Didn't Grow Up In An Urban Hellhole
Actual liberal media responds to fake liberal media
All Things Considered
With 14.2% unemployment in Nevada, a potted plant should be able to beat Reid and he just might pull it off.
Tune in Wednesday, the day when all the pundits tell us What It All Means.
Five Cars
I admit I increasingly find this world baffling.
Our Rulers
Sunday Bobbleheads
This Week has Cornyn and Menendez.
Face the Nation has Peter King, Tpaw, Klobuchar, and Rendell.
Document the atrocities!
Hawk
But it is good to press the point that we need to address climate change aggressively, at the risk of leaning too far forward, as they always say about wars that don't actually involve US security.
Hence climate hawks.
It's also worth remembering that if there is any bias in the scientific work on climate, it's more likely to understate than overstate the risk. Scientists don't like catastrophe theories, and also dislike making predictions that turn out to be wrong.
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Urban Hellhole Real Estate Blogging
Upsetting The Village
Friday, October 29, 2010
Vote
Bob Brady will get an unneeded vote for me, and Sestak and Onorato will get needed ones.
Dooming The Economy
The dream was that the economy would turnaround and then so would the housing market. That didn't happen.
Foxy
But He Regularly Speaks Out
What If Somebody Actually Figures Out How To Spend The Money
Show Someone The Money
Bad
So What Are We Going To Do About These Problems Then
Obama:
The biggest challenge is how do you make sure that you are helping those who really deserve help and if they get some temporary help can get back on their feet, make their payments and move forward and stay in their home, versus either people who are speculators, own second homes that they really couldn’t afford because they’d gotten a subprime loan, and people who through no fault of their own just can’t afford their house anymore because of the change in housing values or their incomes don’t support it.The problem is that "foreclose" is the new "issue as many crappy loans as you can for securitization." Foreclosures are how the servicers are making money, and doesn't even matter if investors in those mortgages are getting the shaft, at least until there are more lawsuits. The incentives are screwed up such that servicers prefer foreclosures to short sales or sensible principal modifications.
And we’re always trying to find that sweet spot to use as much of the money that we have available to us to help those who can be helped, without wasting that money on folks who don’t deserve help. And that’s a tough balance to strike.
Obama's correct that the first wave of foreclosures were subprime and predatory lending crappy loan terms, and that now they are largely recession-caused.
The other aspect of the housing market that is worth bearing in mind is that whereas initially a lot of the problems on the foreclosure front had to do with balloon payments people didn’t see coming, adjustable rate mortgages that people didn’t clearly understand, predatory lending scams that were taking place -- now the biggest driver of foreclosure is unemployment. And so the single most important thing I can do for the housing market is actually improve economic growth as a whole. If we can get the economy moving stronger, if we can drive the unemployment rate down, that will have probably the biggest impact on foreclosures, as well as housing prices, as just about anything.
Yes, turning around the economy faster allow more people to stay in their homes. But we haven't turned around the economy, and it's unclear if Congress will pass any additional legislation, including unemployment extensions. In theory there's a lot that the executive branch can do without Congressional approval. There is still a lot of HAMP money sitting there. We own Fannie and Freddie. I just can't believe there's no way, with improved carrots and sticks, to encourage more widespread principal modifications which would both help more people keep their homes and, you know, help the economy because they'd have additional money to spend on things other than their underwater mortgages.
All of that is even without the fraudclosure mess.
Principal modification, one way or another, was always going to be the only way through this. It still is.
Can We Talk?
“We’ve had several conference calls with major lenders,” Colorado Attorney General John Suthers said in an interview, declining to specify which ones. “The banks want to sit down with the attorneys general. These meetings are being set up,” said Suthers, whose office is a member of the executive committee of the task force.
License To Steal
Then And Now
Wells has not halted foreclosures and says it has discovered no problems in the legal documents used to process them. The company said earlier in the week that it would review pending foreclosures for potential defects.
