More legal maneuverings

 CourthouseHere’s this week’s news from the courthouse

1.     Elizabeth Warren is not the new head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.  Raj Date is the interim director.

2.   Tenants that have been the victim of Domestic Violence can now terminate occupancy on 30 days notice notwithstanding th term of the lease

3.     California citizens with an expunged or pardened felony conviction can now  apply for both real estate license and mortgage loan originator endorsement.

4.     Trust accounts (especially conducting electronic transfers)are a very hot item for DRE audits these days  Update your compliance manuals  to be sure you are operating accordingly. Many audits are ocurring where this noncompliance is a big problem for  licensees.

5.     A Daughter allegedly commited mortgage fraud on her parent’s residence was captured after jetsetting all over the world.  Her new bail was raised to $500,000 from the original $25,000.00 which didn’t seem to slow her down.

7.     Another well travelled case, a  man with a British Passport,who was working in L A was deported from Samoa to face  fraud charges in L A

8.     West L A  banker is going to be a new resident of the big house for 18 months for “flipping” properties.

Thanks to our friend & information source for providing this info;

Law Offices of Herman Thordsen

” Full Service Law Firm”

6 Hutton Centre Drive

Suite 1040

Santa Ana, CA 92707

(714) 662-4990

 

www.lendinglaw.com

Mortgage musings

The Mortgage Meltdown – How We Got Into This Mess, Who’s Responsible, and Why We Should Keep Capital Punishment
by Paul Elis, President, PMB Capital                   Inc.

Who’s most responsible for the mortgage debacle?  It’s the powerful but blind and ignorant packagers and promoters of  the eight, nine and ten digit stacks of securitized mortgages and the “experts” who represented the buyers of those  securities.  These captains of the universe poured hundreds of billions of dollars into weak mortgages, touted them as strong investments, and encouraged and fed this insanity.  The vast majority of these mega-dollar movers and shakers are probably not larcenous as much as just ignorant of reality.  They may know the securities industry but they don’t understand the basic building block of the securities we’re discussing – the individual mortgage.

First, let’s look at the contributing players who are not the people I consider the primary culprits:

First, and the least of the guilty, is the incredibly large number of owner borrowers who either really believed that a free lunch was being given away or that the day of reckoning on their adjustable rate mortgage would never come.  Sure, some of them were “sold” a bill of goods by loan agents, but, let’s face it:  The majority of these borrowers got into these loans knowingly.  They took the easy way out; that of opting for the teaser rate and the low initial payment on an adjustable rate time bomb.  They probably owed more on their house than they should have and then, as we all know, couldn’t walk the walk when the inescapable mortgage payment adjustment came around and payment shock  followed.  Many of these people blindly accepted the       absurdity that prices would just continue to go up and up and, abracadabra, they could refinance – as though refinancing can cure any financial problem.  They ignored or never understood the most basic tenet of consumer credit:    You can’t borrow your way out of debt.  I never fail to be amazed at how some people always, always, always  choose the easy way out of every problem and are unconcerned  with long term consequences.  We know these people. They go through life snatching defeat from the clutches of victory.

Acknowledged: some empathy and sympathy needs to be expressed for those homeowners who we know really are the victims of economic and personal problems beyond their control.   They are the minority but this article   respects their personal difficulties and sympathizes with their tragedies.

Another constituency in this second tier cast of guilty characters are the loan agents.  Some of these people are clearly unscrupulous but most of them fell into the same trap of unrealistic expectations and always-make-the-easy-choice mentality that affected so many homeowners.

Then there are the real estate speculators, not to be confused with legitimate long-term investors and competent  rehabbers.  Speculators were a major influence in driving home prices to unrealistic heights and are now, by virtue of  their inevitable loan defaults, major contributors to the ensuing flood of loan defaults and, by extension, the  resulting collapsing property market.   Investing in  real estate is a time honored way of building capital and             serves a socially desirable purpose in supporting a stock of available rental housing.  But, the only sure winners in this endeavor are those with long term perspective and technical knowledge of a great number of real estate      business factors such as purchase contracts, financing negotiations, insurance policies, maintenance, lease documentation, title insurance, legalities, etc.   I further submit that loan agents who encouraged speculators to take out loans on their primary residences in order to speculate should lose their licenses.  And, the homeowners who bought into this mindless idea of risking their families’ well being in order to place bets on home should face ten years to life for being “felony-stupid,”  although losing everything is probably sufficient punishment.

