Monday, November 30, 2009

Sunday, November 29, 2009
Case Study for Testimony / Existing Clients (11/24/2009)
IndyMac INDX Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-AR13Sponsor, seller and servicer IndyMac INDX Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-AR13issuing entity
By M.Soliman

Foreclosure sales are typically public sales whereby a purchaser bids in excess of the lender's lien. Frequently the sale is not to a third party. This is because of the difficulty of determining the exact status of title to the property. One prohibiting factor as a barrier to liquidation by a lender is the requirement that the purchaser pay for the property in cash or by cashier's check.

A foreclosing lender should purchase the property from the trustee or referee for an amount equal to the principal amount outstanding under the loan, accrued and unpaid interest and the expenses of foreclosure. Thereafter, the lender will assume the burden of ownership, including obtaining hazard insurance and making repairs at its own expense necessary to render the property suitable for sale. The lender will commonly obtain the services of a real estate broker and pay the broker's commission in connection with the sale of the property. Depending upon market conditions, the ultimate proceeds of the sale of the property may not equal the lender’s investment in the property.

I know firsthand from experience attending trustees meeting of creditors how the Courts have imposed general equitable principles upon foreclosure. Its intention is assumed by designed to mitigate the legal consequences to the borrower of the borrower's defaults under the loan documents. The issue of whether federal or state constitutional provisions reflecting due process concerns for fair notice have forced the courts to require that borrowers under deeds of trust receive notice longer than that prescribed by statute.

Many of these cases have found that the sale by a trustee under a deed of trust does not involve sufficient state action to afford constitutional protection to the borrower. In other words the Courts have upheld the notice provisions as being reasonable.

When the beneficiary under a junior mortgage or deed of trust cures the default and reinstates or redeems by paying the full amount of the senior mortgage or deed of trust, the amount paid by the beneficiary becomes a part of the indebtedness secured by the junior mortgage or deed of trust. Subject to the California Civil Code under California law, the "Notice of Default (NOD)" commences subsequent to a notice being delivered to the borrowers. Thereafter a private sale of the real property securing a loan is anticipated to take place sometime 90 days thereafter. Before a foreclosure sale is actually conducted, the borrower may "cure" the default and thereby rescind the NOD.

On or about March 31 2006 the loan subject loan secured by real property located at 617 W 97th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90044 was settled and funded by a wire through the Federal Reserve causing funds to be deposited with the settlement agent through Investors title Company. Through the life of the loan and prior to January 2008, the borrowers herein maintained a “Paid as Agreed” account status with the lender’s servicing agent.
The lender and servicing agent are considered to be both one in the same according to public information published by the registrant for an SEC indentured trust investment. A dispute with the servicing agent and borrowers developed thereafter concerning the amount necessary to cure the NOD. Upon the servicing agents alleged determination of 60 days delinquency the borrowers account was ruled to be in “default” and subject to commencing a foreclosure action. A servicing function is to collect payments due from current borrowers both and those suffering delinquencies. A security holder is entitled to enforce a foreclosure sale afforded to the security after determining a default which is typically after 60 days delinquency. A delinquent borrower condition allows a lender to foreclose assuming it has met the states rules and procedures code. Otherwise, an improper application of the civil code in a lenders recovery effort can come under a courts scrutiny which can delay a sale for months and even years.
Upon the borrowers hitting a 60 days delinquency mark the servicing agent was obligated to assure the borrower’s right to “cure” the “arrearage”. California real property law provides for extra-judicial foreclosure of a Deed of Trust (a Deed of Trust is in effect a mortgage with a power of sale). Lenders enjoy an efficient process from start to finish totaling four months. Under California Civil Code ("CC") §§2924-2924(k) the statute offers broad framework for the oversight of non-judicial foreclosure sales. The statutory procedure maintains in a default by the borrower, the lender may declare a default. Upon such notice the lender may proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure sale. Under CCC§2924 / 2923.5 a lender must provide the delinquency with a meaningful workout option under recently passed legislation. From the 60 days delinquency mark and thereafter the servicing records offered by the lender are uncertain as to the servicing agent’s compliance with state civil code. Therefore it is unknown what rights the lender maintains in a foreclosure and trustees sale of the subject property for any alleged delinquency and upon denying the borrowers fundamental rights prior to conducting a Trustee’s sale.
(1) A right to cure the delinquent amount
(2) The right to a notice of intent to foreclose
(3) A right to a meaningful offer to a workout
A claim brought by the borrowers stems from plaintiff allegations made in a wrongful foreclosure claim under California’s Non-Judicial Deed of Trust Foreclosure Process. The matter will point out the necessity for a lender to pay attention. Maintaining timeliness is not just a smart idea but it ensures both appropriate and spontaneous intelligent approaches to managing delinquency. Where the courts have made known their tendencies to not see the lender as a fiduciary the servicing agent none the less maintains a higher level of responsibility to the borrower. The current administration in Washington has made it very clear through the office of the Secretary of the treasury the same is not true for the servicing agent.
Violations align with the lenders servicers’ refusal of the borrower’s tender of "cure" from the time of the NOD. Therein is a logical judicial argument for plaintiffs to bring a wrongful foreclosure lawsuit. Its mind boggling to say the least; where servicer and lenders may better be served to avoid the legal risks and costs that can arise from this ongoing and redundant predicament.

