From: WorldNetDaily
BIZNETDAILY
Hundreds of banks threatened by new subprime crisis
Court ruling blocks institutions from profiting from
foreclosures
Posted: November 20, 2007
11:45 p.m. Eastern
By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com

Deutsche Bank
headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany |
The reserves of hundreds of banks are at risk, including
some major banks, after a little-noticed federal court
decision signaled the crisis in securitized home
mortgages could spell much more trouble for financial
institutions than previously realized, even on Wall
Street.
Justice Christopher A. Boyko of the Eastern Ohio U.S.
District Court dismissed 14 Deutsche Bank-filed home
foreclosures Oct. 31, based on a ruling that the German
financier lacked standing for not owning the mortgage
loans at the time the lawsuits were filed.
Bob Chapman, author of the
International Forecaster website, emphasized the
problem in his Nov. 21 newsletter.
"This court ruling in Ohio means that the securitized
trusts own nothing," Chapman wrote. "The investors in
these securities might have assumed – wrongly, it turns
out – that they actually owned some real estate in these
deals. The problem is, they own nothing."
Chapman called the ruling "monumental."
"The holders of those slice-and-dice derivatives
could have zero legal redress or collateral in
foreclosures," he said. "This reduces their values
substantially."
Deutsche Bank held the home loans through a packaged
bundle of loans bought in what is known as a Mortgage
Backed Security, or MBS, the home-owner version of the
more general Collateralized Debt Obligation, or CDO,
packaged by Wall Street.
Simply put, Boyko's decision raises the prospect that
Mortgage Backed Securities may be "mortgage backed" in
name only.
An MBS typically involves only a residential
mortgage, whereas CDOs involve a variety of debt
instruments, including credit card debt, which is
purchased from the original issuer and sold to an
institutional investor, typically a bank.
The problem is that banks hold MBSs in their asset
portfolios, contributing to the reserves banks are
required to hold in order to operate.
"The U.S. financial media and Wall Street pundits are
asleep or remiss on the true extent of the MBS crisis,"
Chapman asserted.
He concludes that many institutional holders of the
MBS securities try to argue that they had assignment of
the mortgage titles, or equitable assignment, that
predates the filing of the foreclosure.
But the court in Ohio disagreed: "If a securitized
trust cannot take an equitable assignment of a mortgage
loan, the banks holding these instruments may be out of
luck."
Over the past few years, Wall Street has bundled
billions of dollars of home loans into various MBS
securities and derivatives products.
The full dollar amount of MBS obligations owned by
financial institutions is not yet fully determined, not
even by top experts on Wall Street.
Conceivably, MBS obligations, in trouble because of
the bursting of the real estate bubble, could number in
the trillions of dollars. The stock market already has
realized this.
But the Ohio U.S. District Court decision adds
another level of complication to the crisis.
If the holders of the MBS securities do not hold any
claim or title on the underlying mortgages, then the
banks might not have a claim even on the home
foreclosure proceeds.
In other words, bank assets and reserve calculations
now face the risk of a double loss.
The first loss is the devalued value of the MBS
because the underlying mortgages are in foreclosure.
The second loss is that the financial institutions,
as owners of the MBSs, may not receive any proceeds from
the foreclosures if only the mortgage originator owns
the title to the home, not the financial institution
owning the MBS.
WND previously reported two Bear Stearns hedge
funds, heavily laden with mortgage-backed securities
derivatives, took losses which threatened the solvency
of the funds, forcing Bear Stearns to lend one of the
funds $3.2 billion, just to prevent the fund from
imploding.
WND reported in the same story that Bill and Hillary
Clinton raised eyebrows on Wall Street by liquidating
between $5 and $25 million in a blind trust, just before
the beginning of a market downturn that now has seen the
Dow Jones Industrial Average close under 13,000 twice
since August.
When the Clintons liquidated the blind trust on or
around June 15, the Dow was averaging over 13,600.
The index closed Monday at 12,958.