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You’re Not Entitled to Your Own Facts, Even When Slamming MERS

There are legitimate, substantial concerns about the legal foundation of MERS– I think most folks who have followed the foreclosure mess can agree on that.  But there is also a lot of blatant misinformation out there coming from MERS critics, and some of it is coming from folks who are presenting themselves as experts on the issue.

For example, University of Missouri Kansas City professor of economics and frequent mortgage crisis blogger/pundit L. Randall Wray, a frequent and vocal critic of the banks and of MERS, just flat out makes stuff up regarding the recent Ibanez decision in Massachusetts in his article, Requiem for MERS (and the Banks That Created the Frankenstein Monster), which appeared yesterday on the Huffington Post. Wray claims that the Massachusetts Supreme Court decision in U.S. Bank v. Ibanez is one of several “recent developments that put the final nails in MERS’s coffin,” but from his writeup of the case, it is hard to fathom that he even read the case or has any familiarity with it whatsoever.

Slade Smith’s Blog ::

Professor Wray wrote:

Ibanez decision in Massachusetts.  Courts continue to chip away at the arguments made by banks and their Frankenstein creation, MERS, to justify foreclosure without proper documentation. MERS was manufactured by the industry to evade proper recording of property sales in county recorder’s offices. This not only cheated the recorders out of fees and Uncle Sam out of federal taxes, but it also broke the chain of title. The fiction perpetrated by MERS is that it is simultaneously a nominee of the true owner of the mortgage debt and at the same time it is the beneficiary of the security instrument. (You cannot simultaneously be the party of interest and the nominee, of course.) It also disclaims any financial interest in the mortgage and has no claim on the mortgage payments. But it claims that it can operate as the agent of unnamed owners of the mortgage instrument, unknown owners who–since they are unknown — have never designated MERS as agent. The Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled decisively against MERS’s claims, and a growing number of other state supreme courts (Nevada, New York, Kansas, Idaho) have agreed that MERS is only a nominee or “straw man” (as Kansas put it) with no standing to foreclose.

Here’s the facts: MERS had no “claim” in the Ibanez case– Ibanez’s mortgage was not even a MERS mortgage!

Furthermore, according to the land court case which the Massachusetts Supreme Court upheld, U.S. Bank might have been better off it his mortgage had been a MERS mortgage!  The reason that the land court judge threw out the Ibanez foreclosure was because U.S. Bank had not been properly assigned the mortgage at the time of the foreclosure sale, according to the financial entities’ own rules.  One of the possible ways that they could have been properly assigned the mortgage, according to the securitization agreements that the judge relied on in his decision, would have been if they had received an assignment of the mortgage in recordable form from the entity they claimed transferred the mortgage to them.  But for MERS mortgages, these agreements waived the requirement of an assignment in recordable form. 

As far as the Massachusetts Supreme Court decision?  Well, MERS is not even mentioned in that– not once.  Why would it?  Again, the mortgages at issue were not MERS mortgages!

So when Wray says that “[t]he Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled decisively against MERS’s claims” in the Ibanez case, he is just making stuff up out of thin air. The Ibanez decision had next to nothing to do with MERS at all.

Furthermore, Ibanez was not about “proper recording of property sales in county recorder’s offices” either, despite Wray’s claims.   The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision states just the opposite in clear black and white letters:

We do not suggest that an assignment must be in recordable form at the time of the notice of sale or the subsequent foreclosure sale, although recording is likely the better practice. Where a pool of mortgages is assigned to a securitized trust, the executed agreement that assigns the pool of mortgages, with a schedule of the pooled mortgage loans that clearly and specifically identifies the mortgage at issue as among those assigned, may suffice to establish the trustee as the mortgage holder.

What is laughable in his piece is that Wray whines in his piece about his critics.  “Whenever those who are critical of MERS and the banksters post blogs about the multiple frauds, we are attacked by commentators — presumably industry hacks — who try to obfuscate the issues,” he says.  As someone who battled it out on the political blogs for years, I couldn’t help but notice that the bloggers who played fast and loose with the truth were often the same ones who thought that anyone who criticized them was an industry shill or had some other ulterior motive.  I guess the same holds true for professors!  If this Huffington Post piece is any indication of the quality of the professor’s work, Wray deserves critics and probably ought to have a few more of them. 

I understand that there are many thoughtful and knowledgeable people who have legitimate and substantial criticisms of MERS, and I agree with many of those criticisms. Many of these folks want to see and end to MERS in one fashion or another, for good and well considered reasons.  It may be tempting for otherwise thoughtful people to find common cause with folks like Wray who are outspoken opponents of MERS and the banks and want to see them destroyed. 

But I think it’s important to recognize that some folks are just interested grinding axes.  I think some of MERS’s critics are more interested in cultivating the choir they are preaching to than solving the many serious problems that we face– and that in their eagerness to pump themselves up in the eyes of their readers by piling on the deservedly unpopular banks, they actually end up standing in the way of progress by failing to talk about solutions in a meaningful way. Wray doesn’t seem really interested in solutions to the problems that MERS has posed, or integrity in land recording systems, or clean land titles out of foreclosure.  For example, check out how he casually tosses aside the entirety of the traditional land title system in one sentence when discussing Marcy Kaptur’s recent MERS bill:

In response to this mess, Representative Marcy Kaptur (Ohio) is going to introduce legislation to prohibit Fannie and Freddie from buying new mortgages that are registered in MERS. Since there is virtually no activity in mortgage markets save what Fannie and Freddie are doing, this would effectively take away all new business from MERS.