M.Soliman is an expert witness based in Los Angeles, California. Soliman has served as an analyst to the subprime sector and has personally underwritten, serviced and sold over one billion in closed whole loan transactions.
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Labels: Indy Mac(foreclosures)Indy Mac Bank (foreclosures) Indy Mac; M.Soliman (foreclosures)Livinglies; Garfield; Indy Mac(foreclosures)
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Sub Prime Lenders Held OutAs these sub prime lenders held out as primarily a conduit of prime quality mortgage loans, qualitatively different from competitors who engaged primarily in riskier lending. Specifically, lenders developed what was referred to unique business strategy, where it attempted to offer any product that was offered by any competitor. By the end of2006, lenders underwriting guidelines were broad and expansive and lenders were writing high risk weighted loans.

Even these expansive underwriting guidelines were not sufficient to support lenders desired growth, so lenders wrote an increasing number of loans as "exceptions" that failed to meet its already wide underwriting guidelines even though exception loans had a higher rate of default.

Lenders was more dependent than many of its competitors on selling loans it originated into the secondary mortgage market, an important fact it disclosed to investors. But management expectations were for the deteriorating quality of the loans that lenders was writing, and the poor performance over time of those loans, would ultimately curtail the company's ability to sell those loans in the secondary mortgage market.
Management was unconcerned for the increased risk that lenders were assuming. Thus, the defendants were aware, but failed to disclose, that lenders current business model was unsustainable.
Management was responsible for lenders fraudulent disclosures. From 2005 through 2007, these senior executives misled the market over and over again by falsely assuring investors that lenders was primarily a prime quality mortgage' lender which had avoided the excesses of its competitors.
Lenders forms 10-k for 2005, 2006, and 2007 falsely represented that lenders "manage[d] credit risk through credit policy, underwriting, quality control and surveillance activities," and the 2005 and 2006 forms 10-k falsely stated that lenders ensured its continuing access to the mortgage backed securities market by "consistently producing quality mortgages."Lenders loan products and the risks to lenders in continuing to offer or .hold those loans, while at the same time management continued to make public statements obscuring lenders risk profile and attempting to differentiate it from other lenders.Referring to a particularly profitable subprime product as "toxic," management had "no way" to predict the performance of its heralded product, the pay-option arm loan. Management believed that the risk was so high and that the secondary market had so mispriced pay-option arm loans that he repeatedly urged that lenders sell its entire portfolio of those loans.
Despite their awareness of, and the executive management severe concerns about, the increasing risk lenders was undertaking management hid these risks from the investing public at the expense of the consumer.
Defendants misled investors by failing to disclose substantial negative information regarding lenders loan products, including:

• The increasingly lax underwriting guidelines used by the company in 18 originating loans;

• The company's pursuit of "matching strategy" in which it matched the terms of any loan being offered in the market, even loans offered by primarily subprime originators;

