Saturday, June 15, 2013

Former Employees: Bank of America Regularly Lied to Homeowners

From ProPublica

Bank of America employees regularly lied to homeowners seeking loan modifications, denied their applications for made-up reasons, and were rewarded for sending homeowners to foreclosure, according to sworn statements by former bank employees.

The employee statements were filed late last week in federal court in Boston as part of a multi-state class action suit brought on behalf of homeowners who sought to avoid foreclosure through the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) but say they had their cases botched by Bank of America.

In a statement, a Bank of America spokesman said that each of the former employees’ statements is “rife with factual inaccuracies” and that the bank will respond more fully in court next month. He said that Bank of America had modified more loans than any other bank and continues to “demonstrate our commitment to assisting customers who are at risk of foreclosure.”

Six of the former employees worked for the bank, while one worked for a contractor. They range from former managers to front-line employees, and all dealt with homeowners seeking to avoid foreclosure through the government’s program.

When the Obama administration launched HAMP in 2009, Bank of America was by far the largest mortgage servicer in the program. It had twice as many loans eligible as the next largest bank. The former employees say that, in response to this crush of struggling homeowners, the bank often misled them and denied applications for bogus reasons.

Sometimes, homeowners were simply denied en masse in a procedure called a “blitz,”said William Wilson, Jr., who worked as an underwriter and manager from 2010 until 2012. As part of the modification applications, homeowners were required to send in documents with their financial information. About twice a month, Wilson said, the bank ordered that all files with documentation 60 or more days old simply be denied. “During a blitz, a single team would decline between 600 and 1,500 modification files at a time,” he said in the sworn declaration. To justify the denials, employees produced fictitious reasons, for instance saying the homeowner had not sent in the required documents, when in actuality, they had.

Such mass denials may have occurred at other mortgage servicers. Chris Wyatt, a former employee of Goldman Sachs subsidiary Litton Loan Servicing, told ProPublica in 2012 that the company periodically conducted “denial sweeps” to reduce the backlog of homeowners. A spokesman for Goldman Sachs said at the time that the company disagreed with Wyatt’s account but offered no specifics.

Five of the former Bank of America employees stated that they were encouraged to mislead customers. “We were told to lie to customers and claim that Bank of America had not received documents it had requested,” said Simone Gordon, who worked at the bank from 2007 until early 2012 as a senior collector. “We were told that admitting that the Bank received documents ‘would open a can of worms,’” she said, since the bank was required to underwrite applications within 30 days of receiving documents and didn’t have adequate staff. Wilson said each underwriter commonly had 400 outstanding applications awaiting review.

Anxious homeowners calling in for an update on their application were frequently told that their applications were “under review” when, in fact, nothing had been done in months, or the application had already been denied, four former employees said.

Employees were rewarded for denying applications and referring customers to foreclosure, according to the statements. Gordon said collectors “who placed ten or more accounts into foreclosure in a given month received a $500 bonus.” Other rewards included gift cards to retail stores or restaurants, said Gordon and Theresa Terrelonge, who worked as a collector from 2009 until 2010.

This is certainly not the first time the bank has faced such allegations. In 2010, Arizona and Nevada sued Bank of America for mishandling modification applications. Last year, Bank of America settled a lawsuit brought by a former employee of a bank contractor who accused the bank of mishandling HAMP applications.

The bank has also settled two major actions by the federal government related to its foreclosure practices. In early 2012, 49 state attorneys general and the federal government crafted a settlement that, among other things, provided cash payments to Bank of America borrowers who had lost their home to foreclosure. Authorities recently began mailing out those checks of about $1,480 for each homeowner. Earlier this year, federal bank regulators arrived at a settlement that also resulted in payments to affected borrowers, though most received $500 or less.

The law suit with the explosive new declarations from former employees is a consolidation of 29 separate suits against the bank from across the country and is seeking class action certification. It covers homeowners who received a trial modification, made all of their required payments, but who did not get a timely answer from the bank on whether they’d receive a permanent modification. Under HAMP, the trial period was supposed to last three months, but frequently dragged on for much longer, particularly during the height of the foreclosure crisis in 2009 and 2010.

ProPublica began detailing the failures of HAMP from the start of the program in 2009. HAMP turned out to be a perfect storm created by banks that refused to adequately fund their mortgage servicing operations and lax government oversight.

