...the mortgage-backed securities--whose market collapse started this whole crisis--are facing another bit of a problem.
From The enormous mortgage-bond scandal:
From The enormous mortgage-bond scandal:
You thought the foreclosure mess was bad? You’re right about that. But it gets so much worse once you start adding in a whole bunch of parallel messes in the world of mortgage bonds. For instance, as Tracy Alloway says, mortgage-bond documentation generally says that if more than a minuscule proportion of notes in a mortgage pool weren’t properly transferred, then the trustee for the bondholders can force the investment bank who put the deal together to repurchase the mortgages. And it’s looking very much as though none of the notes were properly transferred.This Citibank note (pdf), via FT Alphaville goes into a bit more detail:
Most mortgage trusts were set up as REMICs (Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits) which are special purpose vehicles used to pool mortgages. Under the IRS code, REMIC confers a special tax status in which the cash flows to the trust are not taxed. Investors in the trust pay taxes. The tax exempt nature is important. If the trusts were in fact to be taxed, the taxes would distort the yields required by investors.This may be a bigger problem for the banks than some pesky homeowners as bondholders tend to have lots of highly paid lawyers to press their cases.
To qualify as a REMIC under the IRS code and enjoy the beneficial tax treatment, the trust (1) must be passive and (2) cannot acquire any new assets 90 days following the trust’s creation.
If … mortgage documents were never correctly passed through to the trust when it was established, then the trust may not actually own the underlying mortgages it purports to own. Although it is possible that this issue could be remedied by some legal maneuvering, doing so could violate the REMIC status since the trust would be acquiring assets long after the aforementioned 90 day period has expired. Such a violation in turn could trigger a sizeable tax burden for investors. Our speaker indicated that there are a handful of open questions on this front and that this is a legal gray area.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-14 07:14 am (UTC)On the plus side, it sounds like the government could be getting a huge tax windfall! While it may have to create TARP II to bail the banks out from under this tax burden that they got themselves into, it may not be that bad, since TARP I was actually hugely successful (even though demagogues treat it as a four letter word).
(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-14 03:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-15 08:20 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-15 09:22 pm (UTC)How do you know that?
(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-17 05:18 pm (UTC)Though it's sort of amusing that somebody lent the money for the mortgage but doesn't have the security agreement to enable them to foreclose. I guess that reduces them to "general creditor", which is going to make it a lot harder to collect the money. Boo-hoo, one is responsible for keeping one's paperwork straight.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-18 12:15 am (UTC)There are cases in which your suspicion is wrong:
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/business/fl-wrongful-foreclosure-0922-20100921,0,36776.storyhttp://www.presimetrics.com/blog/?p=110And a case that a lot of people in Massachusetts may have heard of: http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/realestate/bank-of-america-forecloses-on-house-that-couple-had-paid-cash-for/1072632The banks are making mistakes. Obviously, mistakes happen, but the process is supposed to minimize the number of wrongful foreclosures. In the press of current events, and the haste to clear backlog, it seems that more mistakes are getting through.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-18 02:53 am (UTC)