Tag Archives: Morgan Stanley

Action for Fair Settlement


Campaign for a Fair Settlement a project of Action for the Common Good

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We need to make sure local communities can decide their economic futures.

Full scale Wall Street freak out.

Five years after Wall Street criminals destroyed our economy there are still millions of underwater homeowners and millions more foreclosures in the pipeline.

The good news is that Home Defenders and local elected officials have figured out an innovative way – called Local Principal Reduction – to deal with this problem. The bad news is that Wall Street criminals are in in full attack mode fighting as hard as they can to stop us.

Tell Wall Street bankers: Stop bullying communities advancing local principal reduction and cooperate in keeping struggling families in their homes.

Here’s what’s happening. We have figured out a way to purchase certain underwater loans, reset them to fair market value, and then get the homeowners into new, sustainable mortgages. The costs of the program are borne by the private funders who the cities are partnering with and the beneficiaries are the homeowners, with affordable mortgages and new equity, and our communities, with greater economic activity.

The key to making this program work for everyone is the use of eminent domain – the ability of a government to take property for the public benefit – to acquire the underwater mortgages if the Wall Street investors refuse to make a fair deal. And that’s what’s freaking Wall Street out.[3]

Tell Wall Street: End your outrageous efforts to block local principal reduction programs that will keep families in their homes and rebuild local economies.

We are facing a stark choice. Either we and our elected officials control our economic future, or Wall Street criminals and their banks do. It’s clear where Wall Street bankers stand. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), made up same old Wall Street bankers that brought you the foreclosure crisis, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, US Bank, etc., is bullying and threatening cities that are exploring local principal reduction programs including El Monte, La Puente, and Richmond, CA; and North Las Vegas, NV. [4]

But that’s not stopping us. Stand up and tell Wall Street criminals to keep their hands off of Main Street and help struggling homeowners rebuild their lives and their wealth.

This fight is just starting; Wall Street and SIFMA are committed to fighting as dirty as they can to keep this from happening. With your help Home Defenders and our cities will take bold and courageous action to build a future that works for all of us, starting with the struggling underwater homeowners in our own back yards.

In solidarity, Brian, Campaign for a Fair Settlement
http://www.campaignforfairsettlement.org/

[1] http://www.marketwatch.com/story/underwater-mortgage-percentage-falls-below-20-2013-06-12

[2] http://www.newbottomline.com/underwater_mortgages_and_1_million_jobs

[3] Robert Kuttner “Seize the mortgages, save the neighborhood” Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/2013/jun/29/opinion/la-oe-kuttner-eminent-domain-mortgages-20130630

[4] Peter Dreier “To Rescue Local Economies, Cities Seize Underwater Mortgages Through Eminent Domain” Huffington Post. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-dreier/to-rescue-local-economies_b_3614326.html

Two more banks move mountains


Rainforest Action Network
Tell PNC and UBS to go all the way and stop financing MTR
MTR in action
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Two of the largest remaining financiers of mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining have announced that they are taking a step in the right direction to end the devastating practice of blowing up mountaintops and poisoning drinking water for coal.

Pennsylvania-based PNC and Swiss banking giant UBS have both announced policies that will limit their funding of MTR.

PNC and UBS are following in the footsteps of six other banking giants–Bank of America, Citi, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Credit Suisse—that many of you helped push in the right direction on MTR financing over the last two years.

Though this decision does not mean an immediate end to the financing of mountaintop mining, we are encouraged to see PNC and UBS take this step forward. Now let’s get ’em to go all the way!

Join us in urging PNC and UBS to completely cut all financing of mountaintop mining companies. Once your signatures are in, we’ll deliver your demands to PNC headquarters in Pittsburgh, as well as UBS headquarters in both Connecticut and Zurich. Sign this petition today!

Thanks for moving mountains in the banking world with us so that Appalachia’s mountains can stay right where they belong.

GFC team

For the mountains,

Amanda Starbuck, Annie Sartor and Scott Parkin
Global Finance Campaign Team

ECONOMY: Investigating Foreclosure Fraud


Yesterday, all 50 state attorneys general opened a joint investigation into the ongoing foreclosure fraud scandal that has led some of the country’s biggest banks to suspend foreclosures, as they sort out whether or not they improperly threw borrowers out of their homes. Multiple banks — including Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo — have reportedly had foreclosure documents approved by “robo-signers”: employees who were signing thousands of foreclosure documents a day, without verifying basic information. In many cases, as the Associated Press reported, these employees had no experience with mortgage banking at all. According to employee depositions, “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.” One bank employee reportedly said, “I don’t know the ins and outs of the loan, I just sign documents.” But the extent of the banks’ problems extends beyond robo-signed paperwork to lost and forged documents and, as Reuters’ Felix Salmon reported, knowingly selling investors mortgage bonds they knew were toxic. “The financial institutions would be well served by working with us to get it cleaned up,” said Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray. “And they’d also be well served to think about reaching negotiated resolutions with borrowers in cases where they’ve created exposure for themselves by committing fraud upon the courts.”