Now:
Wells Fargo said on Wednesday it will re-file documents on 55,000 foreclosures, drawing immediate fire from one of the state attorneys general most critical of banks in the continuing home foreclosure crisis.
Deadbeats
Ricky Rought paid cash to the Deutsche Bank National Trust Company for a four-room cabin in Michigan with the intention of fixing it up for his daughter. Instead, the bank tried to foreclose on the property and the locks were changed, court records show.
Sonya Robison is facing a foreclosure suit in Colorado after the company handling her mortgage encouraged her to skip a payment, she says, to square up for mistakenly changing the locks on her home, too.
Thomas and Charlotte Sexton, of Kentucky, were successfully foreclosed upon by a mortgage trust that, according to court records, does not exist.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Forgotten America
Q. So tell me, what does this concept of "livability" really mean?
A. This is something I've never really talked about, but growing up, I lived on the east side of Peoria. When I was growing up, I could walk to my grade school. We had one car, but we would bike everywhere we went. We could walk to the grocery store. In those days, we had streetcars and buses, which people used to get to downtown Peoria, which was probably five miles from my house. I used to take a bus to my dad's business. I grew up in an era [of] livable neighborhoods and livable communities -- what we're really trying to offer to people around America. When there was no urban sprawl, when you didn't have to have three cars, when there weren't houses with three-car garages, everybody had one car.
The Light At The End Of The Tunnel Is Just Around The Corner
"If, by December, we're not showing some progress, we're in trouble," he said. "And the question is: what is progress? Without some benchmarks and measurements, it's going to be hard to sell to the American people a continued involvement in Afghanistan."
And, yes, I know, come December no one will ask Lindsey about those benchmarks and measurements...
Morning and Stuff
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Oh Well
Have fun choking on gas fumes in the Lincoln Tunnel drivers.
Poor People In Cities Don't Drive
In earlier affordable projects, Dunn said that he hadn’t taken the same zero-parking approach. At the nearby Myrtle Avenue Apartments, for example, zoning required that they build parking for 25 percent of the units, leading to eight spaces. At the price of $25 per month, there have never been more than two spaces rented, said Dunn. The company could have built a bigger playground instead of those empty parking spots. “We’ve felt bad that we built that parking every day since,” he said.
Brain Change
The Sestak Surge
Price To Rent Ratio
Ground Game
I'm In Your Tubes Reminding You Of Your Past
...also, too. And Such.
Contrarian
Failed presidency? Rolling Stone begs to differ.
Taken together, Barack Obama's achievements are not only historic in their sweep but unabashedly liberal. By contrast, President Clinton's top legislative victories — NAFTA and welfare reform — catered to the right wing's faith in free markets and its loathing of big government. "When you add them all together, it's clear that Obama's accomplishments have been underrated," says Brinkley. "Saving the auto industry, health care, getting out of Iraq — these are big things for the progressive movement."
But as effective as Obama has been at implementing progressive policy, he has been lousy at capitalizing on those victories politically. Much of his activist base can't seem to get over the compromises he made to win such historic reforms, and average Americans are largely clueless about the key achievements of his presidency. Polls show that only 12 percent of Americans realize that Obama cut their taxes; indeed, twice that number thought the president had raised them. Just 29 percent understand that the stimulus boosted the economy, and 81 percent believe that the deficit-slashing health care reform will actually increase the deficit.
"You have this conundrum," says Wilentz, the Princeton historian. "Obama has an admirable record of accomplishment, but the political dynamics are all moving the other way. How do you explain that?"
Pressed on this disconnect, Axelrod argues that the president has been too busy with governance to get caught up in the scrum of politics. "We're focused on trying to build a better country for the future," he says. "The president's attitude is that the politics will ultimately take care of itself."
But heading into November, it appears that the president's high-minded and seemingly sincere disdain for politics could prove the undoing of what he has fought so hard to accomplish.
And then there's this heartening news.
Oh, well. Maybe it's just me.
Head, Forever
Forever.
Libertarianism.