And, another contributing player is the government. I’m not faulting public policy of encouraging home ownership through the availability of high mortgage amounts at cheap rates.  However, if Washington is going to facilitate highly leveraged home purchases, it better have a “plan B” ready when economic reality belies the underpinnings of these tenuous loans and the foreclosures begin.  —Oh, I’m sorry,  I forgot: Real Estate can’t go down in value, especially in California.

One more lesser guilty group I’d like to pounce upon: The home selling agents, mostly Realtors, who encouraged buyers to buy as much home as possible by using loans that obviously carried a downstream risk of  a huge “payment shock” upon rate adjustment.  —Not that a brokers’  counsel to a buyer to consider buying a less expensive house would have been well received or heeded.

NOW, HERE’S THE CENTRAL ISSUE.  Let’s talk about primary responsibility, the 800 pound gorilla among the guilty.  J’accuse: The folks who “packaged” and sold  these bundles of securitized mortgages and the representatives of the buyers that stupidly recommended their purchase by  institutions.  These are the guys who kept shoveling fuel into the engine.  We’ll add to this list of “most guilty”  the rating agencies who, insanely, rated these securities  backed by such fragile mortgages as strong investments.         In fact, I think the rating agencies are probably the most  inexcusably at fault, but that’s subject matter for another  article.  The captains-of-the-universe financial types  who created and marketed the hundreds-of-millions and billion dollar securities had a total understanding of the securities business BUT—  They had no understanding at all of the individual mortgages that comprise these bundles of  loans. To paraphrase: they may have been able to navigate around their ivory towers but they didn’t know the street.

Putting aside the ruthlessly greedy and the downright criminal persons (and there were, no doubt, some of these),  the people involved in the upper tiers of the securities business didn’t understand the one-loan-to-one-family consumer mortgage issues.  Like so many real estate macro-economic          conditions, the driving force of this industry came from the buyer’s of the securities product.  In other words, there were vast sums of money lusting to buy these securities. So, of course, the high loan to value and subprime mortgage  product was created, securitized and marketed.  It’s kind of the debt counterpart of the real estate equities’ periodic phenomenon of overbuilding.  The driving force in overbuilding often is not market requirement for the space so much as the availability of  too much capital tempting  otherwise unjustifiable development.

If each of the ivory tower-dwelling captains of the  universe had earlier in their career spent six months as a street level loan officer working with homeowners and learning  the nuts and bolts of the product itself and of the lender – home owner relationship and had then worked six months more as  an underwriter learning each component of a healthy loan and      acquainting themselves with the misinformation or fraudulent        information so often submitted on loan applications, they would have had an appreciation of the realities of the  mortgage industry.  If they had worked for six months as a collection officer gaining real world knowledge of what goes   wrong with defaulting borrowers, they would know that 90, 95  and 100% loans just don’t hold up when a borrower starts to  have problems.  As a former director of the California Mortgage Association, I have close friendships with many of  the leading entrepreneurial lenders in the private money loan  industry, “street level lending.”  Many of these  real-world business guys and gals won’t do a loan over 55 or 60% of the property value and many of them can instinctively  sniff out a fraudulent loan application.  They’re good at deal-making, they usually take an active part in the             underwriting of each mortgage and they know when a loan is risky.  I submit that if the mega-dollar shufflers had spent a six month internship with these top of the line  mortgage entrepreneurs who wouldn’t consider doing a loan over 55 or 60%, they would have recognized the absurdity of trusting the 90, 95 and 100% loans.

The captains of the universe and their security lawyers obviously came up with criteria for individual mortgages to be placed in their securities bundles.”   I’m  wondering who sat at the conference table when these criteria were discussed.  Was there a “lowly” loan collection  agent with thirty years of real world experience present alongside with the billion dollar salesperson?  Was there someone participating who is actually a successful  entrepreneurial mortgage lender?  Or, was the conference  dominated by a senior vice president who saw visions of mega-dollar commissions and an annual bonus equal of 100 families’ home mortgages?  Where were the scarred and  experienced street-smart entrepreneurs when they were            needed?