Bank of America was far slower to modify loans than other servicers, as other analyses we’ve cited have shown. A study last year found that about 800,000 homeowners would have qualified for HAMP if Bank of America and the other largest servicers had done an adequate job of handling homeowner applications.
Paul Kiel is a reporter for ProPublica, an independent, nonprofit newsroom.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Treasury Department Extends Mortgage Relief, Refinancing Program

The White House announced that it is extending the Making Home Affordable Program, a refinancing program that has helped home owners lower their monthly mortgage payments and obtain loan modifications. The program, originally set to expire at the end of this year, has been extended two years until Dec. 31, 2015.

The Making Home Affordable Program encompasses the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), among other consumer protections.

More than 1.1 million home owners have received permanent loan modifications on their mortgages through HAMP as of March 2013. The median savings of borrowers who have participated in HAMP is $546 a month -- or 38 percent of their previous payment, according to the Treasury Department.

The program encourages lenders to lower monthly mortgage payments of struggling home owners by either reducing the interest rate on the loan or forgiving some of the principal.

“The housing market is gaining steam, but many home owners are still struggling,” said Jacob J. Lew, the Treasury secretary. “Extending the program for two years will benefit many additional families, while maintaining clear standards and accountability for an important part of the mortgage industry.”

The mortgage program was introduced by President Obama in early 2009. Banks and other lenders were slow to participate in the program, however. The government has since tweaked the program to allow more borrowers to qualify for it, after spending only $5.2 billion through March of the $29.9 billion allocated for HAMP.

Source: U.S. Department of Treasury and “Federal Program for Distressed Home Owners Is Extended,” The New York Times (May 30, 2013

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Short Sales Losing Favor With Lenders?

Lenders may be less inclined to approve short sales due to rising home prices, according to a new report by RealtyTrac.

During the first quarter, short sales posted a 35 percent drop compared to year-ago levels.

"The decrease in short sales was a bit of surprise given that 11 million home owners nationwide still owe more on their homes than they're worth," says Daren Blomquist, spokesman for RealtyTrac.

"Rising home prices are taking away the incentive for short sales on the part of both home owners and lenders."

Foreclosure prices are on the rise, increasing 28 percent in the first quarter. The banks may be realizing they won’t necessarily lose a lot more money by letting a home go into foreclosure instead, Blomquist says.

However, foreclosure sales have been plummeting too, reaching their lowest levels since early 2008. Foreclosure sales made up 21 percent of the total market during the first quarter, which is down from 25 percent one year ago, according to RealtyTrac.

Foreclosure sales peaked in early 2009, when they made up 45 percent of all homes sold nationally.

Still, foreclosures are making up the biggest bulk of sales in certain states, such as Georgia (where 35 percent of sales were foreclosures in the first quarter), Illinois (32 percent), and California (30 percent), according to RealtyTrac.

Source: “Foreclosure sales fall to lowest level since 2008,” CNNMoney (May 30, 2013)

Some Home Owners Chip Away at Mortgage With Credit Card

Wells Fargo’s credit card, the Home Rebate card, has allowed its customers to pay down $50 million in mortgage balances since the card’s debut in 2007.

Every purchase a customer makes with the card counts toward a rebate credited to the principal of the borrower’s Wells Fargo mortgage.

Over a 30-year time period, the card has the potential to help chip away at a home owner’s mortgage balance by reducing the mortgage interest they owe by potentially “thousands of dollars” as well as lowering the number of payments required, Wells Fargo officials say.

As a recent HousingWire article reports: “Wells Fargo claims a cardholder with a $150,000 mortgage who spends $1,500 a month on the Home Rebate Card could shorten their payment schedule by more than a year.”

Source: “Credit Card Allows Borrowers to Simultaneously Pay off a Mortgage, Daily Bills,” HousingWire (May 29, 2013)

Friday, May 24, 2013

Short Sales Routinely Show In Credit Reports As Foreclosures


May 17, 2013, 8:20 p.m.
WASHINGTON — Are large numbers of homeowners who have negotiated short sales with lenders at risk because of a startling omission in the American credit system? Do their credit reports and scores indicate that they were foreclosed upon, rather than having negotiated a mutually agreeable resolution with their lender?