MORE. This is the iconic image of our age. This is 2010, and how it will always be recalled.
America.
Monday, October 25, 2010
Free Parking For The Urban Theme Park
Pretty Random
SIGTARP
The inspector general's report also said Treasury took too much credit for helping homeowners who did not ultimately benefit from Treasury's Home Affordable Modification Program.
Treasury has said several times that its mortgage modification program has "helped" more than 1.3 million homeowners by reducing their monthly mortgage payments, calling each of these a "success," the report said.
However, Barofsky's team took issue with the level of success, saying more than 700,000 of the modifications ultimately failed and another 173,000 remained in limbo.
"It may be true that many homeowners may benefit from temporarily reduced payments even though the modification ultimately fails," the report said. But it adds that, "Treasury's claim that 'every single person' who participates in HAMP gets a 'significant benefit' is either hopelessly out of touch with the real harm that has been inflicted on many families or a cynical attempt to define failure as success."
I'd Do More
None of this will happen, of course, because the people have failed to unanimously and peacefully declare me as your benevolent dictator.
Angels In America
The HBO movie was pretty good too.
Limits
Also, as Matt says, even people who want to live in dense urban hellholes are strangely resistant to any increased density. Personally I'd welcome it. My neighborhood could use more residents. More residents create more local demand and provide business for local establishments, giving me a greater variety of local options within walking distance. I'm not saying I'd want my urban hellhole to become Manhattan dense, but I would certainly welcome some more neighbors.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
The anti-bobbleheads
Signed,
Not Atrios
Happy Hour Thread
...here's a re-run I saw linked to randomly somewhere.
Movie Biz
Personally, I actually enjoy TV more than movies. There's an inherent limitation in the roughly 2 hour format that doesn't appeal to me.
Sunday Bobbleheads
Meet the Press has Michael Steele.
This Week has Tim Kaine and Hugh Shelton.
It's like a weird alternative reality.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Via Digby (Who Else?)
Run From Yourselves
Rocket Docket
Friday, October 22, 2010
Binge Eating
Dropping Money From Helicopters
Running Out
I am not so optimistic.
My Critics Sure Seem Unfair
Work With Us
Gentrification
Williams
Desert
Then we start our two mile trek through the Cemetery, with a grand finale at the Changing of the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Water fountains are available, but limited and often not working. Experienced groups plan ahead and have bottled water for their students, ideally one for the walk and one to replenish afterwards.
I don't mean to just pick on Arlington, which clearly has bigger management problems right now than fixing their water fountains. Visiting the Memorials, the Capitol, even the Smithsonians, require a lot of walking with limited bathroom and water facilities. The National Mall is a virtual desert. Having a place to regroup, get hydrated, pick up or drop off a rain jacket, and so on isn't really a luxury when you are responsible for forty to fifty children.
Austerity Madness
Indeed, there has been a noticeable change in the rhetoric of the government of Prime Minister David Cameron over the past few weeks — a shift from hope to fear. In his speech announcing the budget plan, George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, seemed to have given up on the confidence fairy — that is, on claims that the plan would have positive effects on employment and growth.
Instead, it was all about the apocalypse looming if Britain failed to go down this route. Never mind that British debt as a percentage of national income is actually below its historical average; never mind that British interest rates stayed low even as the nation’s budget deficit soared, reflecting the belief of investors that the country can and will get its finances under control. Britain, declared Mr. Osborne, was on the “brink of bankruptcy.”
What happens now? Maybe Britain will get lucky, and something will come along to rescue the economy. But the best guess is that Britain in 2011 will look like Britain in 1931, or the United States in 1937, or Japan in 1997. That is, premature fiscal austerity will lead to a renewed economic slump. As always, those who refuse to learn from the past are doomed to repeat it.
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Trolling My Own Blog
Deadbeats
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Michael and Pamella Negrea have never been late on a mortgage payment in the 15 years they've owned their home in Eastlake. But they've been foreclosed on three times.
