Friday, September 30, 2011

Bank of America: Website FAIL

Bank of America's homepage and online banking service were experiencing problems Friday, a day after the company said it would start charging a $5 monthly fee for customers who make debit card purchases.
A message on the bank's homepage said that page was temporarily unavailable, despite earlier assurances from the bank that the site had been fully restored.
Some customers who tried to sign onto their accounts were greeted with the message that the site was "operating slower than usual" and that the bank was working to restore service.
A spokeswoman for the bank, Tara Burke, said the site had been fully restored for the majority of customers but that some were still experiencing "sporadic" issues.
She said the problems with the website were not the result of hacking but declined to say what was the cause.
Burke said customers who couldn't sign onto their accounts still could bank via text message, at ATMs and at branches.
Bank of America, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, is the largest U.S. bank by deposits. It offers customers a free eBanking account if they do all their banking online and at ATMs. Customers are charged an $8.95 monthly fee for the account if they also use branch locations.
Many customers have expressed outrage at this new fee. Some have speculated that the Internet activist group "Anonymous" may have had something to do with the Internet outages. "Anonymous" has been named in similar incidents involving the Church of Scientology

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Bank of America: $50 BILLION Liability From Lawsuit

September 28, 2011 {NEW YORK]: Bank of America's potential liability for bad mortgages - in the tens of billions of dollars - is well known. But Bank of America is haunted by other ghosts from the past (?) financial crisis. The most significant is a lawsuit arising from Bank of America's troubled Merrill Lynch acquisition. 

This lawsuit, brought by Bank of America shareholders, claims that Bank of America and its executives, including its former chief executive, Kenneth D. Lewis, failed to disclose what would be a $15.31 billion loss at Merrill in the days before and after Bank of America's acquisition. The plaintiffs contend that this staggering loss was hidden to ensure that Bank of America shareholders did not vote against the transaction. 

Bank of America disclosed this loss after Merrill was acquired. At the same time, Bank of America also disclosed a $20 billion bailout by the government. Bank of America's stock fell by more than 60 percent in a two-week period, a market value loss of more than $50 billion. 

This episode also spawned a lawsuit from the Securities and Exchange Commission that Bank of America, Lewis and Joseph Price, the former chief financial officer, settled for $150 million. Judge Jed S. Rakoff of U.S. District Court in Manhattan approved the deal but complained that it didn't sufficiently penalize the individuals involved. The entire amount was paid by Bank of America with no liability for Lewis or Price. Rakoff called the settlement "half-baked justice at best." 

Rakoff may see his wish for greater penalties granted. The New York attorney general's office has a lawsuit on the matter. More significantly, a lawsuit seeking about $50 billion was brought by some of the largest class-action law firms and is quietly advancing in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. 

The plaintiffs contend that Bank of America engaged in a deliberate effort to deceive the bank's shareholders. According to the plaintiffs, who include the Ohio Public Employees Retirement System and a Netherlands pension plan that is the second-largest in Europe, Bank of America's senior management, including Lewis and Price, began to learn of large losses at Merrill Lynch in early November 2008, months before the deal closed. 

Price met with the bank's general counsel, Timothy J. Mayopoulos, to discuss whether to disclose the loss - at the time about $5 billion - to Bank of America shareholders. Mayopoulos testified to the New York attorney general's office that while his initial reaction was that disclosure was warranted, he decided against it. Merrill had been losing $2.1 billion to $9.8 billion a quarter during the financial crisis, and so this loss would be expected by Merrill and Bank of America shareholders. 

Plaintiffs in the private action and the New York attorney general's complaint claim that after this meeting, Price and other senior executives at Bank of America sought to keep this loss quiet and that Price in particular misled Mayopoulos. 

Mayopoulos has testified that on Dec. 3, 2008, Price told him that the estimated loss would be $7 billion. Mayopoulos concluded again that no disclosure was necessary. Plaintiffs contend that Price misled Mayopoulos as the forecasted loss at this time had now grown to more than $10 billion. 

The Bank of America vote occurred on Dec. 5 without Bank of America shareholders knowing about this gigantic looming Merrill loss, which was now about $11 billion. Mayopoulos has testified he was surprised at this higher number when he learned of it at a Dec. 9 board meeting. Mayopoulos sought to meet with Price about the new loss. The next day, Mayopoulos was fired and escorted out of the building. 

The Merrill acquisition was completed on Jan. 1, 2009. Two weeks later, Bank of America disclosed for the first time that Merrill had suffered an after-tax net loss of $15.31 billion. 

Bank of America has argued in its defense that the exact amount of the loss was uncertain during this time. Moreover, this disclosure was not necessary because Merrill's losses were within the range of previous losses and included a good will write-off of about $2 billion that was previously disclosed. The total loss was not material. 

But if it is true that Price, with Lewis' assent, kept this information from Mayopoulos in order to avoid disclosure, this is a prima facie case of securities fraud. Would Bank of America shareholders have voted to approve this transaction? If the answer is no, then it is hard to see this as anything other than material information. 

Plaintiffs in this private case have the additional benefit that this claim is related to a shareholder vote. It is easier to prove securities fraud related to a shareholder vote than more typical securities fraud claims like accounting fraud. Shareholder vote claims do not require that the plaintiffs prove that the person committing securities fraud did so with awareness that the statement was wrong or otherwise recklessly made. You only need to show that the person should have acted with care. 

