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Investigating Wall St. Crime
by Danny Schechter The Question: As The Feds Broaden A Mortgage Fraud Probe, Will The White Collar Perps Of Subprime Crime Ever Do Time?
New York, May 6: There is a time in the life of every writer when you find yourself fearing that you have become a robo call phone machinerepeating the same message over and over with diminishing results.
Thats how I felt after eight months of silence after labeling the credit crisis a subcrime scandal, lashing out at the fraudulent activity at its core and calling for the investigation and prosecution of wrong doers. Almost no media outlets accepted this way of framing the problem, although, as usual, the British press was ahead of its American cousins in putting the blame on the bankers, not the borrowers.
When the FBI announced a probe of 14 mortgage companies, I
thought that finally some investigators were on the case. But then,
word leaked that they were only going after small fish, even as big
banks reported losses in the billions.
Bank robberies have
always been up the FBIs alley, and after all, this is a bank heist
case, perhaps one of the biggest in history. Only it was the banks that
were doing the heisting.
The New York Times reported on May 5th that a new criminal investigation was finally underway.
A
G-Man explained anonymously: The latest inquiry is broader and
deeper . This is a look at the mortgage industry across the board, and
it has gotten a lot more momentum in recent weeks because of the banks
earnings shortfall.
At last, institutional fraud may be on
the agenda. At last, deeper questions are being asked. There have been
some Congressional hearings, but so far none have risen to a Watergate
type level prompting in-depth investigations fueled by subpoenas.
Slowly,
oh so slowly, news outlets are recognizing this is a big crime story,
one they missed for years, or at least since 2002 when subprime
securities started being packaged for sale.
Reports the Washington Independent:
As
loans made to borrowers with decent credit begin to fail at a
surprisingly rapid rate, its becoming clear that widespread fraud
helped support the entire mortgage system - from borrowers who lied on
their loans, to brokers who encouraged it, to lenders who misled some
low income borrowers, to the many lenders, investors and ratings
agencies that conveniently and deliberately looked the other way as
profits rolled in.
"Despite its widespread role, fraud hasnt yet
been at the forefront of proposed rescue plans, which center on
refinancing people out of loans now resetting to higher rates.
Why
would reputable bankers and respected investment houses engage in these
dishonest activities? The short answer: money, and lots of it.
Sales
from Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) jumped from $157 billion in
2004, to $559 billion in 2006, according to a study for the North Star
Fund by Kevin Connor. Ten investment banks in all were underwriters for
70% of some $486 billion in securitizations in 2006. The banks had a
motto: Its all about capital.
Subprime-related securities
produced large multi-million dollar bonuses for traders and executives,
as well as high revenues for the firms. In the years when business was
booming, CEOs at big firms were making $10 to $50 million annually
apiece.
Collectively, in 2006, a year before their fall, the big banks
earned a stunning $130 billion.
Even after these practices
came to light, hefty bonuses continued. Wall Streeters walked away with
$31 billion at the end of 2007, only one billion less than the year
before. Executives who were fired still received multi-million dollar
payoffs.
Most media outlets considered this business as usual, not shocking or illegal.
Not
even when some of these loans were called liars loans in the
industry, as when loan originators colluded with or advised borrowers
on how to lie on their applications. It was all done with a wink and a
nod reported the Washington Independent. They interviewed many insiders
and experts who contended that:
pervasive fraud was, indeed, a
problem - on the lenders side. At the peak of the housing boom, they
say, the nations mortgage system was set up to promote and encourage
outright fraud in order to close a loan - and everyone, from brokers to
loan officers to Wall Street, looked the other way. Borrowers also were
put into products like payment-option arms that were unsuitable - and
lenders knew it. They were pushed like Vioxx, with very little regard
for their dangers, said Kathleen Keest, senior policy counsel with the
Center for Responsible Lending, a research group that investigates
predatory lending.
Wall Street was not a passive player either
because of all the money they made from subcrime transactions. In some
cases, they paid more for loans with predatory characteristics. Loan
originators at the local level - as sleazy as many were - reported that
it was the Wall Street firms that dictated the types of loans they
wanted and their underwriting criteria. Thus, the so-called secondary
market was really in charge.
This is why I and others insist
this was a Wall Street crime wave built around predatory practices. The
people who had the most were deeply complicit in ripping off the people
who had the least. Whats worse, they had no legal liability in these
unscrupulous deals.
How did Americas leading business magazine
respond after the credit crisis brought Wall Street to its knees?
FORTUNE called the credit crisis both totally shocking and utterly
predictable. For them it was shocking not because of the human
devastation or the millions of families who were cheated and faced
foreclosure or because of the rippling effects on our society, but
because the best minds in the business managed to lose tens of
billions.
And predictable? Again, not due to the lack of
regulation or the enabling of shoddy products by our government, but
because whether its junk bonds or tech stocks or emerging-market debt,
Wall Street always rides a wave until it crashes. What a contrast to
the usual celebratory coverage, but also what a cop-out to explain it
all away.
Warren Buffet, perhaps Americas most successful
investor, sounded disgusted: Wall Street is going to go where the
money is and not worry about consequences, Wall Street is reaping what
theyve sown, he shrugs. The vice chairman of his company said:
If
this were an Alice in Wonderland fable, youd say its too extreme. It
wouldnt work as satire. Adults are not going to behave this way.'
But
adults did - and continue to. So far, they have been well rewarded as
well. The question is: What are the rest of us, and our prosecutors,
going to do about it?
A hard rain may soon fall on Wall Street.
At least one political candidate who has received large donations from
Wall Street senses that the public will is very receptive to anti-big
business rhetoric. Hillary Clinton has outraged the world of finance by
reportedly saying,
Why Dont We Hold These Wall Street Money-Grubbers
Responsible For Their Role In This Recession?
Her campaign now said
she used the term money brokers, not money-grubbers. Whatever the
words, its always the sentiment that counts.
News Dissector
Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. He directed In Debt We Trust,
the doc that first exposed subprime loans. (Indebtwetrust.org) He has
just finished a new book on this calamity called Plunder. Comments to
dissector@mediachannel.org