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United States of Foreclosures: How 'Bankquakes' Shake People from Their Homes
The financial crisis started as a housing bubble with the financial industry convinced that home values never fall. How wrong they were even as they leveraged and securitized their investments to create a global crisis.
Now, brace yourself because not only is it not over, but in some respects it's just begun. There will be more foreclosures this year than last and as a result more suffering for American families.
Ed Harrison who monitors this industry for a website called Credit Write Downs sees a "second wave coming"--like a new tsunami in a industry that All of Obama's horses and all of Obama's Men have not been able to do anything about. The idea of challenging fraud and deception with a debt relief plan goes a bit too far for these self-styled centrists. Writes Harrison:
When the crisis first developed, in February of 2007, it was subprime where the worries were, with the lion's share of writedowns coming from mark-to-market losses in the securitisation market. However, subprime was a relatively small part of the overall market, making up 14% of loans outstanding at that time. Alt-A loans were 27% and prime loans were 57% respectively of loans outstanding according to a Banc of America Securities report.
As the 2004-2007 co-horts of Alt-A option ARM mortgages have started to reset and prime borrowers have come under stress, we have started to see defaults in markets which are an order of magnitude larger than subprime.
I love phrases like "order of magnitude" because they make problems seem too big to do anything about. As we aggregate the losses we lose sight of the individuals whose lives are at risk even as financial websites carry more and more articles about how to profit from foreclosures.
Today, it's not just that prime loans are about to go belly up but more and more tenants living in private homes are at risk-with no one looking out for them because they don't own anything and so are considered disposable.
Mounting foreclosures is an issue I have been writing and railing about. Protests against them are featured in my forthcoming film Plunder: The Crime Of Our Time.
There is a macro dimension to this crisis abut also a far more personal micro one.
Here's a story I was told about a middle class woman on Long Island, who happens to be Haitian. I am sure its not the worst case--and certainly not the best outcome. Read it and weep-but as you do remember this bell may toll for more of us.
At the same time, as a reporter, I find myself personally exposed to people experiencing these problems. One is a close friend of a close friend who found herself on the street last week.
I offered to help her write an op-ed about her situation based on what she told me. She really liked it, but then had second thoughts about having it appear under her name. It is intimidating if you are not used to challenging powerful institutions even after you have been terribly mistreated. There is always a hope that some deal might save you, or get your home back. I have to respect her right to anonymity, but I can vouch for the accuracy of this sad account implicating a predatory bank and their servicer, the County Sheriff, and a moving company that makes money off of people's misery.
Here is the account.
• MY HAITIAN EARTHQUAKE (BANKQUAKE?) IN NASSAU COUNTY
Almost two months ago, the country I was born in suffered a natural calamity. Hundreds of thousands died in the Haitian earthquake, members of my own family among them. Our family home was destroyed. It was heartbreaking and traumatizing. I am still grieving. I was happy to know that so many people who live here on the Island responded with an outpouring of donations and concern. No homeowner would ever want to share the same experience of sudden forced homelessness.
Less than a week ago, I stood outside a home that I have lived in for 14 years and watched the Nassau County Sheriff's office and a team of movers (from Network Moving & Trucking) that they hired, evict me, crudely packing up all my possessions, throwing precious belongings in boxes and somehow also stealing my grand daughter's laptop in the process before physically pushing her into the street.
My family had just been dispossessed in Haiti, and now I was having a similar (but far less deadly) experience in Nassau County. Only this calamity was not due to a natural disaster, but to a well-proven chain of fraud and abuse by banks. The FBI has confirmed we have been living through a "fraud epidemic" since 2004.
No big name musicians are raising money for the victims of this disaster. So far, the government agencies that have promised to curb an out of control foreclosure crisis have been ineffectual. The big banks have paid lip service to helping their customers, but, as study after study documented, they make more money throwing people out of their homes and reselling them than modifying mortgages so residents can stay where they are. They are in the game for profits, not to help people.
In my case, I persistently reached out to the bank with emails and calls to try to negotiate. No one would take my calls or respond. There was no there there. I have been experiencing disdain and insensitivity at every turn.
I reached out to legal agencies which Nassau County itself advises people facing eviction to go to, What happened? They told me there was nothing they could do.
In my case, I wanted to buy the house I lived in with my grandchild - I am nearly 65 - but the mortgage broker and the REMAC realty agency and the courts were less than helpful. No one would assist me. The Administration has stopped deportation orders for Haitians convicted of crimes, but seems uninterested in helping law abiding people like myself.
Was it my accent, my Haitian background? I am an American citizen and a former civil servant with a long history of public service and employment. Ethnicity may be a factor but they treat people of all races this way-with contempt!
