April 26, 2024

California Quits States’ Talks With Banks on Mortgages

The proposal being sought by the big banks “is not the deal California homeowners have been waiting for,” wrote Kamala D. Harris, the state attorney general, in a letter to those leading the talks. It is “inadequate,” she wrote.

California is among the states whose homeowners have suffered the most in the housing market collapse, and because of its size, officials involved in the negotiations said banks, including Bank of America, Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase, would want its participation before agreeing to settle and to pay substantial sums.

The talks have been led by the attorney general of Iowa as well as an associate general counsel at the Justice Department’s headquarters. The negotiations have evolved from disputes over so-called robo-signing and other improper foreclosure practices into a battle over nearly every aspect of the banks’ roles in the housing bubble and subsequent collapse.

If a deal were reached, it could provide billions of dollars for the Obama administration and states to distribute in assistance to homeowners, free banks from some of the mortgage claims that have caused their stocks to sputter, and score a victory for the Justice Department, which has been criticized for pursuing very few cases related to the financial crisis. A spokeswoman for the department said Friday evening that the negotiations would continue.

“We continue to work with the state attorneys general, including California, to ensure that the banks are held fully accountable for their actions,” said Tracy Schmaler, the spokeswoman.

The main sticking point has been the banks’ desire for a broad legal waiver covering future claims over their mortgage practices.

They would like the waiver to cover not only robo-signing and other foreclosure practices but also potential claims related to their creation of mortgage securities before the financial crisis.

A broad deal might help banks reassure investors that they have a good handle on their potential payouts.

But Ms. Harris said in her letter that she was running a full investigation into the creation and sale of mortgage securities. She said she did not want to participate in the deal partly because it would limit her investigation. Though she is the first state official to back out of the negotiations entirely, attorneys general from several states have expressed reservations about a broad waiver, including New York, Delaware, Massachusetts and Nevada.

New York has been among the most vocal in its critiques of such a deal, and New York’s attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, was kicked off the lead committee of officials negotiating the deal.

He has not, however, pulled out of the talks completely.

Bank analysts said that hopes for a deal had been fading for some time and that banks had little reason to participate without California.

“The banks aren’t going to be interested in settling unless it removes future liabilities,” said Jeffrey Harte, a bank analyst with Sandler O’Neill, “and here you have population-wise a very big state — one of the states with a larger portion of mortgage issues — not going along with it.”

Mr. Harte said an agreement that covered only foreclosure missteps, like robo-signing, would be unlikely to generate the amount of money that federal and state officials had been seeking for homeowner aid. The banks may want to hold onto some of those funds to settle claims about their mortgage securities as well as future losses on mortgages they own.

It remains possible, of course, that California could rejoin the settlement talks, but Ms. Harris said in her letter Friday that the effort was not worth their continued resources.

One tricky issue has been how much aid would be awarded to homeowners in California. Any money collected under a national deal would be distributed among the 50 states, and officials in California and other states that have been hit hardest are under political pressure to obtain significant sums.

Opposition to a deal has grown as well.

A coalition called Californians for a Fair Settlement has been working to block a deal. Among other things, it wants the banks to pay a far higher penalty than the $20 billion that has been floated.

They also want the deal to include widespread principal reduction for the state’s homeowners who owe more than their houses are now worth.

Complicating the situation, the housing market in many parts of the country has deteriorated further as the states have been discussing a settlement.

Ms. Harris pointed to the housing weakness in California in her letter. She said that in the 11 months of talks, more than a half-million homes had entered foreclosure in the state. While California used to have five cities ranked on the list of the 10 highest in foreclosures, it now has eight such cities.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=b4d33adb44587cab5b6a60e7b4f4afc6

UBS Settles Fraud Cases Over Munis

The Justice Department, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Internal Revenue Service and 25 state attorneys general entered into the agreement with UBS, which admitted that, from 2001 through 2006, several of its former employees repeatedly manipulated the bidding process when local governmental entities or nonprofit organizations sought to invest the proceeds of municipal bond offerings.

The conduct of UBS and its employees “corrupted the competitive process and harmed municipalities, and ultimately taxpayers, nationwide,” said Assistant Attorney General Christine A. Varney, who oversees the federal antitrust division. “Today’s agreements with UBS ensure that restitution is paid to the victims of the anticompetitive conduct, that UBS pays penalties and disgorges its ill-gotten gains.”

UBS said in a statement that it was pleased to have resolved the matter. “The underlying transactions were entered into in a business that no longer exists at UBS, and involved employees who are not longer with the firm,” the statement said. The company also said that it had made provisions for the settlement in prior quarters and it therefore “will have no effect on the firm’s future financial results or on any current business of UBS.”

UBS is the second big banking institution to settle accusations of bid-rigging in the municipal bond derivatives market. In December, Bank of America agreed to pay $137 million in restitution after voluntarily disclosing its anticompetitive conduct and agreeing to cooperate with authorities in further investigations.

As part of the broader investigation of bid-rigging in the municipal securities market, the Justice Department has brought criminal charges against 18 former executives of various financial services companies. Nine of the 18 have pleaded guilty, including one former UBS employee. Three other UBS employees also have been charged with criminal activities related to the municipal market.

Most of the $160 million to be paid by UBS will go to municipalities that were affected by the conduct, officials said, which involved more than 100 transactions. According to an outline of the charges by the S.E.C., the company played various roles in the illegal bidding scheme, sometimes obtaining advance information about competing bids for financial products, and in other cases facilitating illegal activity by submitting sham bids for services.

Our complaint against UBS reads like a ‘how to’ primer for bid-rigging and securities fraud,” Elaine C. Greenberg, chief of the S.E.C.’s municipal securities and public pensions unit, said at a press conference announcing the settlement.

UBS, which acquired the American investment bank
PaineWebber in 2000, was at the time of its conduct one of the largest underwriters of municipal securities in the nation. UBS closed its municipal reinvestment and derivatives desk in 2008.

State and local governments often sell bonds to raise money to pay for projects like roads, schools and hospitals. Until they are ready to spend the money, the entities invest the proceeds in contracts that are often tailored to meet specific needs in terms of the timing of spending and required collateral to insure their debts.

Investment firms offer to sell those contracts at given prices, and bidding for the right to provide the service is supposed to be conducted at arm’s length. But UBS often conspired with the party overseeing the bidding to guarantee that it bid just enough to win the contract, thereby maximizing its own profit.

Of the $160 million to be paid by UBS, $91 million will be routed through the Justice Department and the states to the municipalities and other customers affected. UBS will also pay $47 million through the S.E.C. to the customers affected, and $22 million through the I.R.S.

Under I.R.S. regulations, the proceeds of tax-exempt municipal securities offerings must be invested at fair market value. Because of the fraudulent conduct by UBS, the tax-exempt status of billions of dollars of securities was jeopardized, officials said. That status was reaffirmed by the I.R.S. as part of its settlement with the company.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/05/business/05muni.html?partner=rss&emc=rss