• The high percentage of loans it originated that were outside its own already widened underwriting guidelines due to loans made as exceptions to 23 guidelines;

Lenders definition of “prime" loans included loans made to borrowers with fico scores well below any industry standard definition of prime credit quality; the high percentage of lenders subprime originations that had a loan to value ratio of 100%, for example, 62% in the second quarter of 28 2006; and LENDERS subprime loans had significant additional risk factors, beyond the subprime credit history of the borrower, associated with 2 increased default rates, including reduced documentation, stated income, 3 piggyback second liens, and loves in excess of 95%.

anagement knew this negative information from numerous reports they regularly received and from emails and presentations prepared by the company’s chief credit risk officer. Defendants nevertheless hid this negative information from investors. During the course of this fraud, the executive management engaged in insider trading in lenders securities. The executive management established sales plans pursuant to rule 9 10b5-1 of the securities exchange act in October, November, and December 2006 while in possession of material, non-public information concerning lenders increasing credit risk and the risk that the poor expected performance of company originated loans would prevent lenders from continuing its business model of selling the majority of the-loans it originated into the secondary mortgage market.
From November 2006 through august 2007, management exercised over 5.1 million stock options and sold the underlying shares for total proceeds of16 over $139 million, pursuant to 10b5-1 plans adopted in late 2006 and amended in 17 early 2007.
Lenders financial corporation, a Delaware corporation, was a mortgage lender based in Calabasas, California. During all times relevant to this complaint, its stock was registered pursuant to section 12(b) of the exchange act and was listed on the New York stock exchange, and, until the demise of the pacific stock exchange, it was listed on that exchange as well.
NUVEEN, MERRILL, CONTIGROUP AND LENDERS OVER AUCTION RATE SECURITIES
Fraud claims against the defendant are nothing at all new or uncommon as of this week, investor sues
A retired securities lawyer and his wife have filed suit in the u. S. District court for the middle district of North Carolina over losses they sustained as a result of investing in preferred stock auction rate securities issued by Nuveen investments. Auction rate securities are debt instruments -- in this case preferred stock-- for which interest is regularly reset through a Dutch auction. Auction rate securities were once routinely marketed as safe, cash equivalents that were highly liquid, but the broker-dealers who sold them failed to disclose that liquidity was entirely dependent upon the success of the auction process, which was being artificially supported by the undisclosed participation of brokers bidding in auctions where they had an interest. The North Carolina suit alleges fraud and securities law violations at all levels, including claims against the issuers, the underwriters, and the broker-dealers who sold the securities and managed the auction process.

In May 2004, on behalf of investors in two investment funds controlled, managed and operated by lenders and advised by dc investment partners, life caresser filed lawsuits for alleged fraudulent conduct that resulted in an aggregate loss of hundreds of millions of dollars. The suits named as defendants lenders and its subsidiaries Alex brown management services and lenders securities, members of the funds' management committee, as well as dc investments partners and two of its principals. Among the plaintiff-investors were 70 high net worth individuals.

udge Christopher a. Boyce of the eastern Ohio United States district court, on October 31, 2007 dismissed 14 lenders-filed foreclosures in a ruling based on lack of standing for not owning/holding the mortgage loan at the time the lawsuits were filed.
Judge boycott issued an order requiring the plaintiffs in a number of pending foreclosure cases to file a copy of the executed assignment demonstrating the plaintiff (lenders) was the holder and owner of the note and mortgage as of the date the complaint was filed, or the court would enter a dismissal.

The court’s amended general order no. 2006-16 requires the plaintiff (lenders) to submit an affidavit along with the complaint, which identifies them as the original mortgage holder, or as an assignee, trustee or successor-interest.

