selling them to investors in
order to allow many more loans to be made than would otherwise have
been allowed under banking regulations. The banking rules are complex,
but for every dollar of shareholder capital a bank has on its balance
sheet, it is supposed to be limited to about $10 in loans. The problem
for the banks is that when the process is reversed, the 10 to 1 rule can
work the other way: taking a dollar of bad debt back on a bank's books
can reduce its lending ability by a factor of 10. As explained in a BBC
News story citing Prof. Nouriel Roubini for authority:
"[S]ecuritisation
was key to helping banks avoid the regulators' 10:1 rule. To make their
risky loans appear attractive to buyers, banks used complex financial
engineering to repackage them so they looked super-safe and paid returns
well above what equivalent super-safe investments offered. Banks even
found ways to get loans off their balance sheets without selling them at
all. They devised bizarre new financial entities - called Special
Investment Vehicles or SIVs - in which loans could be held technically
and legally off balance sheet, out of sight, and beyond the scope of
regulators' rules. So, once again, SIVs made room on balance sheets for
banks to go on lending.
"Banks had got round regulators' rules by
selling off their risky loans, but because so many of the securitised
loans were bought by other banks, the losses were still inside the
banking system. Loans held in SIVs were technically off banks' balance
sheets, but when the value of the loans inside SIVs started to collapse,
the banks which set them up found that they were still responsible for
them. So losses from investments which might have appeared outside the
scope of the regulators' 10:1 rule, suddenly started turning up on bank
balance sheets. . . . The problem now facing many of the biggest lenders
is that when losses appear on banks' balance sheets, the regulator's
10:1 rule comes back into play because losses reduce a banks'
shareholder capital. 'If you have a $200bn loss, that reduced your
capital by $200bn, you have to reduce your lending by 10 times as much,'
[Prof. Roubini] explains. 'So you could have a reduction of total
credit to the economy of two trillion dollars.'"10
You could also
have some very bankrupt banks. The total equity of the top 100 U.S.
banks stood at $800 billion at the end of the third quarter of 2007.
Banking losses are currently expected to rise by as much as $450
billion, enough to wipe out more than half of the banks' capital bases
and leave many of them insolvent.11 If debtors were to deluge the courts
with viable defenses to their debts and mortgage-backed securities
holders were to challenge their securities, the result could be even
worse.
PUTTING THE GENIE BACK IN THE BOTTLE
So what would
happen if the mega-banks engaging in these irresponsible practices
actually went bankrupt? These banks are widely acknowledged to be at
fault, but they expect to be bailed out by the Federal Reserve or the
taxpayers because they are "too big to fail." The argument is that if
they were allowed to collapse, they would take the economy down with
them. That is the fear, but it is not actually true. We do need a ready
source of credit, so we need banks; but we don't need private banks. It
is a little-known, well-concealed fact that banks do not lend their own
money or even their depositors' money. They actually create the money
they lend; and creating money is properly a public, not a private,
function. The Constitution delegates the power to create money to
Congress and only to Congress.12 In making loans, banks are merely
extending credit; and the proper agency for extending "the full faith
and credit of the United States" is the United States itself.
There
is more at stake here than just the equitable treatment of injured
homeowners and investors in mortgage-backed securities. Banks and
investment houses are now squeezing the last drops of blood from the
U.S. government's credit rating, "borrowing" money and unloading
worthless paper on the government and the taxpayers. When the dust
settles, it will be the banks, investment brokerages and hedge funds for
wealthy investors that will be saved. The repossessed will become the
dispossessed; and unless your pension fund has invested in politically
well-connected hddge funds, you can probably kiss it goodbye, as
teachers in Florida already have.
But the banking genie is a
creature of the law, and the law can put it back in the bottle. The
imminent failure of some very big banks could provide the government
with an opportunity to regain control of its finances. More than that,
it could provide the funds for tackling otherwise unsolvable problems
now threatening to destroy our standard of living and our standing in
the world. The only solution that will be more than a temporary fix is
to take the power to create money away from private bankers and return
it to the people collectively. That is how it should have been all
along, and how it was in our early history; but we are so used to banks
being private corporations that we have forgotten the public banks of
our forebears. The best of the colonial American banking models was
developed in Benjamin Franklin's province of Pennsylvania, where a
government-owned bank issued money and lent it to farmers at 5 percent
interest. The interest was returned to the government, replacing taxes.
During the decades that that system was in operation, the province of
Pennsylvania operated without taxes, inflation or debt.
Rather
than bailing out bankrupt banks and sending them on their merry way, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) needs to take a close look
at the banks' books and put any banks found to be insolvent into
receivership. The FDIC (unlike the Federal Reserve) is actually a
federal agency, and it has the option of taking a bank's stock in return
for bailing it out, effectively nationalizing it. This is done in
Europe with bankrupt banks, and it was done in the United States with
Continental Illinois, the country's fourth largest bank, when it went
bankrupt in the 1990s.
A system of truly "national" banks could
issue "the full faith and credit of the United States" for public
purposes, including funding infrastructure, sustainable energy
development and health care.13 Publicly-issued credit could also be used
to relieve the subprime crisis. Local governments could use it to buy
up mortgages in default, compensating the MBS investors and freeing the
real estate for public disposal. The properties could then be rented
back to their occupants at reasonable r`tes, leaving people in their
homes without the windfall of acquiring a house without paying for it. A
program of lease-purchase might also be instituted. The proceeds would
be applied toward repaying the credit advanced to buy the mortgages,
balancing the money supply and preventing inflation.
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