My mortgage investors haven’t had to take back a property through foreclosure on any loan written in the last nineteen years.   My IQ is probably 20 or 30 points lower than that of the financial wizards – but I’m a  whole lot smarter.  I’m committed to designing and underwriting loans one at a time that economically work for my  fund and for the borrower who, let’s not forget, is the guy or gal who has to actually write the mortgage payment check each month. My focus is where it belongs, on the borrower, not on      the billion dollar securities buyer. The all-powerful financial emperors were focusing in the wrong direction!

A couple of random comments:   First, I’m  probably not going to vote for John McCain but I deeply and  profoundly admire his stand on NOT bailing the mortgage industry out of its self-created mess.  While Clinton and      Obama were busy pandering to the masses about bankrolling a fix, only McCain had the guts to say that the rest of us tax payers shouldn’t bail out these morons and shouldn’t reward  stupid investing or irresponsible borrowing.  Good for you, Mr. McCain.  I hope you will go down as my most  admired unelected presidential candidate during my lifetime.

Second comment about the current state of the mess: If there needs to be a fix, I propose no grace at all for the lenders.  But maybe we can do something for the “upside down” homeowner which could save his house and, thus, help stabilize the market.  There is some talk about  legislation or court mandates reducing mortgage loan balances downward to the market value of the homes.  That’s  another brilliant idea from the panderers.  So, now we’re   stealing from one class for the benefit of another class and creating a whole sea of bankrupt lending institutions who are,  once again, going to cry for a bailout, except this time they  would have a valid point.  Here’s my thought:  In cases of borrower distress, where the mortgage loan balance is now higher than the property value, the existing loan could be bifurcated into an economically sustainable first mortgage and a second mortgage representing the portion of the loan not supported by the property value.   The second loan  would become a “sleeping” second with no monthly payments and  would be paid back with no or very little interest at such time as the owner occupied home is sold, to the extent that the sales price at that time covers that second. This way, the lenders maintain their rightful claim to their capital and the  homeowners stand a better chance of staying in their homes.  This would be both humane and economically responsible.  Also, first mortgage loans with variable interest rates should be tightly capped as to payment increases.

Thirdly, loans are unfortunately not now readily available for investors who want to buy many of the distressed and foreclosed homes, the purchases of which would greatly help to stabilize the market.   It’s every bit as stupid to    NOT give strong and credit worthy investors 65 or 70% loans as it is to give weak and fraudulent home buyers 90 to 100%  loans.   I don’t understand the regulators’ policies here.  Once again, the people who presume to regulate    don’t have a clue how things really work.

Fourth comment:  The lenders who were engaged in illegal lending practices and the borrowers and agents who submitted fraudulent loan applications should be aggressively prosecuted.

These people could give Capitalism a bad name.

Note:  Paul Elis The author is a fund manager in the investment property mortgage business and does not make consumer or homeowner loans. Neverthelss, he’s one of the most astute proffessionals I know in this business. He is available at paulelis@pmbcapital.com

More on signing your virtual mail

More advice for closing your messages

Don’t shoot youself in the foot – Strange fonts, goofball colors, and unique symbols don’t belong  in a  signature. Not only are they unprofessional, some email software programs can’t deal with these unusual approaches.

Acceptable options, are a line separating your signature by itself, perhaps a marketing slogan, maybe a small announcements of something you’d like to call attention to. Perhaps product or service, A banner to invite them to an event or seminar, workshop, or newsletter offering, or some such. You want these to link to your website, Which will make folks go to your there &build up traffic and increase your spot in the virtual world Here’s an example of an ideal email signature: Maybe you’ve heard of him

Jeff Heib

Utility Infielder, Hope 4 Loans
9901 Paramount Bl #222
Downey, CA 90240
(562) 806 2921
Hope4loans.com

“Wierd loans from a wierd company”

Pay it Forward – Finally, give your friends & repetitive contacts a break. Set your signature to appear on “new messages only” or  delete all except your name  before you send it.

Any more ideas on  email signatures as a tool are most welcome, give me a call. Your thoughts and ideas are what I live for

Thanks to Eric Mitchell emitchell@eric-mitchell.com

Late Charges for fun & profit

While on the face, it is a simple topic, as with most anything in the land of fruits & nuts the devil is in the details.

