Saturday, October 2, 2010

AND THE HITS JUST KEEP ON COMING – NO TITLE INSURANCE FOR FORECLOSED HOMES

In an announcement on Friday, Old Republic National Title Insurance told its agents that it would not write policies on foreclosed properties by JPMorgan Chase “until the objectionable issued have been resolved,” as reported in the New York Times. This follows its decision to not write policies on Ally Financial (GMAC Mortgage) foreclosed properties subsequently sold as REO.

So, the title insurer is now questioning whether the title of a sold REO property following a foreclosure is clean. This appears to be an aggressive posture of whether the courts will look at whether the entire robo-foreclosure process invalidates the sale of property due to the improper court filed affidavit. As previously mentioned, it would be draconian for the courts to take such a position. Beyond using some type of argument of “bona fide purchaser for value” to be used by a purchaser of REO property, to unwind all of the REO sales done (HOPE NOW published statistics showing over 800,000 completed foreclosure sales between 3rd Q 2009 to 2nd Q 2010 reported by HOPE NOW servicers) would just destroy the recovery of the housing market.

The ripple effect of all this is starting to turn significantly substantial. As noted in the article, foreclosure prices would drop, as lenders would not be willing to loan against REO purchases without the title insurance. The court system would become even more log-jammed, at a time when budgets are already requiring States to make significant cut-backs. Plaintiff’s attorneys, now smelling the blood in the water, will look to feed off defaulted borrowers in ways the loan modification scams only dreamed of. Servicers, now without an ability to recover its costs from liquidation proceeds on the sale of the REO properties, will be “pressed” to find operating revenue. And, as the mantra for the industry, the securitization investor will be once again be forced to “eat it.” Cash-flows will be limited, the properties that should at least be held as REO, will be stuck in this foreclosure limbo, and any recoveries will be less money to pay off their investment. Losses will creep up the tranche structures.

While October is harvest month, it looks like the capital market fields are still only providing the smallest of yields. The HAMP, HAFA and HARP plantings appear to have been only marginal seeds. And now, it looks like we just got hit with an early foreclosure frost that may kill a good portion of the crop. And wait, we still have to face the ghosts, ghouls and goblins (including those on Capital Hill looking to frighten the securitization market with its new regulations) that will be coming out at the end of the month for their free candy (also known as year end bonuses at the Wall Street Banks).

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