Martin and Kirsten Davis, meanwhile, lost their home in Cleveland to foreclosure two years ago. The reason: a mess that started when they accidentally paid 14 cents too little on their monthly payment.
And Michael Rendes of Berea had his mortgage sold last year to Bank of America. The bank foreclosed on him in November, after insisting for months that it didn't hold his loan and wouldn't accept his payments.
No Tunnel For You
One thing that's maddening is that while this argument isn't universally valid, it's certainly the case that in this situation the only possible relief for drivers both into and in Manhattan is improved mass transit. So even if you just love your cars, you should be a big supporter.
Williams
We're Laughing At You
Future Compliance
Despite my best efforts to answer all of Mr. Whelan’s questions, the article contains a number of misstatements. First, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson did not face a foreclosure hearing after simply stopping payment – they paid the entire amount due per a statement sent to them by GMAC, and paid by certified check. GMAC mistakenly refused the check, alleging it was an NSF payment (not possible with certified funds), then placed the couple in foreclosure. I was simply trying to track the facts of the payment by deposing a witness who had sworn in court documents that she had reviewed the entire file and was familiar with the payment history, when, as it turned out, she was not only not familiar with the payment history, but the substance of her entire affidavit was false, including the allegation that the affidavit was sworn to in front of a notary. These were substantive questions I needed answers to – not an excuse for a delay. Further, the judge did not “throw out the case” – it is still pending, with GMAC still suing the Jacksons, years later.
I, and most of my fellow consumer attorneys who are members of the National Association of Consumer Advocates, do not raise these issues for delay – we raise them because we all have cases (this is the bulk of my foreclosure defense practice) where all or part of the foreclosure is purely the fault of the servicer or mill law firm – from homeowners whose payments were misrouted by the servicer, to servicers who simply changed the address of the property and then force-placed flood insurance, to servicers who ignore insurance plans the borrowers paid for (all examples from my cases) to servicers who refuse to even accept HAMP-type loan modification documents – all are substantive, real problems that were not the fault of the borrowers. The deposition was, in the Jackson case, merely an effort to get at the truth of the reversed payment – instead, GMAC admitted to wholesale manufacture of court documents, then promised to fix the practice, then continued that practice unabated for 4 more years.
Once we came to a point where servicers could make more money by foreclosing than not foreclosing, the game was over.
Turning Lemons into a Lemon Party
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Finally
NPR has terminated its contract with Juan Williams, one of its senior news analysts, after he made comments about Muslims on the Fox News Channel.
NPR said in a statement that it gave Mr. Williams notice of his termination on Wednesday night.
The move came after Mr. Williams, who is also a Fox News political analyst, appeared on the “The O’Reilly Factor” on Monday. On the show, the host, Bill O’Reilly, asked him to respond to the notion that the United States was facing a “Muslim dilemma.” Mr. O’Reilly said, “The cold truth is that in the world today jihad, aided and abetted by some Muslim nations, is the biggest threat on the planet.”
Mr. Williams said he concurred with Mr. O’Reilly.
He continued: “I mean, look, Bill, I’m not a bigot. You know the kind of books I’ve written about the civil rights movement in this country. But when I get on the plane, I got to tell you, if I see people who are in Muslim garb and I think, you know, they are identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslims, I get worried. I get nervous.”
Funner and Funner
In a complaint filed this month in Washington, D.C. federal court, Bank of America said the FDIC has wrongly denied claims by Ocala noteholders to recover from Colonial Bank and an Illinois lender also in receivership, Platinum Community Bank.
Bank of America accused executives at Taylor Bean, Colonial and Platinum of having fraudulently schemed to "double- and triple-pledge mortgages and steal assets" to hide their faltering conditions as the housing market declined.
So how widespread was this double-pledging of mortgages? How many people have homes that multiple entities think they are entitled to foreclose on? How screwed up is all the paperwork that nobody has any clue?