Further, her legislation would direct HUD to study the creation of a federal land title system to replace MERS while protecting rights of state and local governments. This is a sensible solution that would modernize the recording and tracking of property ownership. At the same time it would put out of business the hopelessly incompetent MERS, which has partnered with the banksters to perpetrate foreclosure fraud. Bye bye fraudsters.

I’m a big proponent of reform of land title recordation systems, but pseudo-reformers like Wray who throw out “solutions” like this just to pretend that they have the answers are the unwitting allies of those who would like to keep MERS as-is, such as ALTA, which failed to mention to its members in an alert that the only binding part of the Kaptur bill is not about creating a federal land title system, but rather about prohibiting federal insurance and guarantees on MERS mortgages.  ALTA apparently would like its membership to advocate for MERS without knowing that they are doing so. With statements like this, Wray and his ilk may help ALTA play up the minimal threat of a federal land title system.

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Continuing Ed for Title Agents

MBA Weekly Report: Mortgage Volume Declines

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending January 21, 2011.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 12.9 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 12.0 percent compared with the previous week. The results do not include an adjustment for the Martin Luther King holiday.

The Refinance Index decreased 15.3 percent from the previous week and reached its lowest level since January 2010.  The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 8.7 percent from one week earlier. The Purchase Index is at its lowest level since October 2010.  The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 3.1 percent compared with the previous week and was 20.8 percent lower than the same week one year ago.
 
The four week moving average for the seasonally adjusted Market Index is down 1.0 percent.  The four week moving average is down 3.7 percent for the seasonally adjusted Purchase Index, while this average is down 0.1 percent for the Refinance Index.

The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 70.3 percent of total applications from 73.0 percent the previous week. The adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) share of activity increased to 5.2 percent from 5.0 percent of total applications from the previous week.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to 4.8 percent from 4.77 percent, with points decreasing to 1.19 from 1.20 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value (LTV) ratio loans. This week’s increase in the rate followed three consecutive weekly decreases.

The average contract interest rate for 15-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 4.12 percent from 4.16 percent, with points increasing to 1.26 from 0.90 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans.

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Continuing Ed for Title Agents

5,000-Plus Responses Spurs Fed Not to Proceed With Three Rules | Mortgage News | Daily National and State Headlines

FederalReserveBuilding

The Federal Reserve Board (FRB) has announced that it does not expect to finalize three pending rulemakings under Regulation Z, which implements the Truth-in-Lending Act (TILA), prior to the transfer of authority for such rulemakings to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The proposed rules were published as part of the Board’s comprehensive review of its mortgage lending regulations under TILA. In response to the three proposals, the Board received more than 5,000 comments expressing divergent views on many substantive and technical issues.

The first phase of the review consisted of two proposals issued in August 2009, which would have reformed the consumer disclosures under TILA for closed-end mortgage loans and home equity lines of credit (Docket Nos. R-1366 and R-1367). The third proposal was issued in September 2010 (Docket No. R-1390). Among other things, the September 2010 proposal included changes to the disclosures consumers receive to explain their right to rescind certain loans and would have clarified the responsibilities of the creditor if a consumer exercises this rescission right. The September 2010 proposal also included changes to the disclosures for reverse mortgages, proposed new disclosures for loan modifications, restrictions on certain advertising practices and sales practices for reverse mortgages, and changes to the disclosure obligations of loan servicers.

General rule-making authority for TILA is scheduled to transfer to the CFPB in July 2011. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act also requires that the CFPB issue a proposal within 18 months after the designated transfer date to combine, in a single form, the mortgage disclosures required by TILA and the disclosures required by the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA). In light of that mandate, and the upcoming transfer date, the Board has carefully evaluated whether there would be public benefit in proceeding with the rulemakings initiated with the Board’s August 2009 and September 2010 proposals at this time. Because the Board’s 2009 and 2010 TILA proposals would substantially revise the disclosures for mortgage transactions, any new disclosures adopted by the Board would be subject to the CFPB’s further revision in carrying out its mandate to combine the TILA and RESPA disclosures. In addition, a combined TILA-RESPA disclosure rule could well be proposed by the CFPB before any new disclosure requirements issued by the Board could be fully implemented.

For these reasons, the FRB has determined that proceeding with the 2009 and 2010 proposals would not be in the public interest. Although there are specific provisions of these Board proposals that would not be affected by the CFPB’s development of joint TILA-RESPA disclosures, adopting those portions of the Board’s proposals in a piecemeal fashion would be of limited benefit, and the issuance of multiple rules with different implementation periods would create compliance difficulties. Accordingly, the Board does not expect to finalize the August 2009 and September 2010 proposals prior to the July 2011 date for transfer of rulemaking authority to the CFPB.

For more information, visit www.federalreserve.gov.

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Continuing Ed for Title Agents

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