Apparently lenders submitted several affidavits that claim that they were in fact the owner of these mortgage notes, but none of these affidavits mention assignment or trust or successor interest.
Thus, the judge ruled that in every instance, these submissions create a “conflict” and they “do not satisfy” the burden of demonstrating at the time of filing the complaint that lenders was in fact the “legal” note holder.
While the decision is great for homeowners in distress (due to providing a new escape hatch out of foreclosure), it also represents a serious roadblock. If the toxic mortgage fiasco is to be cleaned up, there must be a simple means of identifying what banks own and what they do not own. This judgment is an example of the enormous task ahead in sorting out the mortgage mess.
Jacksonville area legal aid attorney, April charney, broke this news to us via email and made these comments in regards to the Ohio federal court ruling (emphasis ours):
“This court order is what I have been saying in my cases. This is rampant fraud on every court in America or no judicial foreclosure fraud where the securitized trusts are filing foreclosures when they never own/hold the mortgage loan at the commencement of the foreclosure.”

These loans are clearly in default at the time of any eventual transfer of the ownership of the mortgage loans to the trusts. This means that the loans are being held by the originating lenders after the alleged “sale” to the trust despite what it says per the pooling and servicing agreements and despite what the securities laws require. This means that many securitized trusts don’t really, legally own these bad loans. Regarding this mess charney further explains:
“In my cases, many of the trusts try to argue equitable assignment that predates the filing of the foreclosure, but a securitized trust cannot take an equitable assignment of a mortgage loan. It also means that the securitized trusts own nothing.”
This decision confirms that investors in the mortgage debacle may very well own nothing—not even the bad loans they funded! It seems their right to the cash flow from the underlying properties does not extend to ownership of the properties themselves; thus, clouding the recovery picture considerably.

Summarizing the problem charney concludes:

“This opinion once circulated and adopted by state and federal courts across the country, will stop the progress of foreclosures, at first in judicial foreclosure states, across America, dead in their tracks.”We agree with the remarks charney makes pointing out that this decision will have major adverse implications for the prospects of an amicable financial workout for the various investor contingents in mortgage-backed securities (muses). Doubt is cast on where the full write-downs will eventually land, and this uncertainty can only be expected to further harm the market value of mobs and mobs-based synthetic securities, already in shambles purely due to rising underlying delinquencies.
Investors in these securities might have assumed—wrongly, it turns out—that they actually owned some “real estate” in these deals. Lenders remaining operation and employees have been transferred
More Investor Claims Focus on Sales of Preferred Stocks Issued by Financial Institutions
Investors are bringing an increasing number of legal claims against brokerage firms as a result of inappropriate sales of preferred stocks issued by financial institutions. For example, Merrill Lynch has been hit with an arbitration claim filed by an elderly couple that lost $650,000 in the preferred stocks of financial companies according to Sue Asti in her August 16 article in Investment News called “Merrill Lynch confronts arbitration claim involving financials’ preferred stock.” The claim, filed with FINRA, alleges that Merrill engaged in fraudulent sales practices, including self-dealing (more on that below).




Brokers and their firms have legal obligations to their customers not to recommend an investment or investment strategy that is unsuitable based on the client’s investment objectives, risk tolerance and financial situation, which brokers are required to know. In addition, they must fully disclose and not misrepresent all material facts and risks associated with any investment or investment strategy they recommend.




Based on those legal duties and obligations, brokers and their firms are required to diversify rather than concentrate most investors’ portfolios. A portfolio concentrated in one or a few financial sectors is unsuitable for most investors, and that is doubly true when the sectors themselves are inordinately risky.

By June 2007, there were articles in the financial press about Wall Street firms being hurt by the subprime crisis, two big hedge funds at Bear Stearns facing shut-down, how Bear Stearns itself was in trouble, and how Wall Street feared that Bear Stearns was just “the tip of the iceberg.” While it may have made sense for some risk-taking investors to own shares of financial stocks on the theory they were oversold and due for a rebound, it would defy common sense to concentrate the average retired couple’s portfolio in the financial sector, especially in and after June 2007.
Preferred shares are generally regarded as more “conservative” and brokers tend to recommend them for their retired clients seeking income, because they pay a higher dividend than non-preferred stocks. The preferred shares of financial companies had dividends that were higher than many other preferred. However, a concentration of financial preferred in mid-to-late 2007 was extremely risky and, therefore, unsuitable for most investors, and especially so for retired couples and those nearing retirement.
Why did Merrill and other firms recommend these securities? As the article points out, the claim alleges that Merrill was an underwriter of the preferred. The underwriter firms and their brokers make commissions on the sale of IPOs that are substantially higher than the commission paid on non-IPO shares. In addition, underwriters purchase the IPOs and, therefore, have inventories of shares to unload. By 2007, Merrill and other firms had reason not to continue to hold a large amount of securities of teetering Wall Street firms. If Merrill was conflicted in this way, recommending and selling such securities to unsuspecting clients would constitute self-dealing, and would violate a number of laws and FINRA rules, including, for example, FINRA Rule 2010, which states: “A member, in the conduct of its business, shall observe high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade.”
Observers say that claims involving preferred stock of financial companies have doubled or even tripled this year. And that may be the tip of the iceberg. “I think people are still shell-shocked by what happened … {a] nod not a lot of people have come forward yet,” said one observer.
Investors who believe their portfolios may have been over-concentrated in the securities Wall Street firms and other financial companies may have compelling claims to recover their losses, and should consult with experienced counsel to evaluate their circumstances and determine their options.

REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES AS TO MORTGAGE LOANS PURSUANT TO SECTION 2.03(b)
Representations and warranties as to mortgage loans.

The Master Servicer makes the following representations and warranties, as of the date of the initial issuance of
The Certificates, pursuant to Section 2.03(b) of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement (the "agreement") to which this
Exhibit is attached. Capitalized terms not defined in this instrument shall have the meanings specified in the agreement.

1. Execution and Delivery of Mortgage Loans. All parties executing each Mortgage Loan had full legal capacityTo execute the Mortgage Loan documents eecuted by it and each Mortgage Note, Mortgage and other agreement orInstrument executed and delivered by each Mortgagor in connection with its Mortgage Loan has been duly executedAnd delivered by such Mortgagor and constitutes the legal, valid and binding obligation of such Mortgagor. EachMortgage contains customary and enforceable provisions which render the rights and remedies of the holderAdequate to realize the benefits of the security against the related Mortgaged Property, including: (1) in the case of aMortgage designated as a deed of trust, by trustee's sale and (2) otherwise by foreclosure, and there is no homesteadOr other exemption available to the Mortgagor that would interfere with such right to sell at a trustee's sale or right toForeclosure.

2. Compliance with Laws, Rules and Regulations. The Mortgagor’s application for each Mortgage Loan wasTaken and processed, and each Mortgage Loan was closed and made, in compliance with all requirements of anyFederal, state or local law or regulation applicable to such Mortgage Loan, including, without limitation, the FederalReal Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974, the Consumer Credit Protection Act and Regulation Z promulgatedUnder it, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation B promulgated under it,And all other laws, rules and regulations that impose requirements, restrictions or conditions on mortgage loanCompanies, lenders, financial institutions or other persons in connection with the lending of money or the extensionOf credit. None of the terms of the Mortgage Note or Mortgage or other documents evidencing any Mortgage Loan,Executed by the Mortgagor in connection with such Mortgage Loan violates or conflicts with any applicable usuryLaws or governmental regulations or any other laws, rules or regulations that prohibit, restrict or impose limitationsOn any charge, fees or costs which the Mortgagor has paid or is or may be required to pay in connection with theMortgage Loan, and the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the agreement, including,without limitation, the receipt of interest by Certificate holders, will not result in the violation of any of such laws.

3. Mortgage Constitutes First Lien. Each Mortgage is a valid, subsisting and enforceable first lien on the relatedMortgaged Property including all improvements located on or affixed to it, and all additions,alterations and replacements made at any time with respect to the foregoing and the Mortgagor holds good and
marketable title to The Mortgaged Property subject only to exceptions permitted to be contained in title insurancepolicies under the Program Guide.

4. Compliance with Requirements under the Program Guide. Each Mortgage Loan and the related MortgageProperty comply with all requirements under the Program Guide (as in effect on the day the Mortgage Loan wasSubmitted for review by Residential Funding or any of its affiliates) including, among other things, (a) requirements
As to the types of residential property which may secure Mortgage Loans, (b) requirements that certain policies ofInsurance, such as hazard insurance, title insurance (or, in Iowa, an attorney's opinion) and mortgage insurance be in effect in specified amounts and with certain qualified insurers, (c) requirements that the MortgagedProperty be appraised by an appraiser meeting certain minimum qualifications and that such appraisal show a minimum loan-to- value ratio, (d) requirements that the Mortgage Loan meet specified criteria as to amount,
amortization, monthly payments and type, (e) requirements that Mortgaged Property be surveyed and (f) requirements for the creation of escrows for completion, taxes, insurance, Buy down Funds and other amounts.