This case is not only easier to establish, the potential damages could be enormous. Damages in a claim like this are calculated by looking at the amount lost as a result of the securities fraud. A court will most likely calculate this amount by referencing the amount that Bank of America stock dropped after the loss was announced; this is as much as $50 billion. It is a plaintiffs' lawyers dream. 

Bank of America is facing a huge liability from this claim. It is also facing even more liability for those who bought and sold stock during this period up until Jan. 15. In a ruling on July 29, the judge in this case allowed these claims to proceed against Bank of America, Price and Lewis. The judge had already ruled that the disclosure claim related to the proxy vote could proceed. 

This case is on a relatively fast track, with an October 2012 trial date. Given the $50 billion claim looming over it, Bank of America will most likely try to settle this litigation. The settlement value appears to be in the billions. Firing your main witness - Mayopoulos - and escorting him out the door no doubt only increases the cost. 

The case shows how regulators' actions can be supplemented by private actions. And if the plaintiffs win, this case may be the exceedingly rare event of directors and officers, particularly Lewis and Price, actually having to pay money personally to settle a securities fraud claim. If so, the two men would join the relatively few executives from the financial crisis who have been personally penalized. 

Whatever the outcome of this case, it appears that Bank of America shareholders were sacrificed in December 2008 so that the Merrill deal could be completed. The bill may now be coming due for Bank of America.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Bank of America Employees Taunt A Customer

A customer is suing Bank of America after he was allegedly locked inside a local branch during a bomb scare.
In the case of John Caughman versus Bank of America, Caughman alleges the bank failed to notify him of the danger and evacuations after a trip to the bank resulted in him being locked inside.
Caughman, who was in the safety deposit room area at the New Britain, Conn., branch, was unaware of the evacuation notices when he exited into the banking area. Instead, he discovered an empty bank that was surrounded by cops and the doors were locked. A bewildered Caughman called 911 and was told not to touch anything. A short time later, an operator called to inform him there was a bomb threat at the bank.
“We are aware of the lawsuit but cannot comment on ongoing litigation,” ejaculated a spokesperson for Bank of America.
No comment was available as to whether the bank is on Brian Moynihan’s “layoff hit list” or if any of Caughman’s accounts had been turned over to abusive debt collectors, such as GC Services, Northstar Location Service, Client Services or Marauder Corporation.
The amount of time Caughman was locked inside the bank is unclear but the lawsuit alleges it was sizable.  “(P)laintiff was locked within the building for a considerable length of time until a police officer opened the front door and brought the plaintiff out of the building,”  according to the civil complaint.
What is also unclear is how the plaintiff was unable to hear the sirens and the bomb squad if the bank was surrounded.
The attorney for Caughman, Steven DeMoura, only offered a terse comment, “I am sorry, but it is the policy of our firm to not discuss our client’s cases with the media.  I wish I could be more helpful.”
After exiting the bank safely Caughman was subjected to taunts by the bank employees including “we forgot you were in there.” It’s these alleged exchanges that  caused Caughman additional emotional distress.  Caughman is suing the bank for emotional distress and false imprisonment.
According to the complaint, the bank was evacuated after a Bank of America employee reported a suspicious briefcase. Caughman is seeking punitive damages for negligence, false imprisonment and emotional distress, plus costs and medical expenses.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Bank of America: Targeted by Activists

Activists have begun protesting Bank of America foreclosures using “street theater,” from leaving a vacant home’s trash on an executive’s doorstep to sneaking into a business breakfast to hand out anti-B of A muffins.

“We feel this is a fun way to raise our issues while using some levity and humor,” said Jason Stephany of MassUniting, one of the groups behind the protests. “We’re not trying to be confrontational. We just want to give a voice to those families who have been victims of foreclosure and predatory lending.”

Activists got the ball rolling a few weeks ago by sending letters to Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan at his office and Wellesley home to demand the bank do more to prevent foreclosures.

Getting no response, protesters began sit-in-like demonstrations at local Bank of America branches, armed with signs and leaflets but not actually blocking bank operations.

Two MassUniting organizers upped the ante further on Sept. 13, sneaking into a Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce breakfast dressed as servers and handing out muffins reading, “Bank of America: Bad for America. Bad for Massachusetts.”

Robert Gallery — who’s both Bank of America’s Massachusetts president and the chamber’s chairman — was hosting the event.

“A few people who took muffins actually thanked our ‘servers’ before the chamber figured out what was up and asked us to leave — which we did,” Stephany said. “There was no confrontation.”

Activists next cleaned up the yard of an abandoned Malden home that BofA has foreclosed on, bringing bags of trash to nearest Bank of America branch.

“The home and the trash are now Bank of America’s property, so we feel we were just giving their property back,” Stephany said.

When the branch manager refused to keep the rubbish, protesters left it on the front steps of Gallery’s Beacon Hill home.

They also put up a mock eviction notice modeled on real foreclosure paperwork, but calling on Gallery and the bank to “halt all foreclosures and evictions.”

Stephany said the activists have targeted B of A because it’s the nation’s largest bank, but “most of our demands for Bank of America could be made to any financial institution. There’s certainly a lot of shared responsibility for breaking our economy.”

