Bank of America Corp. imposed a nationwide moratorium on foreclosures and the sale of foreclosed homes after it came under intense pressure from a government-run housing-finance giant worried about documentation problems, people familiar with the situation said.A year ago, I wrote about potential issues with MERS, and I figured that there might be a fair number of cases out there, but the developments of the past few weeks, which, credit where credit is due, were spotted and covered with far more detail and intellect by Yves Smith than by me, have been remarkable.
The bank called the halt as concern mounted from legislators and state prosecutors about procedures used by lenders to foreclose on homes. Many banks use so-called robo signers, employees who sign hundreds of documents a day, without carefully reviewing their contents, when foreclosing on homes. Critics say that could result in improper foreclosures.
Freddie Mac, the government-run mortgage-finance company that along with Fannie Mae owns many of the mortgages serviced by banks, pressed Bank of America to expand its search for problems with the foreclosure documentation process, said the people familiar with the situation.
This is all falling apart at a far greater speed than did the collapses of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers in 2008.
We had low key mainstream coverage on the brokerage houses' issues in 2007, but the first mainstream coverage of the mortgage debacle is from just a month ago.
I would further note, that what is going on now has NOTHING to do with MERS, which remains the elephant in the room.
This feels like the first few pebbles hitting us from an avalanche.
0 comments :
Post a Comment