What was done with the Banks’ $110 Billion?
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
Much of the debate on these cases has focused on whether the
financial penalties, pursued in lieu of criminal charges against bank
executives, were the most appropriate response to widespread bank misconduct. Or
else the issue was whether the penalties, especially after accounting for the
fact that they were in part tax-deductible, were big enough.
The Wall Street Journal has just published a front-page story addressing yet another facet:
what was done with the money, which totaled some $110 billion in cases relating
to toxic mortgage-backed securities, foreclosure abuses and related issues. The
largest of the cases involved nearly $17 billion from Bank of America in 2014.
The Journal states: “Bank executives grumble privately about the
opaque process and are critical the government didn’t ensure more money went to
housing-related issues.”
Opinions of the culprits should not count for much in
this discussion. The fact that the Journal cites them adds to the suspicion
that paper is in some way trying to discredit the feds for their handling of
the cases.
That posture is more explicit when it comes to the share of the
money that ended up with the states. The Journal implies there is something
wrong with New York’s decision to use some of its settlement funds to replace
the Tappan Zee Bridge north of New York City and to provide high-speed internet
access in rural communities — or the decision of other states to direct
settlement funds into state pension funds. One can disagree with the particular
uses, but they are all valid public purposes.
After devoting most of the article to these imaginary scandals,
the Journal finally gets to what is really the most important issue: what the
banks themselves are doing with the roughly $45 billion of the total that was
supposed to be devoted to consumer relief. It’s important to realize that the
banks were not required to simply distribute these funds to abused customers in
the form of reparations (which might have been a good idea).
Instead, the banks get credit toward the consumer relief
settlement portions ($7 billion in the case of BofA) when they modify existing
mortgages or make new loans to low-income consumers who lost their homes to
foreclosure. In other words, they are being credited for restoring loans to
more reasonable terms and thereby increasing the chances that the homeowners
will avoid default. This is good for the homeowners but it also benefits the
banks.
The Journal article describes the case of one homeowner who did
not benefit much from her mortgage modification. On the other hand, Eric Green,
the monitor of the BofA settlement has glowing words for the program in his
most recent report.
He says that first lien principal
reductions have averaged 51 percent, that the average loan-to-value ratio has
been brought down from 179 percent to 75 percent, that the average interest
rate has been cut in half, and that the average monthly payment has been reduced
38 percent, or more than $600.
There may be more to the story, but this is what the Journal
should be investigating rather than implying that it was a mistake to extract
large sums from banks to pay for their sins.