While the regulations mandate a minimum 10 days as a grace period; you need to be sure you use all your fingers.

The payment is due on the 1st, late on the 2nd, 10 days later is the 11th. This example illustrates the grace period is actually 11 days.

Here’s some more good news. Per our benevolent fathers, any payment received within 10 days, either before or after the due date is considered a current payment. Again, the payment is due on the 1st, the payment shows up 50 days late. The payment being made is considered the current installment as to the late charge due. Taken a step further, every subsequent payment is made within the grace period; you can only charge one late charge. Beware of “rolling lates”

As to a late charge on a balloon payment. The same rules apply as to the grace period. Additionally, the amount charged can’t be any more than any other late charge called for on the note. No more unreasonable late charges.

In order to be enforceable, YOU MUST PROVIDE WRITTEN NOTICE MONTHLY OF THE LATE CHARGE INCURRING meaning either the payment coupons you use or the payment book you send back & forth must show the date the late hits.

One other item to consider; don’t file a notice of default within the grace period of the 1st payment late (as if). The grace period will negate the filing.

Be careful out there.

Computer Comandments revisited part 2

More computer safeguards

5. Backing thy system religiously keepeth the soul happy.
Backups  will protect you from  fires and natural disasters along with the everpresent hacker. Recovering files and website content each day means   only data will be lost since the last backup. . Backing up daily, with copies somewhere else is the best plan.

6. Deleteth software collecting virtual dust.

If you don’t need or use it, trash it to be an the safe side..

7. Forgeteth not the temples of cyber religion.
Discovering   your computers or hard drives grew little legs & walked off in somebody’s back pocket will ruin your whole day. Secure the area, or install locks. If you don’t know where the hardware came from you found, pass and don’t think about attaching unknown hardware to your computer.
8. Get cyber insurance.
While  not included on garden variety insurance policies,it is available. You can insure for a bunch of computer risks. Policies differ, Check with your agent to see whats’s available     

Thanks to Lisa Flores-Estrella, lisa flores_estrella@imortgage.com                   

Brief Headlines of interest

Powered             by Twitter + LinkedIn
Top                   Reasons to Own a Home- realtytimes.com

There’s good reason that over half of all Americans are homeowners. Social and financial benefits are key factors when it comes to deciding to buy.
How to rescue the housing market: Foreclosures!- money.cnn.com

If the Obama administration really wants to save the housing market, it should speed up the foreclosure process — not prolong the inevitable, experts say.
Mortgage applications drop 9.6% as refinancing surge dies   down- housingwire.com

The number of mortgage applications filed by Americans fell 9.6% this past week after  experiencing a dramatic surge in volume on low interest rates  and refinancing activity. The Mortgage Bankers Association’s market composite…

Misguided Judgement Part 1

This is part 1 of an excerpt of an article written by Paul Elis, paulelis@pmbcapital, that was originally published in a trade association’s newsletter some time ago. He gives some food for thought about investing in loans.

Some Common Objections To Mortgage Opportunities May Be Ill-Considered

Both investors and brokers (we’ll refer to both as  “lenders”) frequently express objections to loan requests for reasons that I believe often don’t survive reasoned and experienced analysis.  The following are the two most   commonly heard reasons for turning down loan submissions based  on flawed reasoning or inexperience, together with my responses.  My opinions and experience apply primarily to non-consumer, investment property fundings and not necessarily to owner-occupied residential properties.

Objection One:  The Loan Term Is Too Long                  
In my experience, this is the most often heard ill-considered objection for a number of reasons.  First and foremost, in most cases it just doesn’t matter how long  the loan term is, most private money loans simply don’t have a     long life span.  Whether the note is written for 10, 15  or 20 years, most deals I have written over the last thirty years are repaid in less than three years. In fact, I have never written a loan for over ten years that has gone  to full term.

Secondly, and also very important, the lender may be missing out on a good opportunity because a long-term loan is  usually made in a safer investment context than a short-term loan. , Borrowers who are seeking or will accept short term financing are looking to bandage an acute financial problem whereas many long-term borrowers have a better strategic concept of investment success.