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Followers

ASSET BACKED SECURITIZATION MEANS NO NOTE

Asset backed securitization is magic come to life. It is the transformation of a note into pieces. The pieces act like a waterfall of cash flow. Its distributed as investment, structured finance, accrual, accretion and cash flows set forth into many classes of offerings.

Take a dollar bill and slice it up and distribute it to your friends. Piece by piece. Then ask your friends to go cash it. The US Treasury will accept only greater than 51% of any legal tender to make the payer (government) honor the bill. Get it...no?

Try this- The bill you cut up...that bill was a promissory note that went bad. Now if you’re a (GE) stock holder and lose on the stock you purchased you won’t get far attacking General Electric. You cannot seize company assets now can you? The assets are still GE assets and you lose.

What’s your point? The note you gave the lender, the lender did own. But lender sliced it up and it was distributed amongst many investors. The investors lose as the certificates they hold are only valuable as the whole and not the pieces. It’s worthless. They (investors) have an abundance of insurance they can attack related to the security and that's it.

Hey investor - are you really going to foreclosure on a 17.8% share of a borrower’s home?

Stops it! Maher, Nooooo! - You’re talking out both sides of your mouth. You said in the above example GE owns the assets and you cannot attack a public company because of a bad stock deal. So the lender owns the note after all and they can foreclose... Correct? Yes mischief makers I did say that “about the GE stock example”, correct! But these registrants offer pass through certificates. They are portioned out and "passed through" from the lenders beneficial interest to the investors. You want me to be any clearer here. Then join me and let's scream from the highest mountain”

"....HEY INVESTORS....GET IT TOGETHER AND GO COLLECT ALL YOU’RE CERTIFICATES AND PIECE THEM TOGETHER . . . And NOW you can foreclose on me!” You lender tore the LEGAL "TENDER' into pieces and the note is lost forever to the securitization they created.

I walked away from structured finance and private placement fees because of this argument. No attorney; accountant or lewd Cop could ever overcome this argument for denying you your home on a securitization gone badly?

So who wants to call me for an audit? Need a modification? I cannot and never will do an audit or modification! If others do, then kiss them for me. What are you auditing . . . Something the lender does not own? Want to file bankruptcy - careful. Are you bringing a lender into court and re-establishing them as a creditor?

They are not a creditor and that's why BK Trustees want no part of the bankruptcy rip-off report. Where’s the modification that California said no more attorneys or consultants can help out on? THERE ARE NO MODIFICATIONS. THERE IS NO MODIFICATION OR SHORT SALE IF YOU’RE WAITING FOR! GOT IT.

You note is gone and that is that. Fight the security as they cannot evidence the note. What if the “The lender came to court with the note...! So.....what? The lender was not a security player or they left the loan out of a securities offering. No problems counsel, you win.

Oh wait a minute! What’s that? You booked the transaction as a sale under FAS 140-3 instead of debt on your balance sheet. That is what we call securities fraud even under FAS revisions 140-3 and for servicing arrangements under FAS115.Its your home and an impostor, Realtor, Recovery firm, Attorney . . . Someone is trying to steal it from you.


M.Soliman

Expert.witness@live.com

According to the treasury department

By Maher Soliman

According to the treasury department, millions of additional homeowners did make a big mistake: they took advantage of “liar loans” and other too-good-to-be-true deals to buy homes they couldn’t afford. Many are still in those homes, hanging on for dear life. Many others have already faced foreclosure proceedings.

What the treasury is figuring out is what we told you as a client over the years. Asset backed securitization is magic come to life. It is the transformation of a note into pieces. The pieces act like a waterfall of cash flow. The fractionalized cash proceeds are derived from the obligation whereby you are the maker of the note. Cash proceeds are distributed as independent performing investments borne of, structured finance including accrual, zero based accretion and cash flows set forth into many rated classes of offerings.

