Barney Frank - Write Down Second Mortgages
Here is Barney Frank’s full letter: (via
WSJ)
Mr. Brian
Moynihan
Bank of America (BAC)
Mr. Vikram
Pandit
Citigroup (C)
Mr. James
Dimon
JP Morgan Chase (JPM)
Mr. John
Stumpf
Wells Fargo (WFC)
Dear
Messrs. Moynihan, Pandit, Dimon and Stumpf:
“The
mortgage foreclosure crisis that began over two years ago, and which
continues to be a prime contributor to our nation’s current economic
downturn, burdens millions of hard-working American families. Congress and
the Obama Administration have worked hard to address foreclosures by
enabling and encouraging loan modification s, but the private sector’s
response has fallen far short of the need. Many homeowners are eager to save
their homes despite being “underwater,” but find that lenders and servicers
are unable or unwilling to make necessary modi fications. These homeowners
are increasingly deciding to walk away and thus foreclosures continue to
mount, deepening the crisis.
To save
homes on a large scale, we must move past temporary modifications in
interest rates or terms and focus on permanent principal reductions that
result in truly sustainable mortgages. There is no more important priority
for me in our efforts to restore stability to our mortgage market.
Many
investors in first-lien mortgages have indicated that they are willing to
accept the fact of significant losses on those investments in order to move
on and use their money for other purposes, rather than having it locked in
underwater mortgages with a high and growing likelihood of foreclosure. With
the interests of homeowners and investors aligned in this way, it should
follow that large numbers of principal-reduction modifications could be made
relatively quickly. That is not happening. According to investors,
Administration officials, and other experts I have consulted, holders of
second-lien mortgages are now a principal obstacle to many modifications.
The problem of second-lien mortgages standing in the way of successful
principal reduction modifications has reached a critical stage and requires
immediate attention from your institutions.
Large
numbers of these second liens have no real economic value – the first liens
are well underwater, and the prospect for any real return on the seconds is
negligible. Yet because accounting rules allow holders of these seconds to
carry the loans at artificially high values, many refuse to acknowledge the
losses and write down the loans, which would allow willing first lien
holders to reduce principal and keep borrowers in their homes.
The four
organizations you lead are major participants in the second-lien market.
Failure to modify these debts has become a major and unnecessary obstacle to
thousands of Americans being able to stay in their homes. I urge you in the
strongest possible terms to take immediate steps to write down these second
mortgages and allow principal reduction modifications of the underlying
first liens to take place. If there are legal obstacles to your doing so, we
will work with you to remove them.
I will be
calling you within the week to discuss what your institutions plan to do to
remove the second liens you own or control as impediments to principal
reduction modifications”.