Third.  There is an old adage in investing that says, “Stick with your winners”.  All lending, no matter how secure the deal seems to be, has some element of risk and a certain percentage of deals will result in problems. Investing in longer-term deals will have a better overall safety record and possibly a better yield performance than skipping from one short-term mortgage investment to another.

misguided judgement part 2

This is part 2 of an excerpt of an article written by Paul Elis, paulelis@pmbcapital, that was originally published in a trade association’s newsletter some time ago. He gives some food for thought about investing in loans. The entire article is available from us if you want to read it.

Objection Two:  The Loan-To-Value Ratio Is Too High 
This objection may be justified but only after being analyzed in conjunction with the borrower’s credit and the general desirability of the realty.   The LTV considerations and the credit considerations are, in my opinion, a function of each other.  When one of them is weak, the other needs to be  Proportonately stronger.  Admittedly, it’s a judgment call..

Having multiple parties personally “on the hook” for the loan adds a self-enforcing dynamic to debt repayment.  And, I find that dealing with “solid citizens” is more problem-free than poor credit borrowers and this extends to areas other than just the receipt of timely payments.  High credit borrowers are likely to meet their obligations.

A caveat is the practical aspect of relying on strong credit in the case of simple non-judicial foreclosure situations leading to investor losses.

Another concern about automatically relying on strong  credit has to do with the amount of the loan that may be in default or foreclosed.  Having two or three or four excellent borrowers personally “on the line” as to the debt is  likely to work out okay when the amount of the financial problem is manageable.

The lender’s objection to a loan predicated only on LTV may also be misguided if it fails to give some consideration to the overall desirability of the security.

Banks generally require both reasonable credit and a certain amount of equity.  My belief is that this is faulty logic.  I want either a ton of equity or a ton of credit; enough of either that it won’t dissipate during the next recession.  I believe that excellent credit from several strong signatory parties generally creates an excellent safety factor for the lender and can frequently be acceptable in approving a high LTV mortgage request.

 

Some legal insights for 9-12

This was furnished by Herman Thordsen, an attorney specializing in loan law. His contact info follows;

There is plenty of news this week.

1, FDIC has at least five law firms it is using to chase loan officers on what it considers are bad loans but which sometimes are not.

2. FHA Mortgage loan holders and servicers are now looking at new penalties for noncompliance.

3. HUD/FHA retracts three notices on streamline loans.

4. A  couple was charged with Mortgage Rescue Scam.

5. Four more indicted in Arizona in mortgage fraud conspiracy.

6. Local broker arrested on 34 counts related to real estate scam of buying bank-owned homes.

7.  Four years after the statement, a  listing broker can be sued by the seller

8. In California two more out of ten plead guilty to mortgage fraud where loss is over $5 million

9. Insurance brokers be aware if anyone is65 or older for a Reverse Mortgage.

.Law Offices of Herman Thordsen

 

 

Foreclosures finally falling

 

The number of homes entering foreclosure in California fell to a four-year low in the second quarter of the year, according to a recent report.
The report credits the foreclosure lull on a more stable housing market as well as policy changes in the mortgage servicing industry. Hopefully this will improve the affordable housing markets .

A total of 56,633 Notices of Default were recorded during the April-to-June period, down 17 percent from 68,239 in the previous quarter, and down 19.2 percent from 70,051 in second-quarter 2010, according to  DataQuick, a  southern california reporting firm

Last quarter’s activity was the lowest for any quarter since  the second quarter of 2007 at 53,493. This is particularly noteworthy because 2007 was pre “bubble burst”

“A lot of theories are being floated as to why the numbers are down,” said John Walsh, DataQuick president. “Bank policy changes. Legal challenges. Politics. Holding back temporarily so as not to flood the market. The fact of the matter is that no one really knows, outside of lending and servicing industry insiders. One thing is certain: Homeowner distress spreads fastest when home price declines are steepest. And it now appears likely that, barring some new economic shock, the worst of the price declines are behind us.”

On a similar vein; the statewide median sales price was $250,000
in the second quarter, while this was down 7.4 percent from $260,000 a year earlier. In first-quarter 2009, when foreclosure activity peaked, the $227,000 median was down 39.5 percent from $375,000 a year earlier.