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Richard Zombeck

Huffington Post 7/30/2010

Treasury Used Bogus Info In Report To Homeowners

According to a recent article in HuffPo by Shahien Nasiripour, "Treasury claims that Fannie
Mae, which administers its Home Affordable Modification Program, screwed up. As a
consequence, the public can no longer tell whether homeowners with HAMP modifications ...
are being placed in sustainable mortgages."

According to the article, Treasury, relying on reports from Fannie Mae, miscalculated the
default rates of HAMP participants by about 600%.

Treasury spokesman Mark Paustenbach said, "In an effort to review and better explain the
methodology, we learned from our program administrator, Fannie Mae, that not all canceled
loans were included in the underlying information provided to Treasury. The error caused
inconsistent reporting of permanent modifications during the snapshots reported. These
omissions have impacted our previous analysis... with respect to the performance of HAMP
permanent modifications."

Ironically, the week before, in a conference call with reporters, Herbert M. Allison Jr.,
Treasury's assistant secretary for financial stability, went so far as to praise the default rate
as "very low."

Of course, Allison thought the default rate was six percent, when in fact it's been more 60
percent according to Barclay's analyst and as high as 75 percent according to analysts at Fitch
Ratings.

Part of the reason for the discrepancy was that Fannie Mae was conveniently not counting
homeowners who had been kicked out of the program. That number has been higher than the
number of people accepted into the program over the last couple of months. Nearly 94,000
homeowners were bounced from HAMP in June. Compare that to the 66,000 homeowners who
were granted some kind of relief. It's the third straight month in which more homeowners
were kicked out of the program than have been entered into some phase of it.
In the meantime, while essentially masking the failure of HAMP by providing phony and faulty
information to Treasury, Fannie Mae's Terence Edwards, Executive Vice President for Credit
Portfolio Management is threatening to punish homeowners who default on their loans.

This comes as no big surprise to homeowners in the way it apparently surprises Geithner and
the rest of Treasury. We've known the plan was a farce since the beginning. Loan Servicers
like Ocwen, Aurora, Litton, and Saxon, to name a few, have used the HAMP program to bilk
close to $4 Billion out of homeowners with false hope and promises. In fact numerous sites
and organizations have been pointing out the programs failures since its inception.

While I was in D.C. in April at Treasury, Diana Farrell, Deputy Director of the National
Economic Council briefly mentioned the administration's "successful" programs, referring to
HAMP, Making Home Affordable, and similar programs designed to address the mortgage
fiasco.

I asked her why the administration continues to see these programs as a success when the
only point of reference they use to gauge the performance is the bank's own reporting of their
progress. She then directed me to the progress reports on financialstability.gov - the same
reports Treasury is now reporting as flawed.

Those reports are crap; I've seen them," I said in response, "Why aren't you talking to the
homeowners and people whose loans have been supposedly modified. Why isn't there any
oversight or verification?"

I didn't get a direct response. Instead she looked to her colleagues in the back of the room
and said, "We'll take that under advisement," and moved to the next question in the room.

So while Treasury was taking the word of criminals in the banking and servicing industry -
allowing them to report on their own progress, the very organization that caused the
meltdown by gobbling up all the toxic mortgages it could is providing status reports that
essentially cover up the program's utter failure.

There are some painfully obvious reasons why these modifications are re-defaulting: A large
number of the modifications don't offer any real relief at all. Many homeowners have found
themselves owing more principal on the loan than they did before. Others have been offered
lower payments amounting to no more than $60 in savings per month - hardly an incentive to
stay in a home that's lost 30-40 percent of its value and is more than likely to lose another 30
percent in the coming two years.

It's not like the information isn't out there. There are thousands of stories written by
homeowners on shamethebanks.org, givemebackmycredit.com, and MFI-Miami that recount
the way homeowners have been abused, lied to, and scammed by the banks and servicers in
the name of loan modifications. One story on MFI-Miami about a cancer victim, Lynne, in
Northern Michigan has received the run around from Bank of America for over a year while
attempting to get her underwater home modified. Through the efforts of Steve Dibert with
MFI-Miami, two weeks ago, Bank of America finally offered to modify the loan. This week they
changed their mind and have decided to foreclose after all.

Dibert also has an interesting article discussing Bank of America's possible insolvency .
Another issue they may be hiding from the public and could explain why, rather than
modifying loans, they've decided to simply suck as much money out of homeowners in any
way that they can.

Another issue falling through the regulatory cracks and far from any kind of oversight are the
"in-house" modifications. As Mark Rodgers, Director, Citi Public Affairs, was kind enough to
point out in a comment on a previous post, "the majority of our customers were assisted
through a variety of Citi's proprietary programs. HAMP mods are only a small subset of Citi's
foreclosure prevention efforts." Rodgers also claimed that Citi has provided assistance to
900,000 distressed homeowners and directed us to read Citi's own "most recent
comprehensive and transparent quarterly report."

Ironically, less than two weeks later, Citi ended up shelling out $75 million to the SEC
because they lied to investors about the extent of the bank's holdings tied to high-risk
mortgages. So much for transparency.

Unfortunately this is the case with many servicers, and Rodgers received a few comments
pointing out the flaws in his claims from other readers.

When servicers create their own modification programs they write their own rules and don't
have to bother with the pesky guidelines. In the case of my mod for example, Ocwen
Financial Corp. increased the original principal by $15,000 (basically starting from scratch
with a generous tip), they charged off $12,000 to the IRS (I have yet to be told why), and the
paperwork and accounting practices are so convoluted that it would take a team of legal
experts and CPAs to decipher it.

Congress seems more concerned with denying the unemployed their benefits, gutting the
reform bill, stopping anything from progressing, and giving tax breaks to the wealthy.

For his part, President Obama seems to have forgotten all about his speech in Arizona back in
February in which he proposed relief for 6 million homeowners over two years. The HAMP
program has done little more than give people the small sliver of temporary hope that may
have kept them from walking away from a money pit months ago.

Homeowners have desperately written, emailed, called, and pleaded with their elected
officials. We've been to Washington; we've tried to make them listen. For what? To have
another announcement come from Treasury that all of the reports we've been following for
the last 18 months have been wrong because they simply didn't check their sources? Now
what? Is it too early for pitchforks and torches?

John March, one of many homeowners who posted his story to shamethebanks.org, started a
Facebook page today called White House Homeowners sit in! 9/11 2010. In the page
description he writes, "This is intended to create a group of homeowners and individuals
willing to go to Washington and stage a sit in outside the White house in protest. We would
stay there until we got answers to questions that have something to do with reality..."

My question is: are there still people in this country willing to fight or have the banks and
corporations really beaten us down enough to claim victory?

Follow Richard Zombeck on Twitter: www.twitter.com/zombeck

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