Finally
It Won't Happen
An Economy Built On Fraud
It's Their World
In a notice recently released by the CFTC, Painter said Judge Bruce Levine, his longtime colleague, had a secret agreement with a former Republican chairwoman of the agency to stand in the way of investors filing complaints with the agency.
"On Judge Levine's first week on the job, nearly twenty years ago, he came into my office and stated that he had promised Wendy Gramm, then Chairwoman of the Commission, that we would never rule in a complainant's favor," Painter wrote. "A review of his rulings will confirm that he fulfilled his vow," Painter wrote.
Good Luck With That
He said that 490,000 public sector jobs would be lost over the four-year savings program and the size of government departments in London would be cut by one third. Public spending would be cut by a total 83 billion pounds, or around $130 billion, by 2015.
Morning and Stuff
Link to Politico
Same As They Always Have Been
Good
On twitter Dan Choi said he was going to enlist in the marines.
Even More Funner
Pacific Investment Management Co., BlackRock Inc. and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York are seeking to force Bank of America Corp. to repurchase soured mortgages packaged into $47 billion of bonds by its Countrywide Financial Corp. unit, people familiar with the matter said.
This is the same as what I linked earlier, with added info of who the players are. Pimco, BlackRock, and the NY Fed are BFDs.
Selling America
Chicago is not so lucky.
Congress Has Long Been Full Of The Crazy
Some Things Are Too Crazy To Contemplate
Shovel Ready
Getting Funner
HOUSTON, Oct. 18 /PRNewswire/ --Today, the holders of over 25% of the Voting Rights in more than $47 billion of Countrywide-issued RMBS sent a Notice of Non-Performance (Notice) to Countrywide Home Loan Servicing, as Master Servicer ("Countrywide Servicing"), and to Bank of New York, as Trustee, identifying specific covenants in 115 Pooling and Servicing Agreements (PSAs) that the Holders allege Countrywide Servicing has failed to perform.
The Holders' Notice alleges that each of these failures has materially affected the rights of the Certificateholders under the relevant PSAs. Under Section 7.01 of the PSAs, if any of the cited failures "continues unremedied for a period of 60 days after the date on which written notice of such failure has been given ... to the Master Servicer and the Trustee by the Holders of Certificates evidencing not less than 25% of the Voting Rights evidenced by the Certificates," that failure constitutes an Event of Default under the PSAs.
Internalize
Ohio Senate. Everyone wrote Lee Fisher off months ago in this race, and just today a public poll showed him 22 points down. But I have seen two other polls in the last 4 days that show the race in single digits, and I have also seen polling numbers that show 30% of Portman's voters have the potential to go bye-bye if they know about his role as Bush's trade rep shipping jobs overseas.
Whatever the merits either way, one thing I've noticed is that "free trade"* is one of those issues about which anyone who works in DC politics quickly internalizes the Very Serious Person position, which is that, politics be damned, anything labeled "free trade" is inherently good and only very silly dirty fucking hippies oppose it. In truth, of course, basically everybody in the country hates everything called "free trade" and politicians left and right would benefit from running against it.
*"Free trade" is in quotes because many things having nothing to do with actual free trade are given that label.
Incredibly Expensive Things We Couldn't Possibly Afford
Where Are We Going
Currency Gibberish
Anyone else notice the mixed message?
Grifters
Monday, October 18, 2010
Any Arrests Yet?
TAMPA — Some employees of Florida's largest "foreclosure mill" were given jewelry, cars and houses from the firm, in exchange for altering and forging key documents used to obtain foreclosures, according to a statement released today by the Florida Attorney General's Office.
The office released transcripts of two interviews it conducted for its investigation into the law offices of David J. Stern. The sworn statements were from Kelly Scott, a former employee of Stern's and Mary R. Cordova, a former employee of G&Z, a process server used by Stern's office. The women's testimonies appear to back up that of former Stern's employee Tammie Lou Kapusta, whose statement was released last week. The three statements paint a picture of a secret system designed to speed up the foreclosure process. Attorneys and staff members forged signatures, changed dates, passed around notary stamps, the women say in interviews with attorney general's staff.