The answer appears to be yes, and recently two federal agencies — the Federal Trade Commission and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — were asked to investigate why. The reality is this: The credit reporting system now in place does not have a separate code that distinguishes a short sale from a foreclosure. Yet there are crucial differences between the two.

In a short sale, the bank approves the sale of the house to a new buyer at a mutually acceptable price. Any unpaid remaining loan balance not covered by the sale proceeds may then be either partially or fully forgiven. The bank is an active participant throughout the process, negotiating for a higher price and higher repayment of principal from the original borrower.

In a foreclosure, the bank is essentially left holding the bag. The owners walk away at some point or live in the property rent-free until they're evicted. Frequently there is damage to the house left by the departing owners, sometimes extensive. There is little or no cooperation between them and the bank.
Both transactions are serious, negative credit events for the borrower. After all, the mortgage wasn't fully repaid. But the financial losses generated by a foreclosure typically are more severe for the lender than by a short sale.

Not only are there extended periods of nonpayment by the borrower but there are also substantial property management expenses, renovation costs, local property taxes and insurance while the house is being readied for resale. In some parts of the country, the average time to complete a foreclosure has exceeded two years.

The nation's major sources of mortgage financing — Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration — all recognize the differences between short sales and foreclosures in their underwriting policies regarding new mortgages. Fannie Mae generally won't approve a new mortgage application by borrowers with a foreclosure on their credit report for up to seven years, but will consider lending to people who were involved in short sales, and who otherwise qualify in terms of recent credit behavior and available down payment, in as little as two years.

But if short sales routinely show up in credit reports coded as foreclosures, borrowers who might be able to qualify for a new mortgage two or three years after a short sale find themselves shut out of the market. George Albright, who completed a short sale on his home in New Port Richey, Fla., in 2010, has been trying for months to get through the hoops for a Fannie Mae conventional mortgage.

According to his mortgage broker, Pam Marron, Albright has a solid 720 FICO credit score, 20% down payment cash and more than adequate monthly income and reserves for a new home. But he keeps getting rejected because his credit report indicates a foreclosure, not a short sale.

That's not unusual, Marron said, since there is no specific code to identify short sales. In a highly automated and strict underwriting environment, lenders go by the codes, according to Marron, harming creditworthy applicants like Albright.

"I did my time," Albright said. "I'm ready to move on," but because of the inadequacy of current credit reporting practices "I'm still paying more for rent than I'd be paying on a new mortgage."

After a Capitol Hill hearing May 7 on credit reporting issues, Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) sent requests to both the FTC and the CFPB to investigate what he called the "disturbing practice" of misidentifying short sales, and to "penalize responsible parties in the mortgage- and credit-reporting industries, if they don't fix this coding problem within 90 days."

Nelson said real estate industry data indicate that there have been 2.2 million short sales nationwide during the last several years. Consumers who opted for a short-sale route rather than a more costly foreclosure are now being blocked from "reentry into the housing market," he said, thereby "stifling economic recovery for all homeowners."

Officials of the main trade group for the credit reporting industry, the Consumer Data Industry Assn., were not available for comment on Nelson's short-sales complaint to the federal agencies.

kenharney@earthlink.net.
Distributed by Washington Post Writers Group.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Freddie Releases New Loan Program Early

Daily Real Estate News | Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Mortgage giant Freddie Mac announced that it will make a new streamlined loan modification program for delinquent borrowers available now, instead of holding off the launch date to July 1 as originally planned.

Mortgage servicers will be able to offer a streamlined modification to borrowers who are at least 90 days late on their Freddie-owned or guaranteed mortgage. Borrowers cannot be more than 720 days delinquent on their loan, however, to qualify. Also, the loan must be at least a year old.

The new program will waive any document requirements for borrowers to receive the modification. The borrowers' modification becomes permanent after he or she makes three on-time payments during a three-month trial period.

"Today, Freddie Mac is giving a green light to its mortgage servicers to speed up financial relief for potentially thousands of families with delinquent mortgages across the nation," Freddie Mac said in a statement. “Freddie Mac is focused on adding momentum to the housing recovery by giving distressed borrowers more options to avoid foreclosure."

