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General News    H3'ed 8/6/10

Financial Legislation Doesn't Mean Much If The Government Won't Aggressively Police Against Fraud

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Message David Fiderer

Past is prologue, and everything you need to know about the financial meltdown can be gleaned from a single article published more than five years ago in The Los Angeles Times. The 3,200-word piece tells you nothing about credit default swaps or CDOs or hedge funds or AIG. There's no need to carefully pore over the reported details. A quick skim will give you the overall gist.

The story explains how fraud had gone viral at the nation's largest subprime lender, Ameriquest Mortgage Company. "In court documents and interviews, 32 former employees across the country say they witnessed or participated in improper practices, mostly in 2003 and 2004. This behavior was said to have included deceiving borrowers about the terms of their loans, forging documents, falsifying appraisals and fabricating borrowers' income to qualify them for loans they couldn't afford."

The most important part, the part that explains everything, is not contained within the text. It's the reaction that ensued thereafter. Nobody cared. Nobody who mattered, anyway. Sure, the article was picked up by the Associated Press and some other papers piggybacked off of the initial reporting by Mike Hudson and E. Scott Ekhard. But the gatekeepers of the financial system ignored the story and its broader implications.

Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, Lehman and Citigroup were all too happy to continue buying and selling Ameriquest mortgages. Rating agencies continued rating the company's mortgage bonds, while Standard & Poor's continued to assign its highest rating to Ameriquest's mortgage servicing unit. The ultimate vote of confidence came from the bond markets, which demanded no increase in pricing for Ameriquest bonds.

The financial media didn't really care either. Neither The Wall Street Journal, nor CNBC, nor Forbes, nor Fortune, nor BusinessWeek gave the story much if any play in the year following the story's release on February 5, 2005.

Most importantly, the heavy hitters in the government didn't give a damn. Neither the Federal Trade Commission, nor the FBI, nor the Federal Reserve, which was tasked by federal statute to regulate mortgage lending, did anything in response to the story. State regulators in California, where Ameriquest was headquartered, turned a blind eye. Ameriquest was only one company, but its widespread pattern of deceit was emblematic of what was going on throughout the subprime mortgage industry.

The fraud was easy to find if you were willing to look for it, but the gatekeepers were, with very few exceptions, were unwilling to look for it. Remember, 40% of all subprime originations were "low documentation" loans, otherwise known as liar loans.

All this fraud--the forged signatures, the falsified W-2s, the inflated appraisals--spread like a flu virus throughout the different exotic financial instruments, which had triple-A ratings. The When the real estate bubble started collapsing, financiers realized that they hadn't known what was going on all along.

At the end of the day, the cause of the financial crisis was rooted in the government's refusal to go after crooks, large and small. Fraud was never legal, even when the markets were deregulated. But if the police show no interest in enforcing the law, lawlessness prevails. When the law is aggressively enforced, crime goes down. The murder rate in New York City did not decline because the City Council passed new laws against murder; it went down in large part because of smarter, more proactive police enforcement.

The new legislation on financial reform can have a positive impact, but only to the extent that the government is serious about enforcing the law. Remember, in the aftermath of the savings & loan crisis, Congress enacted the Home Ownership Equity Protection Act of 1994, designed to protect all homeowners from the types of tactics and transactions described in the Ameriquest story. The legislation gave the Federal Reserve authority to modify and update all consumer protections in light of changing circumstances, but Alan Greenspan adamantly refused to take any action whatsoever.
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For over 20 years, David has been a banker covering the energy industry for several global banks in New York. Currently, he is working on several journalism projects dealing with corporate and political corruption that, so far, have escaped serious (more...)
 
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