Compounding the problem for me is that I wasn't even the homeowner but a tenant whose landlord had disappeared leaving the home with all sorts of major structural problems and unpaid bills. I tried reaching him and the bank for months on end with no success.
The bank in this case was HSBC, one of the most notorious subprime lenders which has written off billions of dollars because of its irresponsible lending policies, and been subject to investigations and reprimand. Their servicer is part of the scheme. It is no wonder that the public calls these people banksters. That is who they are.
I went to Court and had my appeal to stay the eviction denied without any reasons given. The Sheriff told me the eviction could be stopped if I applied for bankruptcy. I did so, and when I tried to call him with the file number, as instructed, before his office carried out the eviction, no one would take my call. His secretary told he would not talk to me. A bankruptcy filing should have stopped the eviction. It didn't. These are the bureaucratic games they play with people's lives.
And then to add insult to injury, the moving company had the nerve to yell at me for trying to stop my own eviction claiming that I was trying to cheat them out a $2000 fee for doing the job during which my grandchild was pushed physically and "lost" her computer.
I am appealing to my Nassau neighbors to express concern about this outrage like they did for the victims of the quake.
Please help me call for an investigation and reversal of this rushed eviction without a fair hearing or recourse. Will someone look into the actions by the Sheriff of Nassau County who did the bank's bidding, and Judge Scott Fairgreive who callously signed the order without an ounce of compassion.
I am now, as a senior citizen homeless and personally at risk. I fainted on the day of the eviction and had to be hospitalized. I don't know what will happen to me, and if something does, what will happen to my grandchild? For me, this calamity was like an earthquake destroying my life. Call it a 'bank-quake' if you will. I need help now.
Will someone stand up for me as I have for years for people all over the world?
If you live on Long Island and can help, write to me and I will pass on your message. Please circulate this appeal. Write dissector@mediachanel.orgComments
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20 Comments so far
Show Allcapitalism; love it or leave it in the compost of history
when the quake hits you, as it will, be preparred. head for fresh air and keep loose so you can go with the flow.
All this trauma and horror could have been averted if the sheriff refused to enforce the eviction which then would have prevented the moving company from entering the premises. Compassion and humanity should take priority in life. What else is there when all else is gone?
I wouldn't be surprised to learn that the sheriff is benefitting financially from the foreclosures. In fact, I'd be amazed if it turned out that he isn't.
q
Articles that focus on the plight of people being thrown out of their houses may create some kind of empathy. But this is a war, and regulators could put an end to this foreclosure crisis in minutes. But you don't have a right to housing in the USA, investors in China, and Saudi Arabia are much more important than your housing. A big reason people are clueless about how badly they are being screwed is articles that focus on the victims; belongings strewn on the street, sheriff vehicles and so forth, the irresponsible sensationalism of the tabloid genre.
And this moving story has so many parallels across the country and will have many more, while Washington huffs and puffs but blows no genuine relief toward the besieged homeowner other than limited aid to people not that far into problems. Not to those in the most dire straits. Not to those who have already lost their homes.
The only relief for most homeowners evicted from their houses is guerrilla tactics of reoccupying the premises illegally. As is been done across the nation. Instead of sitting empty and deteriorating, the homes are being lived in and kept up. And the people have a home again.
But such actions run into the cold hand of the law eventually and the heartrending evictions start all over again -- now with addition costs from the court for trespassing.
The banksters and mortgage-grubbers need to be made to write down those debts THEY accrued upon their balance sheets with their predatory tactics and stupid repackaging. But they aren't paying the price. The American public is.
Gary
"Destiny waits alike for the free man as well as for him enslaved by another's might."
-- Aeschylus
I wonder if this poor soul voted for Mr. Obamageddon? I'll bet she did.
You got the "change you can believe in" sister. Now live with it.
How cruel can you be?
DCH likely considers himself a progressive protesting Obama from left. It is often said that lefties care about the community as a whole but don't like individual people much, while rightwingers don't believe in community but will help individuals. This post seems to prove the saying correct.
No, he is just pointing you, get what you vote for. Any idiot could see Obama was a corporate shill, but they voted for him anyway, so they got exactly what they wanted a corporate wolf in sheep's clothing. Maybe next time they will do their homework a little better, I doubt it. Fool me once shame on you, fool me infinitely and I'm democratic party voter.
"The bank in this case was HSBC, one of the most notorious subprime lenders which has written off billions of dollars because of its irresponsible lending policies, and been subject to investigations and reprimand."
If I'm not mistaken, HSBC recently moved its Headquarters to Hong Kong or China. That should make it more difficult if not impossible to prosecute them for any wrongdoing.