Source: “Freddie Mac speeds up availability of streamlined loan mods,” HousingWire (May 13, 2013)

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Mortgage Relief Checks Go Out, Only to Bounce

New York Times, April 18, 2013

By JESSICA SILVER-GREENBERG and BEN PROTESS

11:25 p.m. | Updated

When the bank account is running dry and the mortgage payment is coming due, the phrase “insufficient funds” is the last thing you want to hear.

Now imagine hearing those two words when trying to cash a long-awaited check from the same bank that foreclosed on you.

Many struggling homeowners got exactly that this week when they lined up to take their cut of a $3.6 billion settlement with the nation’s largest banks — lenders accused of wrongful evictions and other abuses.

Ronnie Edward, whose home was sold in a foreclosure auction, waited three years for his $3,000 check. When it arrived on Tuesday, he raced to his local bank in Tennessee, only to learn that the funds “were not available.”

Mr. Edward, 38, was taken aback. “Is this for real?” he asked.

It is unclear how many of the 1.4 million homeowners who were mailed the first round of payments covered under the foreclosure settlement have had problems with their checks. But housing advocates from California to New York and even regulators say that in recent days frustrated homeowners have bombarded them with complaints and questions.

The mishap is just the latest setback to troubled homeowners. It took more than two years to resolve a federal investigation into the foreclosure abuses. Even after the settlement in January, the checks were delayed for weeks.

“It’s the perfect ending for such a debacle,” said Michael Redman, a paralegal who runs 4closurefraud.org, a Web site for victims of foreclosure abuse. He said he had received 15 e-mails on Tuesday from homeowners whose checks bounced.

The first round of the settlement checks was mailed last week. In recent days, problems arose at Rust Consulting, a firm chosen to distribute the checks, people briefed on the matter said. After collecting the $3.6 billion from the banks, these people said, Rust failed to move the money into a central account at Huntington National Bank in Ohio, the bank that issued the checks to homeowners.

Many banks, after spotting a phone number for Huntington on the back of the checks and confirming the legitimacy of the money, agreed to process the payments. But some credit unions, check cashers and community banks apparently looked only at the account number on the unfamiliar-looking checks and ultimately found a zero balance, the people briefed on the matter said.

Rust says it does not know how many homeowners encountered the check mishap, adding only that it “was aware of 12 situations.”

Still, banking regulators, frustrated with missteps at Rust, urged the consulting firm to shore up the account Tuesday. Now, regulators say the problems are resolved, and are urging homeowners to try again. Officials worry that homeowners, weary from a process that has stretched on for years, will give up.

In a statement, the Federal Reserve assured the public that “Rust subsequently corrected problems,” adding that the Fed would “continue to monitor the payments closely.”

Rust, an oft-used middleman for class action lawsuits and government settlements, has faced similar concerns previously. In 2006, when it helped distribute payments from a class-action case involving title insurance costs, some consumers complained that the checks bounced.

Some officials say it is common for Rust to keep accounts empty. Rather than lose access to the money, the firm often fills requests for payment at the end of each day. The officials have questioned whether Rust hangs on to the cash to earn interest throughout the day. Others noted that it may be difficult to move a sum as large as $3.6 billion into a single account.

“We apologize to anyone who experienced problems trying to cash their checks,” a senior vice president at Rust, James Parks, said in a statement. “We are working hard and communicating with the banking regulators, the servicers, and other banks to ensure those issues are not repeated.”

Rust is authorizing its employees to arrange conference calls with Huntington National Bank to provide outside verification that the cash is available, a company spokesman said.

Housing advocates remain wary, however. The Northside Bank Tenant Association in Boston held a meeting on Wednesday where housing advocates addressed questions from frustrated homeowners. Also in Massachusetts, Lynn United for Change said it had received calls from at least six homeowners in the last two days.

Regulators have said that, by the end of Wednesday, homeowners successfully cashed or deposited about 342,000 checks, or roughly 25 percent of the total checks issued. That leaves more than 1 million people who have either delayed cashing the check or have had problems doing so.

The homeowners unable to cash the checks are not the only ones languishing. Many are still mired in bureaucratic delays, like Nancy Brown, of Fredericksburg, Va., who recently learned that her check will be made out jointly to her and her ex-husband, whom she has lost contact with. As a result, she fears being unable to collect the money.

Other homeowners like Yanko Matias, of Lynn, Mass., say they are afraid to cash the checks. Mr. Matias, 37, was initially wary that the $500 he received was just another empty promise — or worse, a scam.

