Eric Schneiderman Delves Into Housing
Christopher Whalen, HousingWire
          
Maybe, just maybe there will be justice afterall
How could the Obama White House look at a 50% loss rate on half a  trillion dollars’ worth of collateralized debt obligations issued during  the housing market madness and not bring prosecutions for securities  fraud? Instead, Obama played the role of stooge perfectly. He did  nothing just long enough to let the worst offenders on Wall Street walk  on acts of securities fraud and other offenses. But maybe, just maybe,  there will be justice after all.
During the State of the Union, Obama appointed New York Attorney  General Eric Schneiderman head of the “new” Residential Mortgage-Backed  Securities Working Group.  When he subsequently took credit for the  settlement with the top banks and more than 40 states over foreclosure  abuse, President Obama said inaction was “unacceptable.”  As HousingWire  noted in previous commentaries, the Obama administration has ignored  housing issues such as foreclosure and the refinance blockade by the  mega banks going back three years or more until the expediency of  election year politics made it attractive to talk about them. He  belatedly gave Eric Schneiderman control over federal resources to  conduct wider investigations, something that ought to have been done  three years ago.
But Schneiderman has all the legal authority he needs. The role of  Schneiderman in investigating fraud and malfeasance in the financial  markets needs to be understood separately from Washington agendas. The  legal and political mandate of the New York AG is far broader than that  of Obama and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, whose chief role is to  protect the large banks from any accountability. The Department of  Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission, for example, are  nowhere to be found when it comes to prosecuting Wall Street executives  involved in the creation and sale of fraudulent assets linked to the  mortgage markets.
The NY AG inquiry, on the other hand, reportedly focuses on areas  such as loan origination and sales, the creation of residential  mortgage-backed securities, the change in and perfection of title with  respect to mortgages, and the role of the trustees and servicers. Each  of these areas of inquiry is separate and apart from the issue of  foreclosure abuse. And each carries with it legal and tax consequences  that are significantly larger than the $25 billion involved in the  foreclosure settlement announced recently.
Last summer Bank of America and other lenders were willing to accept a  settlement of foreclosure abuses with the various state AGs in the $13  billion range. Remarkably, $8 billion of this amount would have gone to  California alone. The imbalance in terms of the portion of the  settlement going to California and the scope of the proposed settlement  forced New York to withdraw from the discussions last summer. (The state  later opted to take part in the settlement.) But as we’ve noted above,  Schneiderman took the proverbial football home. Only New York has the  legal weapons to force the large banks to settle and not just with  respect to foreclosure abuse claims.
The NY AG’s office, don’t forget, used the threat of the  Depression-era Martin Act to force American International Group into  management changes shortly after the 2008 rescue by the Federal Reserve  Bank of New York and the Treasury.
THE BNY MELLON CASE
Around the time that settlement discussions broke down last summer,  Schneiderman intervened in the civil litigation against Countrywide  Financial. The extraordinary Martin Act intervention filed by  Schneiderman with the New York State Supreme Court alleged that Bank of  America and Bank of New York Mellon committed fraud when they failed in  their fiduciary duties with respect to the creation and sale of hundreds  of RMBS trusts. Less than a month after the NY AG intervened in the  Countrywide case, BNY CEO Robert Kelly was abruptly forced out.
The Schneiderman intervention in the Countrywide litigation was  significant because almost immediately after the NY AG acted, some of  the smaller RMBS trustees such as US Bancorp, Deutsche Bank and others  began to sue the Wall Street banks that sponsored bad deals for which  they’re cast as custodian. US Bancorp reportedly is actively cooperating  with the NY AG and other agencies in terms of identifying potential  wrongdoing, essentially acting as an unpaid advocate for bond holders in  return for consideration from NY and federal prosecutors.  Nobody pays  or indemnifies RMBS trustees to act as advocates for investors.
Of note, with Bank of New York and Bank America, which account for  the lion’s share of the RMBS market and trustee billets, there is as yet  no litigation by Bank of New York on behalf of investors. When you see  Bank of New York sue Bank of America, then you’ll know the mortgage  crisis really is headed for a conclusion.  But the calculus going  forward with respect to the ultimate fate of Bank of America and Bank of  New York is now largely in the hands of Eric Schneiderman and the  courts.