Bank of America isn’t applauding the street theatrics. It is to be noted that Bank of America, about to lay off 40,000 employees, may have ceased to care…

Friday, September 23, 2011

Bank of America Layoffs Begin In Investment Banking

New York (September 23, 2011): The Bank of America (BAC) has laid off 13 investment bankers who courted business from industrial sector companies.
The dismissals were part of an initial round of 3,500 layoffs across the bank, and amount to 5% of the investment bankers who provide advice on mergers and acquisitions and other financing activities to industrial companies.
Following the initial round of 3,500 layoffs, Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan announced he would eliminate another 40,000 jobs across the company over the next several years. Bank of America has been slashing expenses and selling businesses as its stock has dropped some 50% this year on concerns over the bank's multibillion dollar exposure to troubled mortgages underwritten by Countrywide, which Bank of America acquired in 2008.
Among the bankers let go were managing directors David Iwan and Egan Antill, according to the reports. Among Iwan's clients was Kennametal, a manufacturer of machinery parts based in Latrobe, PA.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Bank of America: DOWNGRADED by Moody's

NEW YORK (September 22, 2011) -- Moody's has declared the era of "too big to fail" over.
In yet another blow to the financial sector, Moody's Investors Services announced the downgrade of Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America -- three of the United States' top banks.
Among the primary reasons: the U.S. government is less likely to step in to save a troubled financial institution.
"It is more likely now than during the financial crisis to allow a large bank to fail should it become financially troubled, as the risks of contagion become less acute," Moody's wrote in its downgrade note of Wells Fargo's stock.
Moody's downgraded Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500)'s long-term debt two notches to Baa1, Wells Fargo (WFC, Fortune 500)'s long-term one notch to A1, and Citigroup (C, Fortune 500)'s short-term debt one notch to Prime-2. Moody's offered a negative outlook for all three.
"While we disagree with their conclusions and we believe our ratings should be higher, to minimize any potential impact of this decision on our business, we have been managing our liquidity carefully and we have prefunded our planned borrowing needs for the year," said a Bank of America spokesman.
With the exception of embattled Bank of America, which saw its shares fall 4.2% following the downgrade, the other banks' investors appear to have largely shrugged off the news. Wells Fargo's shares edged up 1%, while Citigroup's stock slid 0.2%.
"We believe that less than 1% of Citi's funding will be affected by the Moody's decision and the downgrade will not affect the short-term and long-term funding of our bank vehicles," said a Citigroup spokesman.
Moody's said that the U.S. government might be more likely to allow a large financial institution to fail because it the contagion could be viewed as limited.
The ratings agency also cited Dodd-Frank legislation as a reason that the U.S. government could opt for failure. The post-financial crisis legislation gives the FDIC a method to liquidate failed banks and hand over losses to bondholders.
Bank of America received the steepest downgrade from Moody's because of its exposure to problematic residential mortgage loans. Still, the ratings agency commended Bank of America's leadership for its "significant improvements to its capital and liquidity positions."

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Bank of America Layoffs "Baltimore Will Be Hit Hard"

On September 19, 2011 Bank of America executives confirmed that they intend massive company-wide job cuts over the next two years, but employees at the Baltimore area’s leading bank continue to be left in the dark about how the plans will affect them.

“I truly don’t know” what the local impact will be, confessed William Couper, president of the Mid-Atlantic Region for the bank. “It’s premature to estimate” how many of the bank’s workers in Maryland will lose their jobs, he told Patch.

At corporate headquarters in Charlotte, NC, spokeswoman Nicole Nastacie said the company would be providing no geographic breakdown of the estimated 40,000 job cuts. The cuts will include all different business segments of the corporation, she said, and no single geographic area will be spared entirely.

The bank currently has about 2,000 employees in Baltimore City and Baltimore County, and about 4,000 statewide in Maryland, according to state Department of Business and Economic Development. Baltimore County, with about 1,200 Bank of America employees, has the highest concentration of company workers in any single county in the state.

Bank of America locations in the Essex-Middle River area, include branches at Windlass Drive and Eastern Avenue. 

Most employees work in the bank's 189 retail branch offices across Maryland, although there is also a credit processing facility in Hunt Valley and a regional headquarters office in Rockville. The Hunt Valley facility already has seen job cuts this year—the bank announced in March that it would eliminate about 40 jobs there.

Michael Raia, a spokesman for the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation, said the agency is gearing up to respond to the job cuts despite the lack of any definitive information from Bank of America.

“The Maryland Department of Labor is watching the news, and staff from the Dislocated Service Unit will be available to provide rapid response if and when Bank of America makes public any plans for layoffs in Maryland,” Raia said.

“DLLR provides a full range of services to dislocated workers and job seekers, including initiatives designed to bolster new and incumbent worker skills to better compete in the new economy,” he said.

The confirmation Monday of the 30,000 cuts over the next two years follows disclosure last month the company is in the process of cutting some 6,000 jobs companywide in 2011.

Like the larger cuts planned for 2012 and 2013, Bank of America has refused to publicly disclose the geographic locations of the 6,000 job cuts, or comment on the local impact of eliminating jobs.

