After months of painstaking talks, government
authorities and five of the nation’s biggest banks have agreed to a $26
billion settlement that could provide relief to nearly two million
current and former American homeowners harmed by the bursting of the
housing bubble, state and federal officials said. It is part of a broad
national settlement aimed at halting the housing market’s downward slide
and holding the banks accountable for foreclosure abuses.
Despite the billions earmarked in the accord, the aid will help a relatively small portion of the millions of borrowers who are delinquent and facing foreclosure. The success could depend in part on how effectively the program is carried out because earlier efforts by Washington aimed at troubled borrowers helped far fewer than had been expected
Still, the agreement is the broadest effort yet to help borrowers owing more
than their houses are worth, with roughly one million expected to have their mortgage debt reduced by lenders or able to refinance their homes at lower rates. Another 750,000 people who lost their homes to foreclosure from September 2008 to the end of 2011 will receive checks for about $2,000. The aid is to be distributed over three years.
The
final details of the pact were still being negotiated Wednesday night,
including how many states would participate and when the formal
announcement would be made in Washington. The two biggest holdouts,
California and New York, now plan to sign on, according to the officials
with knowledge of the matter who did not want to be identified because
the negotiations were not completed.
The
deal grew out of an investigation into mortgage servicing by all 50
state attorneys general that was introduced in the fall of 2010 amid an
uproar over revelations that banks evicted people with false or
incomplete documentation. In the 14 months since then, the scope of the
accord has broadened from an examination of foreclosure abuses to a
broad effort to lift the housing market out of its biggest slump since
the Great Depression. Four million Americans have been foreclosed upon
since the beginning of 2007, and the huge overhang of abandoned homes
has swamped many regions, like California, Florida and Arizona.
In
New York State, more than 46,000 borrowers will receive some form of
benefit, with an estimated 21,000 expected to see what they owe reduced
through a principal reduction, according to estimates by the Department
of Housing and Urban Development.
The five mortgage servicers in the settlement — Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial
— have largely set aside reserves for the expected cost of the accord
and investors are likely to cheer its announcement because it removes
one more legal worry for the industry, analysts said.
Banks Involved in the Settlement
“I
wouldn’t say it’s a panacea for the housing industry but it is good for
the banks to get this behind them,” said Jason Goldberg, an analyst
with Barclays.
As
more and more states signed on this week, the negotiations with the
banks became especially intense, said one participant, who wasn’t
authorized to speak publicly. Two bank officials, Frank Bisignano of
JPMorgan Chase and Mike Heid of Wells Fargo, played a critical role in
the talks with Shaun Donovan, the secretary of Housing and Urban
Development, and Thomas J. Perrelli, the associate attorney general at
the Justice Department. Bank of America, which will make the largest
payout as the nation’s biggest mortgage servicer, moved more cautiously,
the participant said.
The
settlement money will be doled out under a complicated formula that
gives banks varying degrees of credit for different kinds of help. As a
result, banks are incentivized to help harder-hit borrowers with homes
worth far less than what they owe.
While
the $26 billion figure is the one being cited in the negotiations,
federal officials said they hope the eventual value for homeowners
reaches up to $39 billion. However, mortgages owned by the government’s
housing finance agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, will not be
covered under the deal, excluding about half the nation’s mortgages.
About
one in five Americans with mortgages are underwater, which means they
owe more than their home is worth. Collectively, their negative equity
is almost $700 billion. On average, these homeowners are underwater by
$50,000 each.
A recent estimate from the settlement negotiations put the average aid for homeowners at $20,000.
“I
just don’t think it’s going to be a life-changing event for borrowers,”
said Gus Altuzarra, whose company, the Vertical Capital Markets Group,
buys loans from banks at a discount.
Several
billion dollars would cover the direct cash payments to foreclosure
victims and provide money for states’ attorneys general to services like
mortgage counseling and future investigations into mortgage fraud.
Though
many economists identify the moribund housing market as the greatest
drag on the recovery, it is not clear how much the settlement will help.
Christopher J. Mayer, a housing expert at Columbia Business School, said the accord could give banks more certainty that they can clear their large backloads of seized homes, restoring the flow of those homes into the market.
“It
may be good for individual homeowners, but if you don’t do something to
help the foreclosure process, it’s not going to help the housing
market,” he said.
Mark
Zandi, the chief economist for Moodys Analytics, said that while the
settlement looked small compared with the scope of the problem, it was
not necessary to erase all, or even most, of the nation’s negative
equity to turn the market around.
About
a third of houses on the market now are distressed, or have been
through foreclosure, he said, and reducing that percentage by just a
small amount could be enough to put a floor under housing prices.
More
than the dollar figures, the settlement had been held up amid concern
by New York’s attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, that it provided
too broad of a release for banks for past misdeeds, making future
investigations much more difficult.
Mr. Schneiderman was able to win significant concessions from the banks in recent days.
In
the agreement’s expected final form, the releases are mostly limited to
the foreclosure process, like the eviction of homeowners after only a
cursory examination of documents, a practice known as robo-signing.
The prosecutors and regulators still have the
right to investigate other elements that contributed to the housing
bubble, like the assembly of risky mortgages into securities that were
sold to investors and later soured, as well as insurance and tax fraud.
Officials
will also be able to pursue any allegations of criminal wrongdoing. In
addition, a lawsuit Mr. Schneiderman filed Friday against MERS, an
electronic mortgage registry responsible for much of the robo-signing
that has marred the foreclosure process nationwide, and three banks,
Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, will also go forward.
Along
with how broad the releases would be, California’s attorney general,
Kamala Harris, also pushed for her state to be able to use the state’s
False Claims Act. That would enable state officials and huge pension
funds like Calpers to collect sizable monetary damages from the banks if
officials could prove mortgages were improperly packaged into
securities that later dropped in value.
By: Nelson D. Schwartz and Shaila Dewan
This story originally appeared in The New York Times
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