Building Height Restrictions Lead to More Tall Buildings
The Great Depression Lasted A Long Time
Nothing To See Here
Spoonfeeding The Stupid
How Many Years In
Just A Paperwork Problem
The Banksters Destroyed Everything
Enthusiasm Gap
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Our media, not theirs
Signed,
Not Atrios
Let's You And Him Fight
Foreclosure Hell
Their loan originally was with subprime lender Argent Mortgage, then LaSalle Bank, then Wilkshire Financial. The loan was sold to Bank of America in September 2009, although the couple said they weren't initially notified. They made their September and October payments to Wilkshire.
"I had no clue. I just made my payment," Michael Rendes said. "I knew I had a mortgage." Wilkshire then told him the loan had been sold. He called Bank of America many times, but bank employees couldn't find the couple in the system. They tried using names, Social Security numbers, the parcel number, dates of birth, everything.
Their two payments were cashed but apparently not forwarded to Bank of America, or at least not posted to the couple's account. In November, they received a letter that they were in default.
The couple had the money to get caught up, but they said Bank of America wouldn't take it.
Sunday Bobbleheads
This Week has Coons, O'Donnell, and Maria Shriver.
Meet the Press has Gibbs, Michael Bennet, and Ken Buck.
Document the atrocities!
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Winning Messages
Friday, October 15, 2010
Outsourcing
I'll just add that even if nobody is in anyway concerned about the plight of screwed homeowners, a failed HAMP program (or general sensible way to deal with foreclosure mess) is a big reason for the failure of the economy to turnaround. So, you know, suck on that.
Blabbity Blabbity Blah
Fraud
As An Example
Culture
Helicopter Ben
As I've said all along, I don't think that anything the Fed is likely to do is going to help the economy much, but even a little is something.
Morning and Shit
Thursday, October 14, 2010
They Fucked The Whole Thing Up
It is not yet clear what the consequences would be if large quantities of mortgage-backed securities turn out to be defective - or how the trouble could be solved.
"If the basic principles of property law have been violated here . . . it may be extremely difficult to fix," said a source involved in government oversight of financial institutions, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the uncertainties involved. "There is a chain of questions that no one seems to know the answer to."
Big And Serious
She additionally stated that major servicers' voluntary foreclosure freezes mean two things. First, this problem "is big, and it is serious," and second, the voluntary moratoria represent evidence that "the issuers themselves are trying to get this problem solved," she said.
Already missing the good old days, when anybody behind on their mortgage could be foreclosed upon by any random entity just because.
Never Let Them Die
It's Pat
This is from memory, but around 15-18 years ago I remember seeing Pat give a talk to a conservative audience on CSPAN. I remember it being his kind of political coming out show. It was a complete disaster. Basically I remember him saying horrible things about poor people and minorities, without the practiced acceptable dogwhistle "code." Even the conservative audience members were squirming.
By The Numbers
About 11.5 percent of borrowers are in default today, up from 5.7 percent from two years earlier.
As I said many months ago:
Happy to be wrong, but the failure to deal with the underlying problems in housing and finance under the theory that prices will magically rebound and everything will then be ok is going to doom the economy....
All A Sham
Legal documents obtained by the Financial Times suggest that Wells Fargo [WFC 24.875 -0.935 (-3.62%) ], the second-largest US mortgage servicer, also used a “robo signer”. Unlike its rivals, Wells Fargo has not halted foreclosures.
The San Francisco-based bank said on Tuesday it was reviewing some pending cases, but it has maintained that it has checks and balances designed to prevent serious procedural lapses.
In a sworn deposition on March 9 seen by the FT, Xee Moua, identified in court documents as a vice-president of loan documentation for Wells, said she signed as many as 500 foreclosure-related papers a day on behalf of the bank.
