Yearly Archives: 2010

Guest Post: So Why Did the Mortgage Servicers Use “Robo Signers”?

I received an e-mail from a correspondent I’ll call MBSGuy and I thought readers would find it informative. He’s been an expert witness in quite a few securitization cases (which is an area with relatively little in the way of case law, in contrast to real estate). And in case it isn’t obvious, to serve […]

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Guest Post: Foreclosure Counterattack – Propaganda, Pseudo-Legality, and Thuggery

By Russ, aka Attempter, a sustainability activist trying to help figure out solutions to America’s crisis, who blogs at Volatility As Foreclosuregate, the legal crisis, looms ever larger and becomes a major political issue, the banks and government have scrambled to mount a counteroffensive against the consequences of their crimes. We can see how flat-footed […]

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Has the Fed Painted Itself Into a Corner?

A couple of articles in the Wall Street Journal, reporting on a conference at the Boston Fed, indicates that some people at the Fed may recognize that the central bank has boxed itself in more than a tad. The first is on the question of whether the Fed is in a liquidity trap. A lot […]

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Links 10/16/10

Readers may recall I mentioned that this week and early next were jammed for me, so some of these links are to items earlier in the week that I consider important. (And thanks to Marshall Auerback, Ed Harrison, Richard Smith, and for their considerable help). Fibre optic cables’ data capacity may soon be reached BBC […]

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MSM Distancing Itself From Bank Party Line on Foreclosure Crisis

We’ll see next week whether two articles, one in the Wall Street Journal, the other in the New York Times, are a sign of a sea change in the media posture towards the banking industry’s spin efforts, at least as far as the securitization mess is concerned. Let’s face it, the banks have lied so […]

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Puzzling Out China’s Saber Rattling

One of Winston Churchill’s oft repeated saying was, “I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.” Of late, China has become a Russian-level conundrum to the wider world. Developed economies are troubled by Middle Kingdom’s increasingly aggressive economic stance; neighboring countries are rattled […]

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Foreclosure Fraud: We Need to Fix the Banks Again

By Marshall Auerback, a Senior Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, and a market analyst and commentator. Crossposted from New Deal 2.0. It’s time to put the perps of this scandal in jail. Yves Smith, Bill Black, and Mike Konczal have already done yeoman’s work in seeking to explain the lender fraud scandal in the securitized […]

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Links 10/15/2010

I have a ton of links today – probably 60-70. Many didn’t make it in to this edition because of space constraints. But I reckon I will fit them in at the weekend. Have a good weekend, everyone. Edward On Mortgages What’s Behind the Foreclosure Crisis The Economic Populist (h/t Richard Smith) Bank Holiday is […]

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Foreclosure Crisis Finally Hitting Banks Where it Hurts: Their Stock Prices

I’m surprised it has taken this long for Mr. Market to wake up and smell the coffee. Major bank suspending foreclosures in a whole passel of states, overwhelming evidence of fraud on courts (commemorated in sworn testimony), and increasing evidence that these developments are mere symptoms of much deeper problems had been spun by the […]

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Not to be outdone, FDIC joins the robo-signing club, too

It keeps getting better. From  Bloomberg, we have this tired-looking plaint What were banking regulators doing while some of the biggest U.S. lenders routinely filed false foreclosure documents in local courthouses around the country? …but, since that is Jonathan Weil speaking, there’s a twist: In the case of IndyMac Federal Bank, it turns out the […]

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Guest Post: Tim Geithner’s Magical Mystery Tour Of TARP Propaganda Has Little Use For Truth

By Dr. Pitchfork, an iconoclast who writes at Daily Bail. In “5 Myths About TARP,” Tim Geithner joins Steve Rattner and Herb Allison in the parade of Washington insiders who have gone out of their way to tout the great success of TARP, calling it the “most effective government program in recent memory.” If you […]

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Extreme Measures: Currency/Trade Tensions Rising, Will Action Follow?

After the in retrospect not that terrible first acute phase of the financial crisis, August-September 2007, this blog began taking note of Extreme Measures. These were proposals by respectable people for dealing with the burgeoning mess that were usually very creative and had zero chance of happening. The fact that so many normally sound people […]

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Links 10/14/2010

First Topic of the day: Foreclosures Robo-signers: Mortgage experience not necessary Yahoo! Finance (Mortgage servicers hired hair stylists, Walmart floor workers and installed them in "foreclosure expert" jobs. Here’s a quote from one of these experts: "I don’t know the ins and outs of the loan, I just sign documents." Gee, I wonder who will […]

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