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Guess What Got Lost in the Loan Pool? (produce the note)

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-02-09 05:09 PM
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Guess What Got Lost in the Loan Pool? (produce the note)

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

WE are all learning, to our deep distress, how the perpetual pursuit of profits drove so many of the bad decisions that financial institutions made during the mortgage mania.

But while investors tally the losses that were generated by loose lending so far, the impact of another lax practice is only beginning to be seen. That is the big banks’ minimalist approach to meeting legal requirements — bookkeeping matters, really — when pooling thousands of loans into securitization trusts.

Stated simply, the notes that underlie mortgages placed in securitization trusts must be assigned to those trusts soon after the firms create them. And any transfers of these notes must also be recorded.

But this seems not to have been a priority with many big banks. The result is that bankruptcy judges are finding that institutions claiming to hold the notes that back specific mortgages often cannot prove it.

On Feb. 11, a circuit court judge in Miami-Dade County in Florida set aside a judgment against Ana L. Fernandez, a borrower whose home had been foreclosed and repurchased on Jan. 21 by Chevy Chase Bank, the institution claiming to hold the note. But the bank had been unable to produce evidence that the original lender had assigned the note, which was in the amount of $225,000, to Chevy Chase.

With the sale set aside, Ms. Fernandez remains in the home. “We believe this loan was never assigned,” said Ray Garcia, the lawyer in Miami who represented the borrower. Now, he said, it is up to whoever can produce the underlying note to litigate the case. The statute of limitations on such a matter runs for five years, he said.

A spokeswoman for Capital One, which is in the process of acquiring Chevy Chase, did not return a phone call on Friday seeking comment.

Mr. Garcia has another case in which a borrower tried to sell his home but could not because the note underlying a $60,000 second mortgage cannot be found. The statute of limitations on the matter will expire in October, he said, and if the note holder has not come forward by then, the borrower will be free of his obligation on the second mortgage.

No one knows how many loans went into securitization trusts with defective documentation. But as messes go, this one has, ahem, potential. According to Inside Mortgage Finance, some eight million nonprime mortgages were put into securities pools in 2005 and 2006 and sold to investors. The value of these loans was $797 billion in 2005 and $815 billion in 2006.

If notes underlying even some of these mortgages were improperly assigned or lost, that will surely complicate pending legislation intended to allow bankruptcy judges to modify mortgage terms for troubled borrowers. A so-called cram-down provision in the law would let judges reduce the size of a loan, forcing whoever holds the security interest in it to take a loss.

But if the holder of the note is in doubt, how can these loans be modified?

Bookkeeping is such a bore, especially when there are billions to be made shoveling loans into trusts like coal into the Titanic’s boilers. You can imagine the thought process: Assigning notes takes time and costs money, why bother? Who’s going to ask for proof of ownership of these notes anyhow?

But as the Fernandez case and others indicate, bankruptcy judges across the country are increasingly asking these pesky questions. Two judges in California — one in state court, another in federal court — issued temporary restraining orders last month stopping foreclosures because proper documentation was not produced by lenders or their representatives. And in another California case, a borrower’s lawyer was awarded $8,800 in attorney’s fees relating to costs spent litigating against a lender that could not prove it had the right to foreclose.

California cases are especially interesting because foreclosures in that state can be conducted without the oversight of a judge. Borrowers who do not have a lawyer representing them can be turned out of their homes in four months.

Samuel L. Bufford, a federal bankruptcy judge in Los Angeles since 1985, has overseen some 100,000 bankruptcy cases. He said that in previous years, he rarely asked for documentation in a foreclosure case but that problems encountered in mortgage securitizations have made him become more demanding.

In a recent case, Judge Bufford said, he asked a lender to produce the original of the note and it turned out to be different from the copy that had been previously submitted to the court. The original had been assigned to a bank that had then transferred it to Freddie Mac, the judge explained. “They had no clue what happened after that,” he said. “Now somebody’s got to go find that note.”

Continued>>
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/01/business/01gret.htm?_r=1
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Fresh_Start Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-02-09 05:16 PM
Response to Original message
1. damn, my lender hasn't sold my account
so I guess I can't use this weakness to get my home loan forgiven
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ret5hd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-02-09 05:24 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. I don't think you would necessarily know.
If they sold the pooled the note and sold the pool to say, a hedge fund, the hedge fund could have contracted for your lender to keep collecting the payments.

Maybe someone here will know for sure.
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Fresh_Start Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-02-09 05:27 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. I've had other loans which were clearly sold
I needed to change who I remitted payment to.

My current loan is still with the original lender. Even if they securitized the loan, they are still servicing it so I'd guess there is much less opportunity for paperwork to get lost
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knowbody0 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-02-09 05:18 PM
Response to Original message
2. I was a mortgage banking accountant
and cannot believe protocol got this sloppy in such a short time. we sold loans in bundles and the notes were treated like gold.
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