The placement of Schneiderman atop the RMBS Working Group implied  that New York and the other states would cooperate in terms of both  settlement discussions with respect to foreclosure abuses like  robo-signing and other offenses. And, with the exception of Oklahoma,  they did. Sources close to the NY AG’s office, however, tell HW that  being back in the fold with respect to the foreclosure settlement  process does not mean that New York must or will participate in an  omnibus settlement of other issues.
The insider asks how other AGs came to the table after California  Attorney General Kamala Harris got such a big piece of the settlement  pie, an estimated $18 billion.
The answer, in the case of Eric Schneiderman and the courts in the  State of New York, is that there are bigger fish to fry.  While much of  the media attention devoted to the housing crisis has been focused on  the question of robo-signing and foreclosure abuse, how Eric  Schneiderman pursues the other issues currently on the table could have a  dramatic impact on the nation’s largest banks.
While AGs such as Harris in California are mostly focused on  political outcomes with respect to the foreclosure settlement — AG after  all stands for “aspiring governor” — Schneiderman is also concerned  with more basic issues of equity for investors, regulated banks, funds  and insurance companies which suffered losses, and the public at large.
As the gatekeeper of New York law, the governing template for the  global securities markets, Schneiderman has a duty to pursue acts of  fraud and negligence to demonstrate that investors may rely upon New  York to enforce the rules of the game.
SCHNEIDERMAN IN 2012
What can we expect from Schneiderman in 2012 and beyond? First and  foremost, as HW went to press, we got a narrow settlement of the  foreclosure mess that allows the various AGs to declare victory, and  move people and resources into areas such as loan servicing that  directly affect borrowers and investors. This is a bad deal for the  banks in one sense, but the banks are already refinancing and modifying  loans in a desperate effort to keep visible default rates from rising —  and event that will panic Wall Street.  In most cases, the states other  than New York, Delaware and Calfornia are primarily focused on consumer  facing issues, but the big three states are also focused on issues  related to investors and, yes, taxes.
In New York, look for a broad inquiry into the four areas outlined  above, with particular focus on the creation of RMBS and the role of  trustees and servicers. In the crosshairs are the top four banks along  with BNY because of its dominant position as custodian and trustee in  RMBS. Also caught up in the dragnet could be Morgan Stanley, Deutsche  Bank and Goldman Sachs.  Look for the salvation of US Bancorp for good  behavior.  When these inquiries start to become more visible in terms of  indictments and settlements, the reasons for the reluctance of  Schneiderman to participate in the overbroad state AG settlement last  year will become clear.
FUTURE BANK TAX LIABILITIES?
But perhaps the biggest surprise coming from the New York AG is going  to be his focus on the issues of taxes, something Schneiderman talks  about in media interviews but which the financial press largely ignores.  The allegations of wrongdoing against Bank of America and Bank of New  York with respect to RMBS raise troubling issues for investors, not the  least of which is the tax status of what are arguably busted RMBS REMIC  trusts.
There is also the issue of the largest banks counting losses from  RMBS trusts as expenses, a maneuver admitted already by Countrywide in  court proceedings. This admission not only eviscerates any claim of  separateness between the sponsor and the RMBS trust, but may also result  in huge future tax liabilities for the banks. By pretending that losses  to the RMBS trusts were losses of the bank, Countrywide underpaid state  and federal taxes for years and arguably committed tax fraud on a  systemic basis.
Just as federal prosecutors used tax law over the years to bring  criminals such as Al Capone to justice, Eric Schneiderman seems poised  to use the issue of taxes as a club to compel settlements and  reparations by the largest banks. While such an outcome may not provide  the high profile criminal prosecutions sought by many observers of the  housing mess, it will certainly bring the mortgage crisis to an end more  quickly. And collecting tens of billions in back taxes certainly won’t  hurt Schneiderman’s aspirations to follow Andrew Cuomo into the New York  governor’s mansion.
Christopher Whalen is a regular columnist for HousingWire and  senior managing director of Tangent Capital Partners in New York where  he provides advisory services focused on companies in the financial  services sector. He is co-founder and vice chairman of the board of  Lord, Whalen LLC, parent of Institutional Risk Analytics, a provider of  bank ratings, risk management tools and consulting services.
 