“I just want my house back,” Mr. Matias said.

For Mr. Edward, the Tennessee man, the check mishap caps a foreclosure “nightmare” that began in 2010 when a neighbor called to tell him that his home was being advertised for foreclosure auction in the local paper. Mr. Edward, a retail supervisor who left the home later that year, said it was the first he learned of the foreclosure.

With the check cashing denied on Tuesday, Mr. Edward remarked: “This is the latest runaround.”



This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: April 17, 2013

An earlier version of this article misstated the name of a company in one instance. It is Rust Consulting, not Rust Consultant.

Friday, April 12, 2013

HARP Program Extended Another 2 Years

The Home Affordable Refinance Program — a government refinancing program for underwater home owners — will be expanded for another two years, the Federal Housing Finance Agency announces. HARP was originally set to expire Dec. 31, 2013, but will now be extended to the end of 2015.

"More than 2 million home owners have refinanced through HARP, proving it a useful tool for reducing risk," says FHFA acting director Edward DeMarco.

Home owners eligible to apply for refinancing under HARP must have a Fannie Mae- or Freddie Mac-backed mortgage that was guaranteed on or before May 31, 2009, must be current on their loan, and must have a current loan-to-value ratio more than 80 percent.

Source: “HARP mortgage refinancing program extended by 2 years,” Chicago Tribune (April 11, 2013)

Foreclosure Errors Found To Be More Widespread



About 30 percent of more than 3.9 million households whose properties were foreclosed on in 2009 and 2010 nearly lost their homes due to potential bank errors, government regulators said.

Nearly 1.2 million borrowers faced foreclosure notices even after not having defaulted on their mortgage, being protected under federal laws, or having been in good standing under bank-approved plans to either modify their loan or temporarily delay their payments, according to a report from the Huffington Post. Of those borrowers, more than 244,000 did eventually lose their homes, new government data shows.

The government breaks out the data more fully of those who faced foreclosure due to errors, including:
  • Nearly 700 borrowers who faced foreclosure during 2009 and 2010 never defaulted on their loans.
  • More than 28,000 faced foreclosure who were protected under federal bankruptcy laws.
  • About 1,100 who faced foreclosure had been meeting all the requirements of forbearance plans that their lender had agreed to.
  • About 1,600 borrowers who faced foreclosure were protected by the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act of 2003, which bans foreclosures on active-duty military personnel and their families.
Payments have started being mailed this week to many of those affected, after about a dozen financial institutions agreed to make $3.6 billion in cash payouts to more than 4 million borrowers who potentially faced wrongful foreclosures from 2009 and 2010.

Source: “Foreclosure Review Finds Potentially Widespread Errors,” Huffington Post (April 9, 2013)

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

4.2M Borrowers to Start Receiving Foreclosure Payouts

About 4.2 million eligible home owners who underwent foreclosure in 2009 and 2010 will start receiving cash payments on Friday, ranging from $300 to $125,000. The payouts are part of a $3.6 billion settlement over foreclosure mishandlings reached among 13 mortgage servicers and the government.

Military service members whose homes were repossessed while they were on active duty will receive the largest checks — $125,000. The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act prevents military personnel from being foreclosed on while on active duty.

Other home owners will receive payments from servicers that charged unfair fees or failed to do a loan modification.

Originally, the 13 servicers had agreed to conduct independent foreclosure reviews for each borrower, but the reviews proved too costly and time consuming, says Brian Hubbard, a spokesman for OCC. Also, only about 439,000 borrowers had asked for a review out of the some 4 million who were eligible.

In January, lenders revised the settlement terms to include all borrowers in default in 2009 and 2010 to be eligible for the payments, Hubbard says. For those borrowers who did request independent foreclosure reviews, they will receive double the compensation in most cases.

The following servicers are participating in the settlement: Aurora, Bank of America, Chase, Citibank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, MetLife Bank, Morgan Stanley, PNC Mortgage, Sovereign Bank, SunTrust, U.S. Bank, and Wells Fargo. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley will issue their payments to customers at a later date. All other servicers will start issuing payments to customers this week and will be completed by July.

Source: “Payments coming for borrowers in $3.6B foreclosure settlement,” CNNMoney (April 9, 2013)