Bank of America, which by many measures is the country’s largest bank, employs a total of about 288,000 workers, according to recent company statements. If current plans are fully realized, the company will have eliminated the jobs of roughly 12 percent of its employees by the end of 2014.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Bank of America: Layoff Announcements Blamed For Poor Morale and Customer Service Decline

Morale quickly turns ugly after a company warns about layoffs—even if the job cuts won't happen for a while.

Bank of America Chief Executive Brian Moynihan told employees in an internal email last week that "overall employment levels" at the bank would come down by 40,000 over the next few years.

He said managers have tried to send short notes to reassure employees but it seems they are nervous about their own positions. "They say it's going to be 40,000 over the next couple years. Does that mean that for the next several years we're supposed to wait for our number to be called?"

A Bank of America spokesman declined to comment.

Recruiter Mike Ramer said that many banking employees have contacted him this year looking to leave the industry altogether for finance positions in the corporate sector. He said smaller banks have been able to get top talent from large multinational firms, such as Bank of America, over the last few months because of perceived weakness there.

Bank of America, which is still suffering ill effects from bad mortgages, reported an $8.8 billion quarterly loss in July. Goldman Sachs officials in July said that the bank could lay off 1,000 employees by the end of the year and indicated that more cuts may come later. A Goldman Sachs spokesperson declined to comment.

It is more than likely that decreased morale will lead to a decrease in the quality of customer service, which is already rated very poor. At present, both the Bank of America and FIA Card Services are taking several months to answer customer inquiries about misplaced and misapplied payments, and customers report receiving correspondence indicating that the Bank of America will only respond to certain types of inquires in writing. These inquiries are to be directed to various PO Boxes in Delaware, which is rumored to be one targeted for a significant number of layoffs under Moynihan’s plan.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Bank of America: Foreclosures Increase In Orange County,CA

Bank of America filed three times as many default notices on Orange County homeowners in August 2011 than the month before, helping to push the overall number of defaults in O.C. up 66 percent last month, according to new figures from DataQuick Information Systems.
Other lenders also increased their default filings – the start of the foreclosure process – although to a lesser degree. The B of A filings jumped 197 percent from July to August, compared to a 50.6 percent increase for all other lenders. 
The increase was exaggerated slightly because August had three more business days than in July. But the numbers are up dramatically even after adjusting for the difference.
B of A default filings were up 44.4 percent on an annual basis as well, increasing to 374 in August from 259 in August 2010. By comparison, non-B of A filings increased 9.7 percent to 1,584, up from 1,444 in August 2010.
Countywide defaults were up 15 percent, rising to 1,958 in August from 1,703 in August 2010.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Bank of America Must Pay $930,000 and Reinstate Whistleblowing Employee!

September 14, 2011: The U.S. Department of Labor said today that it ordered Bank of America Corp. (BAC) to rehire and pay $930,000 to an employee improperly fired in a whistleblower case.

The worker reported "pervasive wire, mail and bank fraud" involving employees at Countrywide Financial Corp., the mortgage lender acquired by Bank of America in July 2008, the government said. The bank was ordered to pay back wages, damages and attorneys' fees.

"It's clear from our investigation that Bank of America used illegal retaliatory tactics against this employee," said David Michaels, assistant secretary of the Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration. "This employee showed great courage reporting potential fraud and standing up for the rights of other employees to do the same."

The Los Angeles-area employee, whose name wasn't disclosed, was fired shortly after the Countrywide acquisition became final, the government said.

Bank of America said in a statement that it is "disappointed with the ruling and plans to exercise our option to challenge the order." The bank said its decision to fire the employee was "solely based on issues with the employee's management style and in no way related to the employee's complaints and the allegations made in the complaint."

Bank of America has faced mounting troubles related to the bank's acquisitions of Countrywide Financial. in 2008 and Merrill Lynch & Co. in 2009. The Charlotte, N.C.-based bank has faced numerous lawsuits from private investors and the federal government, alleging that the bank failed to fully disclose the risks of mortgage-backed bonds sold to investors.

Earlier this year, a criminal probe of Angelo Mozilo, former chief executive at Countrywide Financial Corp., was closed without charges being filed. The investigation was led by the U.S. Attorney's office in Los Angeles. Last year, Mozilo agreed to pay $67.5 million to settle civil-fraud charges filed against him by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Bank of America: Layoffs Pay Legal Bills?

NEW YORK (September 12, 2011)-- Bank of America's announcement that it plans to shed 40,000 jobs doesn't address the bank's most pressing concerns, experts said Monday.

The job cuts come as part of a last ditch initiative by Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan known as Project New BAC, the first phase of which aims to save $5 billion in annual costs by 2014, the bank announced Monday. But shareholders have been preoccupied in recent months with something other than overhead costs -- namely, the lawsuits from investors and government regulators that potentially threaten the bank with billions in losses. The company's stock price has fallen about 50 percent this year as speculation has swirled that it doesn't have enough capital to defend against losses, despite the bank's persistent statements to the contrary.

But experts say Project New BAC, which also included a shake-up of top management, doesn't address these legal concerns -- and say it may be for naught.

"What Bank of America should be doing is spending all their energy cleaning up legacy liabilities," said Manal Mehta, a partner at the San Francisco-based hedge fund Branch Hill Capital. "At this point, whatever progress they make in streamlining the company could easily be overshadowed by the loss of a critical legal ruling."

