Monday, December 15, 2008

Fear Of Investor Lawsuits Impede Loan Modification Efforts

In Bradenton, Florida, a column in the Bradenton Herald offers a view on why mortgage lenders are so reluctant to offer loan workouts on delinquent home mortgages:

  • [T]hat's because most lenders sold their mortgages, which were soon packaged with others and the packages sold in shares. Now, ownership and securitized stakes in the expected profits are in the hands of multiple institutions and retirement funds and such.

  • According to April Charney, a lawyer who teaches other lawyers about this stuff, some institutions don't even own what they invested in. It is a huge problem for our country that, systemically, a Ponzi scheme was at work as, she said in an e-mail, "originating lenders failed to legally transfer notes and mortgages, leaving the investors in these trusts (us, our states, our schools, our pensions, the Bank of China, etc.) owning air. Sliced and diced air."

  • That ownership web can make it hellish to find anyone who dares restructure a mortgage. Often no one is sure who has authority to make a deal, let alone thousands of deals. Mortgage servicers fear being sued by investors if they exceed contractual authority, and the contracts with different investors vary.
For more, see Why won't the lenders try to cut a deal? missing mortgage foreclosure docs gamma MortgageServicingIssuesAlpha

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