FRAUDULENTLY FORECLOSING: According to a report from the investment bank Morgan Stanley, “as many as 9 million U.S. mortgages that have been or are being foreclosed may face challenges over the validity of legal documents.” In Florida alone, “a recent sample of foreclosure cases in the 12th Judicial Circuit of Florida showed that 20 percent of those set for summary judgment involved deficient documents.” In other instances, dubious notarizations were used to approve foreclosures (leading President Obama to veto a bill that would have forced every state in the country to accept out-of-state notarizations). At the moment, the extent to which unlawful foreclosures were approved is unknown, but JP Morgan Chase yesterday set aside $1.3 billion to cover potential legal costs stemming from the foreclosure scandal. As the Washington Independent’s Annie Lowery reported, “CEO Jamie Dimon tried to reassure call participants by saying there is ‘almost no chance we made a mistake‘ with foreclosures,” but the bank, in addition to the money to cover legal fees, put $1 billion into its mortgage-repurchase reserves, which it uses “to buy back bad mortgages it packaged and sold to investors or the government-sponsored entities, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.” “Every homeowner that’s in foreclosure now should be questioning,” Matthew Weidner, an attorney who defends homeowners in foreclosure cases, told Bloomberg News. “This entire system is now a great big question mark.” The banks’ actions not only call into question the legal status of foreclosures, but undermine due process and the rule of law when it comes to property rights. “In a nation of laws, contract and property rights, there is no room for errors,” wrote The Big Picture’s Barry Ritholz. “So what does it mean if banks have been systemically, fraudulently and illegally undermining this process?”

THE POLITICAL RESPONSE: The White House yesterday signaled its approval of the attorneys general’s investigation, with Press Secretary Robert Gibbs saying, “We’re supportive of getting to the bottom of the process and insuring that these banks are following the legal process for making these decisions.” However, the administration has thus far refused to endorse the idea of a national foreclosure moratorium — suggested by some congressional Democrats — due to the potential for “unitended consequences.” The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has also released a four-step plan for banks to follow as they look into their foreclosure processes. “I intend to maintain our focus on addressing this issue in a manner that is fair to delinquent households, but also fair to servicers, mortgage investors, neighborhoods and most of all, is in the best interest of taxpayers and housing markets,” said acting FHFA director Edward DeMarco. While many congressional Democrats have called for investigations into the banks’ actions and a bi-partisan group of attorneys general have called for foreclosure moratoriums in their respective states, Congressional Republicans have been largely silent on the issue. Sen. Richard Shelby (R-AL) is one of the few Republicans to call for an investigation, saying “the regulators should determine exactly what occurred at these institutions and make those findings available to the [Senate] Banking Committee without delay.” Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd (D-CT) has scheduled a hearing to examine the banks’ practices for November 16.

DEFANGING THE WATCHDOG?: Could some of these problems with the banks been avoided? Elizabeth Warren, who is heading the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), thinks so, saying “had a similar agency been in place three years ago” this problem could have been nipped in the bud. “Little problems are a lot easier to fix than great big problems,” Warren said. The CFPB will have the mandate “to oversee and write rules for mortgage servicers, though it is not staffed or set up yet,” and having one agency in charge of this will be a distinct improvement, as right now at least four agencies have some jurisdiction over mortgage servicers, with none of them looking out specifically for the interests of homeowners. This lackluster and balkanized oversight of the servicing industry helps to explain why companies passed off bogus paperwork and allegedly committed fraud on the court for as long as they did,” wrote Mother Jones’ Andy Kroll. “This is where a consumer protection bureau dedicated to proactively safeguarding American consumers comes into play.” “Moving forward with the regulations under the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau makes a lot of sense. This is a reminder of why those kinds of rules are necessary,” said Harvard Business School Professor Nicolas Retsinas. But the CFPB may have a hard time getting off the ground, as some Republican members of the House Financial Services Committee have already made clear they want to deny the agency funding. Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) has announced his intention to defund the agency entirely, as he believes it “assaults the liberties of the consumer.”

Move Your Money


Break up the Big Banks. Pledge to Move Your Money now!The big banks on Wall Street — JP Morgan/Chase, Citibank, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley — have had an incredible year, getting huge taxpayer bail-outs, making record profits and paying out multi-million dollar bonuses to their CEOs while many of them are still participating in all the highly leveraged activities that caused our housing and credit crisis in the first place.

I’d like to say the good news is that Congress is poised to pass major financial reforms later this month, so the President can sign the bill before the 4th of July. The problem is the bill they’re planning to pass isn’t good enough. Don’t take it from me. Here’s what the New York Times said about it last week:

The financial reform legislation making its way through Congress has Wall Street executives privately relieved that the bill does not do more to fundamentally change how the industry does business.

Despite the outcry from lobbyists and warnings from conservative Republicans that the legislation will choke economic growth, bankers and many analysts think that the bill approved by the Senate last week will reduce Wall Street’s profits but leave its size and power largely intact.

In other words, too big to fail banks will still be too big to fail. It’s time to take matters into our own hands. So today we’re joining the Move Your Money campaign started by the good people at The Huffington Post. Declare your independence from big banks and pledge to Move Your Money to a local community bank or credit union today.

PLEDGE TO MOVE YOUR MONEY TO A COMMUNITY BANK OR CREDIT UNION RIGHT NOW

Community banks and credit unions don’t act like the big banks. Typically, they’re more responsible in how they manage their money, they’re more closely connected to the people and businesses who live near them, and they’re more inclined to make loans they know will get paid back. And your local credit union isn’t going to ask Congress for a multi-billion dollar bail-out either. These are the qualities most people want banks to have.

The idea is simple.

To regular Americans this issue isn’t Left or Right — it just makes sense. If enough people move their money from a big bank to a smaller, more local, more traditional community bank, we can break up the big banks ourselves. By working together, we won’t have to wait for Congress make change happen.

TAKE THE PLEDGE AND FIND A CREDIT UNION OR COMMUNITY BANK NEAR YOU

We can send a message to Congress, the President and every candidate running for office that we don’t trust big banks with our money. But it’s up to us to do it.

Let’s get started right now. Thank you for everything you do.

-Charles

Charles Chamberlain, Political Director
Democracy for America