The layoffs and other cost-cutting measures, Mehta said, may turn out to be "pointless."

Bank of America spokesman Jerry Dubrowski objected to that characterization, saying the issue of legal liabilities shouldn't be part of an assessment of the effort to cut costs.

"If anyone is trying to connect Project New BAC to litigation, they are missing the point. This isn't about that," Dubrowski said. "This is about making the company a simpler company, a more efficient company and ultimately a more profitable company."


The bank has been plagued over the past year by lawsuits largely stemming from its 2008 acquisition of Countrywide Financial, the subprime mortgage lender that sold loans investors say didn't meet basic standards. Such legal costs turned what would have been a profit into a record $8.8 billion loss during the second quarter of this year, as the bank set aside money to settle claims.

And the legal woes aren't over. After the bank announced it had struck a deal for an $8.5 billion settlement with investors this summer, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman moved to block the settlement, saying another bank involved in the mortgage transactions had behaved improperly. Another state attorney general, a group of investors and a federal regulator also lodged complaints.

Bank of America, the nation's biggest bank by assets, is also in talks with all 50 state attorneys general and a host of federal agencies to resolve allegations that it illegally foreclosed on homeowners. The penalty being discussed for the group of big banks in those talks could be around $20 billion, The Huffington Post reported in June.

In August, the insurance company AIG sued Bank of America over losses on $28 billion of mortgage securities, seeking $10 billion. And early this month, the Federal Housing Finance Agency sued the bank on behalf of the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, seeking compensation on tens of billions in mortgage investments that went sour.

Bank of America chief executive Brian Moynihan spoke about legal threats during a conference with investors Monday in New York.

"It wasn't unexpected that people would intervene," he said of the $8.5 billion deal that was held up this summer. "We will put this settlement through the court systems. As we told you back when we made the settlement in June, that settlement will take 12 to 18 months from that time frame to get final."

But the chief's words, and the bank's subsequent statement about Project New BAC, drew criticism from some finance professionals.

"The money he's talking about saving wouldn't even pay the lawyers," said Christopher Whalen, managing director of the financial research firm Institutional Risk Analytics.

In a report from IRA, Whalen argued Monday that Bank of America must be restructured in order to resolve the legal claims. The parent company should be placed in bankruptcy, wiping out shareholders and replacing them with bondholders, he added in an interview.

"No amount of layoffs or other cost-savings by the management of BAC will resolve the crisis of confidence affecting the bank," Whalen wrote in the confidential report, referring to Bank of America by its stock ticker symbol.

Project New BAC aims at "delivering long-term value for shareholders," the bank said in its Monday release. The company has also been selling assets this year, earning several billions on those transactions.

Job cuts are set to happen over "the next few years," the bank said. The cuts represent more than 10 percent of its total workforce as of the end of June, according to a recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Bank of America's declaration that it would cut 40,000 jobs was the biggest single workforce reduction announcement by a U.S.-based employer so far this year, according to a Monday report from the consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

It dwarfs the nearly 11,000 job cuts announced by the Borders bookstore in July, and it's the largest planned cut since the U.S. Postal Service announced 30,000 cuts last year, Challenger said.

But it may not be enough to give investors faith in the bank. Bank of America shares hardly budged after Moynihan's conference Monday morning, and then slumped downward in the afternoon as the Standard & Poor's 500 Index declined. The stock ended the day 1 percent above Friday's close.

This type of cost-cutting is fundamentally misguided, said Amar Bhide, a professor of international business at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. It addresses only known costs, Bhide said.

"The only costs you're taking into account are the upfront costs, not the costs of things going bad," he said. "In finance, the costs of things going bad swamp the upfront costs."

Monday, September 12, 2011

Bank of America To Cut 40,000 Jobs

September 12, 2011: Bank of America Corp. is preparing to slash 40,000 or more jobs nationwide, a dramatic retrenchment that reflects the deepening woes of the country's largest bank and the magnitude of the U.S. economic slowdown.
The layoffs will come mainly from the BofA's sprawling consumer-banking operations, which will take a heavy toll on branches, loan centers and other offices throughout California.
Bank of America has 45,000 employees in the state, about 1 in 6 of its nearly 300,000-person workforce, and is expected to roll out the job cuts over the next several years. The company, which for years was based in San Francisco and maintains its huge mortgage unit in Calabasas, also is in the process of closing 10% of its branches nationwide.
California has the highest concentration of BofA branches in the U.S. with 956 throughout the state, though it has been losing ground in recent years to rivals like Wells Fargo & Co. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.
The layoffs are another blow to California, with its battered economy and nearly 12% unemployment rate. From tellers to middle managers, laid-off Bank of America employees are likely to have a tough time finding new jobs.
The details of the cutbacks were not officially announced, but the information was disclosed by three Bank of America executives who have been briefed on the plan but were not authorized to speak publicly. Brian Moynihan, Bank of America's beleaguered chief executive, is expected to unveil details at an investor conference Monday in New York.
Executives met at the bank's Charlotte, N.C., headquarters Thursday and Friday to finalize the plan, which has been under discussion for months. Moynihan is grappling with how to wring more profit from the bank's core customer base, which includes about 58 million consumer and small-business accounts.
At least one analyst said the cutbacks could weigh heavily on BofA's millions of Southern California customers, who would have to deal with fewer branches and longer lines for tellers.
Moynihan hopes to fashion a smaller but more focused company that can withstand the fallout from its disastrous 2008 takeover of mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp. in Calabasas. The home-lending unit has run up $30 billion in losses, and faces billions more in potential liability from a barrage of mortgage-related lawsuits.
**
COMMENTARY: Too little, too late. Even though some senior people are being laid off, the majority of the "victims" are decent, hardworking people, following the orders of BofA's greedy management. The Bank of America is one of, if not the largest, economic oppressors in the country. It should be forced to close, and many of its senior people should be investigated for criminal behavior.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Bank of America: Too Big To Obey The Law?

