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Mortgage Fraud News
Tuesday, 12 May 2009 |
Minyanville: Subprime Lending is Back with a Vengeance
This is truly a shell game of the most amazing magnitude and we are simply continuing the practices that got us here. Because Americans are not savers and there are not enough marginal buyers we literally are turning renters into homeowners and they need to bring nothing to the table ... again. So they will have no problem walking away... again. This is the latest outrage via an excellent piece at Minyanville... that $8000 credit we were lauding as an incentive? Well it is no longer being used as it was intended to be... i.e. borrower comes to government with their 3% down and then gets the $8000 the following year. |
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New York Times Editorial: When Builders Build Bad Loans |
Thursday, 23 April 2009 |
When Builders Build Bad Loans
The billâs sponsor, Assemblyman V. Manuel Pérez, says the problem is that many consumers who bought homes from corporate builders ended up caught in a closed loop: forced by hard-sell tactics and deception to use the buildersâ in-house mortgage and title companies. The industry promotes the practice as a one-stop-shopping convenience that saves time and money. Too many homeowners found it did neither. They were pressured into buying overpriced homes with interest-only loans that they didnât understand and couldnât handle. When the bubble burst in Southern California, that was it for their dreams and homes. |
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NBC Dateline Series on Mortgage Fraud |
Monday, 23 March 2009 |
DATELINE: INSIDE THE FINANCIAL FIASCO SERIES BEGINS
For the first hour of a three-part investigative series, "Inside the Financial Fiasco: Mortgage Madness," NBC's Chris Hansen reports on how risky home loans helped cause a chain reaction that led to failures on Wall Street and the near collapse of the American economy. The report also includes exclusive accounts from insiders and whistleblowers speaking out for the first time.Check TheHansenFiles.com afterwards for web-exclusive material. See NBC main page... |
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Bad Guys at Countrywide Profit on Good Ole Mortgage Fraud |
Friday, 06 March 2009 |
Ex-Leaders of Countrywide Profit From Bad Loan
So it may come as a surprise that a dozen former top Countrywide executives now stand to make millions from the home mortgage mess. Stanford L. Kurland, Countrywideâs former president, and his team have been buying up delinquent home mortgages that the government took over from other failed banks, sometimes for pennies on the dollar. They get a piece of what they can collect. âIt has been very successful â very strong,â John Lawrence, the companyâs head of loan servicing, told Mr. Kurland one recent morning in a glass-walled boardroom here at PennyMacâs spacious headquarters, opened last year in the same Los Angeles suburb where Countrywide once flourished. |
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Countrywide Mega Million Stettlements, VA, WVA, PA, TN, |
Sunday, 08 February 2009 |
State Law- Predatory Lending & Mortgage Fraud
State AG's Make Countrywide Pay - When will Board Members, the masterminds be held accountable. Countrywide sold subprime loans, including adjustable rate mortgages ("ARMs") with teaser rates that were unaffordable and unconscionable to West Virginia consumers. These loans exposed consumers to foreclosure and loss of their homes. Countrywide also used unfair and deceptive acts or practices to sell loans and service loans. Read more... |
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Bank Foreclosured Hit Homebuilders Hard |
Friday, 02 January 2009 |
Builders with unsold homes get little leniency from bankers
In his 35 years as a home builder, Bobby Lunceford earned plenty of accolades. Kennesaw Citizen of the Year in 2000, home builder of the year in 2003 and outstanding Georgian, according to a resolution approved by state lawmakers in 2004. None of that mattered, however, when Lunceford tried to work with five banks to save his business, Bob Lunceford Properties, after home sales plummeted. He asked the banks to suspend loan payments until his homes sold, at which time the loans would be paid off. Instead, âthe instant we ran out of money all but one bank began foreclosure proceedings,â Lunceford, 56, recalled. He and his wife, Becky, lost their home, their cars, their life savings and their business, and now live in a rented house. |
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NY Times Exposes: Washington Mutual was all about saying yes |
Thursday, 01 January 2009 |
Saying Yes, WaMu Built Empire on Shaky Loans
We hope to do to this industry what Wal-Mart did to theirs, Starbucks did to theirs, Costco did to theirs and Loweâs-Home Depot did to their industry. And I think if weâve done our job, five years from now youâre not going to call us a bank.â As a supervisor at a Washington Mutual mortgage processing center, John D. Parsons was accustomed to seeing baby sitters claiming salaries worthy of college presidents, and schoolteachers with incomes rivaling stockbrokersâ. He rarely questioned them. A real estate frenzy was under way and WaMu, as his bank was known, was all about saying yes. Yet even by WaMuâs relaxed standards, one mortgage four years ago raised eyebrows. The borrower was claiming a six-figure income and an unusual profession: mariachi singer. Mr. Parsons could not verify the singerâs income, so he had him photographed in front of his home dressed in his mariachi outfit. The photo went into a WaMu file. Approved. |
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HUD to Bans Incentives for Using Affiliated Lenders |
Wednesday, 17 December 2008 |
New for 2009: HUD Bans Incentives for Using Affiliated Lenders
When Housing and Urban Development Secretary Steve Preston announced the departmentâs âlong-anticipated mortgage reformsâ on Nov. 12, he said the changes to the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) would help consumers to shop for the lowest cost mortgage, avoid costly and potentially harmful loans, and save hundreds of dollars at the closing table. |
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USA TODAY Predicts Decades of Recovery |
Friday, 12 December 2008 |
Why home values may take decades to recover
As painful as the decline has been, history suggests home values still may have a long way to drop and may take decades to return to the heights of 2½ years ago... An extreme relaxation of lending standards inflated the housing bubble. "Shoddy underwriting on mortgages" is the primary cause of the housing crisis, says York, the Wachovia economist. "People got caught off-guard by how bad it was." Millions of home buyers â poor, rich and middle class â were approved to buy homes at prices that had been out-of-reach just a few years earlier. Lenders offered low introductory "teaser" rates on adjustable rate mortgages and approved borrowers based on artificially low mortgage payments, not the higher ones that took effect later. |
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NY Times: Unweaving the Web of Deceit and Organized Mortgage Crime |
Sunday, 07 December 2008 |
Debt Watchdogs: Tamed or Caught Napping?
Moodyâs, which judges the quality of debt that corporations and banks issue to raise money, had just graded a pool of securities underwritten by Countrywide Financial, the nationâs largest mortgage lender. But Countrywide complained that the assessment was too tough. The next day, Moodyâs changed its rating, even though no new and significant information had come to light, according to two people briefed on the change who requested anonymity to preserve their professional relationships. Moodyâs had assigned high grades to many securities containing Countrywide mortgages. Those securities and mortgages, issued during the lending spree of recent years, later soured â leaving investors with large losses and homeowners and communities struggling with foreclosures. Since the subprime mortgage troubles exploded into a full-blown financial crisis last year, the three top credit-rating agencies â Moodyâs, Standard & Poorâs and Fitch Ratings â have faced a firestorm of criticism about whether their rosy ratings of mortgage securities generated billions of dollars in losses to investors who relied on them. |
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Sunday, 07 December 2008 |
UsHousingMeltdown.org
The Independent Resource for Housing Market Information. Housing Research - USHM was created to provide the facts and the truth about the housing market. Our product is quality information. The agenda at USHM.org is to provide non-biased information and commentary whether the information leads to or supports buying houses and real estate or not. Read more... |
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