First Cup of Coffee Thread
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
"Perhaps"
CitiMortgage modified D’Amelio’s mortgage but she defaulted anyway. Now she claims that Citi cannot foreclose upon her because Fannie Mae is the owner of her mortgage. Her lawyer argues that the mortgage was improperly assigned to Citi, and is contesting the foreclosure on those grounds.
Let’s grant D’Amelio not only the facts but also her interpretation of foreclosure law. Perhaps Citi, which purchased the mortgage in late 2006 and sold it to Fannie Mae in early 2007, shouldn’t be able to foreclose. Maybe the MERS system somehow vitiated any security interest attached to her house through the mortgage.
If Citi doesn't own the mortgage then the woman doesn't owe them any money. If Citi doesn't own the mortgage then it isn't the case that "perhaps" they shouldn't foreclose on her, it's the case that they have no legal right to foreclosure. Citi can't just take possesion of a house, or decide someone owes them money, just because they say so.
And, yes, maybe one day Fannie will get around to a foreclosure process, but Citi cannot just assert control of the mortgage and the property on their say so.
...adding, the view just seems to be "well, she deserves to lose her house so it doesn't really matter who takes it from her."
More Retail
Timmeh
Riding the Rails
Stepped up business travel in the Northeast helped Amtrak boost ridership by nearly 6 percent to a record 28.7 million passengers in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, the railroad said Monday.
...
All of Amtrak's lines experienced growth as the railroad competed more heavily with air travel in its flagship Boston-New York-Washington market. Amtrak officials said in a statement that the rail agency has a 65 percent share of the air-rail market between Washington and New York.
Morning
(Link to Digby)
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Even More Thread
...actually I suppose this is worth discussing.
NEW YORK (AP) -- In an effort to rush through thousands of home foreclosures since 2007, financial institutions and their mortgage servicing departments hired hair stylists, Walmart floor workers and people who had worked on assembly lines and installed them in "foreclosure expert" jobs with no formal training, a Florida lawyer says.
In depositions released Tuesday, many of those workers testified that they barely knew what a mortgage was. Some couldn't define the word "affidavit." Others didn't know what a complaint was, or even what was meant by personal property. Most troubling, several said they knew they were lying when they signed the foreclosure affidavits and that they agreed with the defense lawyers' accusations about document fraud.
Maybe somebody should do something?
Sigh.
Now They're Waking Up
Not that it will likely help out homeowners. And one of those investors is Uncle Sam.
Reality Bites
Trust Them!
You can't save "the system" by destroying it, but it's what the banskters want. This guy can't defend the legality, but still thinks it's awesome, you know, just because.
A Very Simple Economic History
If You Prick the Housing Market, Does It Not Bleed?
High School Spycam
I find it fascinating that the majority of the Worst People In The World, otherwise known as newspaper site commenters, think it's ok for school administration to spy on their children.
Simple
Given the absurdly bad unemployment projections years out, now is not the time for normal worries about the slow speed at which fiscal stimulus can trickle out in practice. We don't just need stimulus right now, we need stimulus two years from now.
LA just needs some money.
Progressive Hunter
Nobel Fun
Short version: as with many things, when you move away from Econ 101 models to add legitimate complications, lots of results change. This work is basically about adding search and matching into labor market models. Firms and workers are both looking for a perfect match, but will settle for an imperfect match as at some point that's better than continuing the search.
Local Blackouts
Hysteresis
This is really serious. I know I'm all glum and panicky these days, because I don't think we're actually on the path to recovery. The main lesson of the Great Depression was that an extended period of mass unemployment could happen, and we seem to have forgotten most of the other lessons which involved how to prevent it from happening.
Too Easy
Paul is correct that one half of the residents of his state are not poor (below poverty line), but 17% are.
More Like This
WASHINGTON – President Obama will join mayors, governors and current and former transportation secretaries on Monday to argue for a major initiative to repair and modernize the nation’s roads, rails and air systems, just weeks before an election that is all but certain to expand the size of his Republican opposition in Congress.