It is high time something be done about the Bank of America, one of the biggest abusers of hardworking Americans!


If you’ve watched the collapse in Bank of America’s stock this past month, you’ve probably read that investors are concerned about the bank’s legal liabilities from the devastation of the housing market. Analysts usually cite the raft of lawsuits filed by just about anybody who had anything to do with the bank or Countrywide, which was bought by Bank of America when Countrywide was on the verge of bankruptcy. Analysts, however, don’t tell you the details behind these legal claims – what exactly did Bank of America do to earn its position as poster child for banking industry fraud? To the rescue comes a lawsuit filled with such details, from someone who has access to thousands of consumer complaints about Bank of America. The complaint was filed recently by the Attorney General of Nevada,Catherine Cortez Masto. You should take the time to read this lawsuit. It tells you in a comprehensive way what went wrong with the mortgage business from origination of the mortgage to foreclosure. But fair warning: be prepared to be nauseated. If Bank of America perpetrated even a fraction of the frauds outlined in this report, it raises a most serious question: why does this company still have a banking license?
Countrywide Sets the Tone
The first third of the complaint concentrates on the fraudulent activity of Countrywide Financial under its CEO Angelo Mozilo, before it collapsed and was bought up by a covetous Bank of America. Bank of America at the time of the purchase assured its shareholders that management had done thorough due diligence on Countrywide and that BOA was satisfied it had uncovered all the sins of omission and commission possibly perpetrated by Countrywide. It is evident now, as BOA is being dragged underwater by the weight of these sins, that management’s idea of “due diligence” seemed to consist of nothing more that reading the frothy “all is well” press releases that Angelo Mozilo was issuing until the very end.
Too bad BOA never uncovered the email Mozilo sent around to his executives, alerting them to growing problems in the mortgage portfolio, including the rising number of defaults and the difficulties borrowers were having with “payment shock.” BOA should have been concerned that Countrywide in 2003 had abandoned traditional fixed rate mortgages to sell more lucrative but highly toxic mortgages to customers that couldn’t qualify for traditional mortgages in the first place.
The three favorite mortgages at Countrywide were:
1) Option Adjustable Rate Mortgages, which were often marketed with a 1% teaser rate for the first three months. The consumer had the option to defer principal payments and only pay interest, but the deferred amount accumulated and compounded so that the mortgage developed “negative amortization”, which meant the loan balance grew to a size greater than the amount initially borrowed.
2) Hybrid Adjustable Rate Mortgages. These mortgages carried low introductory interest rates for the first two or three years, and then significantly higher interest rates for the next 28 or 27 years.
3) Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs). Countrywide marketed these loans as “piggyback mortgages”, encouraging homeowners to borrow up to 85% of the value of their home on their first mortgage, and take out a HELOC for the remaining 15% of the value. The customer walked out the door signing away all equity of the home as collateral to Countrywide.
Countrywide set up a very aggressive marketing program for all three of these loans. Advertisements never mentioned anything but the opening, low rates. Brochures conveniently left out information about the payment shock which would occur when rates reset. Loan officers were not allowed to talk about interest rates at all during the initial conversation with a borrower, and nor was there any discussion of how much equity was going to be shifted over to the bank as collateral. By 2006, over three-quarters of Countrywide loans were “liar loans”, in which the homeowner’s income and asset information could be submitted without any verification whatever, such as pay stubs or tax returns. Often the loan officers made up these numbers out of thin air in order to get a loan approved. Countrywide played hardball with appraisers who did not inflate the value of homes under review; those who refused to play along were blackballed completely from ever dealing with the nation’s largest home loan lender.
That was the home loan side of things. Countrywide was also the nation’s largest mortgage servicer, for its own loans and those of many other banks, handling over $1.5 trillion in mortgages. Once the housing crisis hit in 2006, Countrywide found new and imaginative ways to defraud consumers by collecting “impermissible and inflated fees” from any homeowner in default or foreclosure or bankruptcy. Interest due was routinely overstated and never explained in detail. In four states where Bankruptcy Trustees looked into the matter, it was shown that Countrywide collected unlawful servicing fees.
The Federal Trade Commission investigated Countrywide’s compliance under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA), and fined the bank $108 million for its various criminal acts. When Bank of America bought Countrywide, it wanted to put all these problems behind it, especially since they were much bigger and more serious than they thought at first. BOA negotiated a multi-state settlement, conceding that “Countrywide engaged in widespread consumer fraud in origination, marketing, and servicing.” The state of Nevada came to its agreement with BOA on February 24, 2009, in which BOA consented to make major changes in its servicing practices.
The complaint filed this week by Nevada is the third since 2009 in which the state alleges BOA has routinely violated the terms of this agreement. This new suit is also the most comprehensive in describing these violations, which also include the way BOA sold mortgages into the secondary market.
Bank of America Promises to Clean Up its Mortgage Business
Under the consent agreement with the state of Nevada, Bank of America promised that under its participation in the National Homeownership Retention Program, the bank would:
• Make the modification process streamlined,
• Decide on modifications within 60 days, on average,
• Not initiate or advance any foreclosures on homeowners seeking modifications to their mortgage.
Based on numerous complaints filed with the Attorney General of Nevada, the state’s lawsuit against Bank of America claims none of these promises was met.
