Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Facing forclosure? Make them produce the note.

I love this story. And the fact that the idea is spreading.

We all know about people who refinanced their mortgages into ARMs that subsequently ballooned to unaffordable proportions. Now it appears that people are figuring out how to beat the lenders at their own game: "produce the note".

See, it turns out that, in order to forclose on your house, the bank that holds the note on your house must produce the original note in court. However, due to rampant securitization of mortgages, lenders and investors did a poor job of keeping up with the paperwork. Many owners of the note on your house cannot produce the original.

Yes, its a tactic and not a solution, but if it forces lenders to stop and find another solution to forclosure, all the better. I say, more power to the homeowners. When forclosure is the only tool lenders have in this economy, where forclosed homes sit vacant and lose more money for the lender and cost other homeowners more of their home value, those lenders need to be forced to devise a better tool.

(Full disclosure: As I've said before, my family experienced first-hand the predatory practices of lenders, brokers and banks who gave bad financial advice in order to get us into an untenable financial position. Thankfully, we're naturally skinflint-y Scots and trusted our guts.)

NPR covered the "produce the note" tactic today. They do make the point that, aside from the fun Robin Hood-aspect of the practice, "produce the note" tactics could stifle one investment channel in a potential housing recovery. Thankfully, the securities lawyer they interviewed for the story, Talbott Franklin, puts the emphasis in the right place:

"My big fear," Franklin says, "is that we'll get a series of decisions, based on not fully understood facts, which will prevent securitization from going forward in the future."

Franklin doesn't blame homeowners or their lawyers for bringing the challenges. He's more critical of lenders and their attorneys for not doing a better job understanding securitized mortgages and for not taking care of important legal matters before going to court to foreclose on a home.

Right on. More blame needs to be placed on a financial sector that didn't care how these investments worked as long as they were making money. Now that they're losing money, the sector need to deal with the troublesome consequences. Too bad for them.

UPDATE: If you haven't seen it, check out MSNBC's reporting on makeshift encampments ("tent cities") popping up all over the country. (TOH to Bosh56, who says "all the people who are calling the foreclosed people losers are hating and not seeing the human condition/these losers are real people".)

1 comment:

Ju said...

Nice post. I like the part about produce-the-note. I live in Tampa and know one person he helped, and it actually worked. Well it did not work like some of the newspapers reporting, but they did get new terms that were very favorable and they were able to avoid foreclosure. It really varries by situation and probably the laws of your state on how far this goes. This site has all the videos they have done. Watch all the videos here:

http://tinyurl.com/bozo2d