Asset backed securitizations means no note as it was marked “paid in full”. Take this example for a better illustration. Take a dollar bill and slice it up into even pieces and then distribute it to your friends. Now ask your friends to go cash each individual portion of the dollar. The US Treasury will accept only greater than 51% of any legal tender as the payer (government) and therefore has no obligation to honor the bill. Seen in another light, the bill your lender cut up is the promissory note in a high stakes game that went wrong.

I’ve seen estimates suggesting as many as one out of every six homeowners has a troubled mortgage. This is an enormous social problem. It is also a continuing economic problem. In the year since the crisis began, the world’s financial institutions have written down around $500 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities. These financial institutions have written down the securities used to replace the notes, they did not write down the notes whereby the notes are the securities. Unless something is done to stem the rapid decline of housing values, these institutions are likely to write down an additional $1 trillion to $1.5 trillion.

If you’re a GE stock holder stock holder and lose on the stock trade you purchased in 2005 and wrote down in 2009, you won’t get far attacking General Electric and suing them

You cannot seize company assets with equity stock. The assets are still GE assets and you lose. The note you gave the lender is not whole and now is in pieces. The investors lose as the certificates they hold are only valuable as the whole and not the pieces. It’s worthless. They (investors) have an abundance of over collateralization insurance they can attack related to the security and that's it. So ask yourself, are you really going to foreclosure on a 17.8% share of a borrower’s home?

Politicians are talking out both sides of your mouth. Another way to look at this is as follows. You said in the above example GE owns the assets and you cannot attack a public company because of a bad stock deal. So the lender owns the note after all and they can foreclose?

Yes I did say that “about the GE stock example”, correct! But these registrants offer pass through certificates. They are portioned out and "passed through" from the lenders beneficial interest to the investors. Hey investors get it together and go collect all you’re certificates and piece them together. And now you can foreclose on the collateral, maybe. But by tearing the legal "tender' into pieces and the note is lost forever to the securitization they created. I walked away from structured finance and private placement fees because of this argument.

So how many people paid for an audit and what is it they were to have audited. There is no loan modification either. NLS never agreed to do an audit or modification! What are you auditing anyway, something the lender does not own? Want to file bankruptcy – be careful. Are you bringing a lender into court and re-establishing them as a creditor! They are not a creditor and that's why BK Trustees want no part of the bankruptcy rip-off report. Where’s the modification that California said no more attorneys or consultants can help out on? There are no modifications. There is no modification or short sale if you’re waiting for!

You note is gone and that is that. Fight the offensive for the security (mortgage or deed) as they cannot evidence the note. What if the “lender came to court with the note.” Where a mortgage or asset backed securitizers left the loan out of an offering you establish for the lender a new set of issues.

If the lender booked the transaction as a sale under FAS 140-3 instead of debt on your balance sheet you make a claim of securities fraud. It’s a fact even under FAS revisions 140-3 and for servicing arrangements under FAS115.It’s your home and an impostor Realtor, Recovery firm or Attorney is trying to steal it from you. This is why we immediately shifted this case over to attorneys early last year and through 2009.

If you’re not listening to the immoral minority then you’re still with us and chances are you have not lost that home and never will.

M.Soliman

Expert.witness@live.com

SEC Where are you?

REFORM
The market crisis and the repeated calls to rewrite
the regulatory landscape make projecting the future
direction of SEC enforcement hazardous. Some of
the calls for reform are rooted in the current market crisis.
Others stem from scandals that have tarnished the
reputation of the SEC. An agency that until recently
was largely unknown on Main Street U.S.A. is now unfortunatelybeing recognized, not for its past successes,
but for its failure to protect investors — its fundamental
mission.
Examination of the enforcement program begins
with a brief look at recent statistics. Last year, the SEC
filed 671 cases, a record number.