A new report from economists at the Treasury and Mr. Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers concludes that this is the “optimal time” to invest in public infrastructure because of high unemployment and lower prices in the construction industry, which has been hit harder than any other sector by the puncturing of the bubble in housing and commercial real estate.
...
As with many issues, paying for any initiative is the major divide between the parties. While Mr. Obama in September proposed a long-term solution to create a national infrastructure bank, which would seek private and public partnerships to invest in projects selected on merit, he seeks $50 billion in federal aid up front and he would offset that spending by closing an array of tax breaks for the oil and gas industry.
Over to President Snowe, I guess.
Act
Chris Piss
The 2010 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science was awarded on Monday to Peter A. Diamond, Dale T. Mortensen and Christopher A. Pissarides for their work on markets where buyers and sellers have difficulty finding each other, in particular in labor markets.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Opportunity
That Was Their Moment
When The Music Stops
The Association of Mortgage Investors, a trade association, has called on trustees, who oversee loan pools on behalf of investors, to demand that loans be repurchased by their originators if required documents are missing. Typically, sellers have 90 days to fix such problems or buy back the loan. The group has also asked trustees to audit and hold servicers accountable for any losses due to improper servicer practices.
"It's very hard to see how the servicers can avoid reimbursing the trusts for losses caused by taking short cuts," said David J. Grais, an attorney in New York who represents investors. Investors could press trustees to investigate servicer conduct, sue the servicers to recoup damages or replace a servicer, he said.
Sunday Bobbleheads
This Week has the McMahon/Blumenthal smackdown, Pervez Musharraf, and the French finance minister.
Dancing Dave's Meet the Press has Kirk and Giannoulias.
Document the atrocities!
At Least They Wrote A Sternly Worded Letter
In an interview this week, a senior administration official confirmed that the White House and Treasury Department had received warnings that the mortgage industry employed inexperienced staffers to oversee foreclosures, had problems handling documents and communicating with borrowers, and often failed to comply with regulations.
But the government had struggled to address shortcomings in the industry, the official said, because the administration was also seeking the servicers' help with modifying the home loans of millions of borrowers to help them avoid foreclosure.
...
The only immediate response to warnings was a letter to servicers urging them to behave better. But in June, the administration enacted a policy requiring that servicers try to modify a loan before beginning the foreclosure process.
Investigations
WASHINGTON — The attorneys general of up to 40 states plan to announce soon a joint investigation into banks' use of flawed foreclosure paperwork.
A person briefed on the investigation said Saturday night that an announcement could come as early as Tuesday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation was not yet public.
Saturday, October 09, 2010
Or Much Of Anything Else
We can go to war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and threaten to blow Iran off the face of the planet. We can conduct a nonstop campaign of drone and helicopter attacks in Pakistan and run a network of secret prisons around the world. We are the mightiest nation mankind has ever seen.
But we can’t seem to build a railroad tunnel to carry commuters between New Jersey and New York.
The United States is not just losing its capacity to do great things. It’s losing its soul. It’s speeding down an increasingly rubble-strewn path to a region where being second rate is good enough.
Deficits
And Democrats may come to regret their eager embrace, this spring, of deficit-cutting rhetoric. Then, as now, the trouble in labour markets should have been the primary focus. With these figures sure to feature in Republican stump speeches for the next three weeks, those up for re-election will pay for their mistake.
Development Hell
Friday, October 08, 2010
This Modern World!
But his stuff is still consistently funny, so go pre-order his book. Go now!
(This one made me laugh.)
Such As?
This growth provides more evidence that the economy continues to recover, but we must do more to put the economy on a path of robust economic growth.
The answer apparently is this:
The President continues to work with his economic team and looks forward to working with Congress when they return to identify measures to speed the recovery.
See you in a month, I guess.
The Fierce Urgency Of Now
If I were your benevolent dictator, I would begin by lowering Social Security and Medicare eligibility to 60. That won't fix unemployment, but it would fix some misery.