Here's a good article about the Business Round Table - the ones who really control policy around the globe: (http://www.alternet.org/economy/145996/the_business_roundtable%3A_the_most_powerful_corporate_business_club_most_americans_have_never_heard_of)...
HSBC Holdings was founded in 1990 and has had its global corporate headquarters in London, England since 1993. The original Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited was one of the founding members of the HSBC Group. This bank, originally founded in 1865, is based in Hong-Kong and is now a subsidiary of the Group. The North American subsidiary is based in Buffalo, NY.
The real problem with HSBC is the same as any global corporation, total independence from any sovereign government.
The problem with Wall Street banks, as your citation relates, is that they have completed the coup d'etat of the US.
Here's some good news.
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/09/no-longer-too-big-to-fail_n_456028.html)
"the financial industry convinced that home values never fall"
I believe this assertion comes from the congressional testimony of the heads of 3 major Wall Street banks.
Now you're not suggesting that these CEO's would knowingly lie before Congress, are you?
Why was this woman evicted from the house? So the owner that was renting it out defaulted on his mortgage. The woman was going to buy the house, that implies she was willing and able to pay for it. Yet, for some reason she declared bankruptcy.
The story does not make too much sense.... at least not in the context it is used.
The people who are doing this belong in cells deep beneath the surface of the earth.
Banks are pushing more scams on the public than meet the eye. Here's one I can tell you about. I know of two people who are doing what I describe below. Imagine how many of these deals are out there like this.
I know someone who is collecting SSD (Social Security Disability for mental illness). About a year before she was approved for SSD she liquidated $40,000 from an IRA account and purchased a $200,000 condo. She was approved for SSD in late 2006.
Today, she does collect $1,200 per mo from SSD, has Medicare and rents her property for $1,200 a month. She gotten Chase Bank to give her two (2) 6 month periods for suspension of her having to make payments (Forbearance). She's renting the home and pocketing the $1,200. Get this, she's also allowed to work, hold down a job on top of collecting her SSD. So she works as a temp (Kelly Services) but knows when she's got enough time in to collect unemployment benefits, which is what she does. She accepts short term assignments but understands when she can turn assignments down and/or how to leave an assigment, what to say without saying she's quitting so she can go back to unemployment.
Chase loves her! When Chase gave her not one, but two approvals to utilize "forbearance" Chase pretty much knows she's going to foreclose on her property when her forebearnce period is up. Places identical to her's are seeling for $45K. She's so underwater it's ridculious. Chase wants drive up her debt up because the government (Geithner) is going to take the debt owed to Chase which goes back to either Fannie or Feddie and they will collect every dime owed to them once the foreclosure goes through. Take her monthly payment ($1,200 per month) multiply by 12 and add the interest payment, compounded to the full amount of debt owed on the total loan. Cha,-ching! Her condo she bought for $200K is now up to $240K and Chase will collect.
Does Chase realize what's going on here? What do you think? If I know of two people who are doing this how many others are out there doing the same thing?
And here’s the happy ending. On the part of homeowner, she’s living at home and she’ll bank over $30K this year and plans to purchase another home and pay cash within the next year. Once housing costs hit rock bottom.
Good thing the good cops are on the beat, instead of those nasty republican bad cops. Because you know the good cops are going to reign in these abuses, right?
My boyfriend is going through some of this BS with the banks right now. He calls and calls and says he is willing to pay if they just will talk to him about the mortgage. They tell him they are just debt collectors and can't negotiate his mortgage. He has gone to the local branch of the bank and they tell him they can't help him either because it has been turned over to debt collectors so it is a Catch-22. He is afraid to pay the $16,000 they demand in back payments and penalties without renegotiating the mortgage because he is afraid they will double or triple the mortgage hoping he will foreclose again.
This is criminal.
Most banks dislike most foreclosures most of the time.
They like them more than just not getting paid, and they have about the same sympathy for borrowers as hunters do for ducks, but they are almost all ill-prepared to resell property, and regard a foreclosure as future trouble with regulators and the loss of the near-free revenues that they expected from the loan. Banks almost always lose money on foreclosures.
This is truer the further a loan goes upside-down, for the obvious reason: the bank gets a less expensive house and lose a more expensive loan.
In the current situation, they almost certainly see foreclosure as a necessary sacrifice to keep milking other borrowers. They likely do it selectively. A very large % of loans are in arrears, and if all banks foreclose on all of the loans they could, property prices will again plunge, more loans will bottom-up and fail, and the banks will lose more loans.
That being the case, the selection of who gets foreclosed probably varies. They may select which home they want, or they may select which person they suspect may not pay or which community they prefer to threaten most directly.