1 This is the first increasein recent years. While this is significant, manycritics note that the number is inflated by defaults andsimilar actions. Other critics point to recently publishedNERA statistics which demonstrate that the number ofcases settled in 2008 declined to one of the lowest levels
in years

2 In the first quarter of 2009, however, settlements
have increased compared to the prior quarter
and to the same quarter one year earlier.

3 Other statistics further cloud the view. A recent studypublished by Syracuse University based on Departmentof Justice (‘‘DOJ’’ or ‘‘the Department’’) data found thatthe number of securities fraud prosecutions declined
significantly in 2008.

4 At the same time, the FBI reportsthat it is overburdened, with 530 corporate fraud investigationsunderway. These cases focus on financialfraud and insider trading.

5 While the vitality of SEC enforcementis not measured by the number of criminalcases brought, since those are exclusively in the purviewof the Department of Justice, the numbers raise
significant questions. This is particularly true since the
SEC and the Department closely coordinate and often
conduct parallel investigations and actions.Collectively, these statistics raise more questionsthan they answer.

No clear trend emerges from them.On the one hand, they clearly do not depict a vibrant enforcementprogram. At the same time, they also do notsuggest one that is dysfunctional. The lack of a clear
trend, however, might suggest a program in search of
direction, supporting calls for reform.

Beyond the statistics, the current market crisis has
spawned repeated calls for the reform of securities
regulation as well as banking and other financial regulators.

6 Many have criticized the SEC’s performance
during the current crisis as lackluster, at best. A report
from the SEC’s Inspector General, for instance, is
highly critical of the agency’s performance during the
demise of Bear Stearns.

7 That same report also criticizedthe agency’s now-defunct program of voluntarysupervision over investment bak holding companies.

8When the SEC did react to the market crisis, not only
was it criticized, but perhaps worse, the agency secondguessed
itself. In September 2008, the Commission initiated
a ban on short trading in the shares of certain financial
institutions

9 Regulators around the globe institutedsimilar bans which lasted far longer than themodest few week embargo imposed by the SEC.

10 Yetafter the SEC’s ban ended, then-Chairman Cox claimed
it was the biggest mistake of his tenure, undertaken
only because of pressure from the Secretary of the
Treasury and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve.

11Attempting to shift blame for controversial actions suggests
a rudderless agency, not a strong regulator.Scandals in the enforcement division belie any notionthat difficulties at the agency stem solely from a temporarylack of leadership. The Pequot Capital debacle isthe scandal that will not die.

California real property law provides for extra-judicial foreclosure

A claim brought by the borrowers stems from plaintiff allegations made in a wrongful foreclosure claim under California’s Non-Judicial Deed of Trust Foreclosure Process.

The matter will point out the necessity for a lender to pay attention. Maintaining timeliness is not just a smart idea but it ensures both appropriate and spontaneous intelligent approaches to managing delinquency. Where the courts have made known their tendencies to not see the lender as a fiduciary the servicing agent none the less maintains a higher level of responsibility to the borrower. The current administration in Washington has made it very clear through the office of the Secretary of the treasury the same is not true for the servicing agent.

Whats up with Foreclosures

The Treasury Department pumped $125 billion into the country’s largest financial institutions, and it promised another $125 billion — more, if necessary — to recapitalize regional and community banks.They are vital steps and the global recapitalization of the banking system is the reason. But the job isn’t done and nothing seems to have trickled down to the homeowners....why?Wake up America -


Modifications do not exist. And the capital advances are to supplement the value for the assets these banks are stealing back for securitization deals gone wrong....very very wrong.California said no more modification help . . . maybe they could have been a little more honest?


They do not exist.Portraying foreclosure consultants as Crooks Thieves and Shakespearean web sites are a little bit of an obstruction of justice. Even the bad ones made phone calls and talked to parties who "were not authorized to discuss the loan." FAS 140-3 friends. THAT IS THE VIOLATION NEEDED TO ARGUE RELIEF IN COURT MORE THAN ANY OTHER ARGUMENT. That's testimony to an "expert witness” to provide counsel AND I will go out, interview and collect the information.We need to realize - there is no other solutions to a securities deal gone bad. We played by the rules and lost in better times. Now are faced with this?


M.Soliman

expert.witness@live.com