The modification process was anything but streamlined. Consumers were required to submit proof of income, copies of tax statements including all attached schedules, an IRS tax form 4506-T (authorizing a tax transcript), a signed affidavit applying for a modification, and a signed letter identifying the financial hardship behind the request. Under the terms of some of the government modification programs, financial hardship was not a condition required for a modification. This was a bank, by the way, that was happy to extend these loans without any proof of income required from the consumer.
Once consumers submitted the required documentation, for many of them a nightmare began in which documentation would be lost by the bank as many as half a dozen times. The bank never told consumers documentation was lost; it was only discovered if the consumer called the bank to find out why the modification was taking so long. The bank would repeatedly tell consumers documentation was complete and under review, when in fact it was lost. These and other problems made a mockery of the bank’s claims, plastered all over its website and in written material, that the streamlined modification process would take less than 60 days, and in many cases “within 45 days”. Bank of America has refused to release its statistics on the average wait time for a modification decision, but the Nevada Attorney General believes the average to be well beyond 60 days.
While modifications were under review, or even if the documentation was lost by the bank, Bank of America proceeded in many cases to file for foreclosure against the applicants, even though this was strictly prohibited under the terms of the government programs involved. Consumers would receive letters of foreclosure at the same time they were told by the bank that modification was forthcoming. Employees working in the bank call center report numerous instances where they knew the home was in the process of foreclosure even though this was prohibited under the modification terms.
Consumers who were never late on a payment, and who sought a modification, were instantly labeled by the bank as a bad credit risk, and the credit agencies were notified of an adverse event that affected the consumer’s credit rating. It was also routine for the bank to hire collection agents to harass the applicants for payment if they were late on their mortgage obligation. One of the advantages to the bank of damaging a consumer’s credit rating or labeling them as delinquent and therefore subject to collection procedures, was that the bank could start accumulating missing payment fees and late payment interest charges. The Attorney General’s complaint cited a number of cases where the late fees and interest charges were so large, that the consumer lost the home to foreclosure anyway.
Consumers who were not late in making payments were routinely told that they could not proceed with an modification request until they deliberately failed to make a payment. This was definitely not a requirement under the government modification programs, but once a consumer stopped paying on their mortgage, the entire foreclosure process began in earnest, including compounding of late fees and other charges. In a number of such cases, these consumers ultimately lost their home to Bank of America under a foreclosure.
The bank said it made 20,000 modifications a month nationwide last year, but it won’t release data on how many applications were declined a modification. The Nevada Attorney General said that the decision process was opaque, and the reasons given for a refusal were often specious. If a request was denied, foreclosure was often the only option for the homeowner. The bank had any number of reasons to give when denying a modification. Consumers might be told that the investors owning the mortgage had refused to allow a modification, even though in most cases investors had authorized the bank to modify loans, and even though Bank of America had specific evidence in the consumer’s file that investors had waived their right to deny modifications for that specific mortgage. Another reason given was that the applicant had failed to file complete information; the complaint shows that in many such cases the applicant had filed the complete information required multiple times. On some occasions Bank of America denied modifications for incomplete information even though the only reason information was incomplete was because the bank had lost the file. One consumer was told his modification was denied because he had already received a modification, even though the applicant had rejected that modification because it was based on erroneous income information. In many cases the bank denied modifications because the applicant was “unable to be reached”, despite evidence in the file that the applicant had called the bank numerous times.
The denial of a modification usually allowed the bank to proceed with foreclosure. At the time of the Countrywide purchase, and when Bank of America entered into its consent agreement with the state of Nevada to clean up its mortgage servicing business, the bank knew that Countrywide had serious problems with its securitization process. Complaints had revealed that Countrywide hardly ever complied with the terms of the legal agreements governing securitizations, so that the trustee for the security rarely received the original note to the mortgages and never received any amendments or modifications to the note, as required.
Despite knowing this, since 2009 Bank of America, in the state of Nevada, has consistently foreclosed on properties for which it has no legal claim, according to the state Attorney General. The suit claims Bank of America “sought to enforce notes, engage in collection activity, pursue nonjudicial foreclosures, and defend foreclosures when it did not have the authority to act.”
Suppose a consumer was one of the few who received a modification. In many cases the modification involved an increase in the interest rate, which is yet another of the terms that are not permitted under the federal loan modification programs. Or, the consumer was allowed to go through mediation, which like arbitration, is one of those practices corporations are increasingly requiring to prevent consumers from suing in courts for redress. The Nevada suit claims, though, that Bank of America often did not show up at mediation hearings, or the people who came were unable to agree to mediation terms, or they didn’t have sufficient documentation in their file to discuss the terms. When the mediator got both sides to agree to a modification package, the mediator would discover months later that Bank of America never proceeded to grant the modifications. Some of these consumers therefore still went into foreclosure. A number of these mediators have reported to the state Attorney General that Bank of America “did not negotiate in good faith.”
