CreditSlips

BONY-Countrywide Settlement Removal Reversed by 2d Circuit

02/27/12

Lost in the attention to the state-federal mortgage servicing settlement is the other major servicing fraud settlement:  the $8.5B deal between BONY as trustee for various MBS trusts and Countrywide (Bank of America) over putback claims for securitization of mortgages that didn't comply with the requirements of the securitization documents.  

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Littwin on Bankruptcy Without a Lawyer

02/27/12

A few weeks ago, Katie Porter noted the release of the new book, Broke: How Debt Bankrupts the Middle Class. We are trying to feature posts from the authors of Broke about their contributions. Today's post comes from Professor Angela Littwiin of the University of Texas School of Law and a founding member of Credit Slips:

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Robosigning 2.0: Coming to a Foreclosure Review Near You

02/26/12

Last October, I wrote a post entitled "Robosigning 2.0" that discussed some job ads for outsourced OCC foreclosure reviews.  I predicted based on the job ad qualifications that the foreclosure reviews would be nothing other than a whitewash.

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Thank You to Philomila Tsoukala

02/26/12

Credit Slips has been fortunate to have my Georgetown colleague Philomila Tsoukala as a guest blogger the past couple weeks. The mainstream US media press coverage of the Greek financial crisis has focused on the dynamic between the Greek government and the EU, but as Philo's posts remind us, there is a complex internal dynamic in Greece, with the Greek population actually having to live with the deals its government keeps making.  Thank you Philo!

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RDC App for Citibank?

02/26/12

Citibank is running commercials featuring the ability to deposit checks remotely via mobile device, a process known as remote deposit capture. Citi isn't the first retail bank to roll out RDC--USAA, for example, has been doing it for a while, but USAA has almost no branches, so checks have to be deposited remotely by their farflung depositor base.

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Credit for Parenthood (in the Wall Street Journal)

02/23/12

Wall Street Journal Reporter Jessica Silver-Greenberg casts a spotlight on the market for fertility treatment loans - including loans that enable the purchase of other women's eggs  - in the article "In Vitro a Fertile Niche for Lenders."  (subscription required).

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Watch them do, The standing still

02/23/12

My latest column for Dealbook looks at the competing narratives regarding Dodd-Frank's OLA in the banking and bankruptcy communities.

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Teach Consumer Bankruptcy

02/22/12

It's the time of year when professors, including those who are adjunct professors or are interested in teaching as adjuncts, submit their proposed courses for the next academic year. Many of us teach a general 3 or 4 unit bankruptcy course that uses a textbook, and some of us teach specialized seminars on chapter 11. This year think about teaching a seminar on consumer bankruptcy. I've got just the class all ready to go--course pack, syllabus, writing assignments, even in-class exercises.

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The Disorderly Default in Your Closet Eupdate

02/21/12

Another day, another Greek deal to end them all (more on that soon).

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Pushback on the San Francisco City Assessor-Recorder Foreclosure Audit

02/18/12

Not surprisingly, there's been some attempts to downplay the significance of the SF City Assessor-Recorder foreclosure audit. The attacks have come in three flavors:  questions about the auditors' own background; questions about the accuracy of the report; and the "who cares, as these are just lousy deadbeats" argument.

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