What to Do About a Bad Faith Bank
The first defense Bank of America can make about its actions is that the Attorney General’s complaint consists of allegations. In other words, nothing has been proven yet. Except, the complaint cites several regulatory actions against Bank of America that have resulted in substantial fines being paid, even though the bank did not admit any guilt. It just didn’t want to go to court or to a jury trial. Second, this isn’t a complaint from a private party. The attorney general is in possession of thousands of complaints against the bank, complaints which have been investigated by the state, and for which the bank has no explanation or justification. The lawsuit is backed up by documentation from these thousands of consumers, by depositions, and other evidence. This isn’t some lawyer looking for an easy target and a quick settlement. This is, in fact, a state government that entered into an agreement with Bank of America on these same issues regarding mortgages and foreclosures, and has already concluded that the bank did not act in good faith.
Some of the observers who have had the stomach to read through all 48 pages of this suit – and it takes a good deal of fortitude to read about case after case of consumer fraud – think Bank of America is a criminal organization. Certainly you get the feeling that the bank operates in complete defiance of the law, of regulations set down in Washington, of the legal agreements it signed governing securitizations, of the promises it made to mediators, and of commitments it made previously to state attorneys general.
This week also saw two other complaints against Bank of America. The Federal Housing Finance Agency filed suit against BOA and 16 other banks, charging them with defrauding investors by lying about the condition of the mortgages included in mortgage-backed securities. The interesting thing about this complaint is that the allegations are about Bank of America’s behavior before it bought Countrywide, and when it was one of the large securitizers in the business. Separately it was revealed that HUD’s inspector general submitted to the Department of Justice evidence that many banks, including Bank of America, defrauded the government and consumers by forcing consumers to buy expensive home mortgage insurance, not revealing that the insurance provider was a subsidiary of the bank itself.
Adding all this up, you do get the image of a corporation which actively skirts, flouts, evades, and breaks the law. Does this mean that CEO Brian Moynihan meets regularly with his executives, or even his board of directors, to determine which laws to break next? No – nor is that necessary for one to conclude that the bank is a criminal enterprise. It is possible that the bank executives refused to hear the details of what their managers were doing, and winked and nodded at suggestions that the bank “stretch things” a little when it comes to the legalities.
But let us assume this is not the case. Assume that Moynihan and his fellow executives have every intention of following the law, and that they set a tone that should in normal circumstances encourage employees to follow the law and regulations to the letter and the spirit required. Even assuming this, something has gone severely wrong at Bank of America that still allows for egregious, fraudulent behavior. What could this be?
The large banks have admitted to serious errors in their mortgage servicing businesses. These businesses were sleepy underperformers before the housing collapse. They earned modest fees and modest returns for processing mortgage payments. Foreclosures were few and far between. They were grossly understaffed when the mortgage crisis hit, and they farmed out foreclosure and other duties to law firms that routinely broke the law with robo-signing and other techniques that jammed thousands of foreclosures through the system every week.
Having admitted all this, you would think an institution like Bank of America would devote top executive talent and the necessary hiring budget to fixing its problems. Whatever happens with the state of Nevada complaint, a bank lives and dies by its reputation, and cannot afford the reputational damage that is done when a high profile suit alleges consistent, deliberate criminal behavior. Bank of America has persisted in behavior that could utterly destroy its franchise.
This might be why shareholders have abandoned its stock, which has fallen over 45% in value this year. Given how the bank cannot afford continuing criminal behavior and the attendant law suits and reputational damage that results from this behavior, we have to conclude that the bank is incapable of correcting its fraudulent behavior. This may be because the bank cannot hire the right sort of people, or the cost of modifications is too high. This is certainly possible, because what is really needed are thousands of capable attorneys to handle all the modification claims and foreclosure legal requirements. It is also plausible that if the bank starts accepting modifications, it will need to write down billions in related first and second mortgages that would deserve similar treatment.
Another possibility is that the executives running the business are incompetent. Bank of America gave notice this week that this is something to consider, when it fired the executive in charge of Consumer Banking. Whatever the reasons, we come to the belief that Bank of America is Too Big to Manage.
Along with Too Big to Fail, we now have another reason to doubt whether Bank of America should be allowed to survive in its present form. And why wouldn’t the same conclusion be made for Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Chase Manhattan, Goldman Sachs and the other Too Big to Fail institutions? The same allegations have surfaced against these banks as well. Even the one bank supposedly above the fray of fraudulent behavior – JPM Chase, whose chairman insisted not one of its foreclosures was unjustified, was later forced to confess that by foreclosing on so many servicemen engaged in Iraq and Afghanistan, it violated the Service Members Civil Relief Act, which outlawed such foreclosures.
We would know a lot more about these other banks and their activities in the mortgage business if the attorneys general in other states were as conscientious as Catherine Cortez Masto. Lamentably, 46 state attorneys general have signed on to the effort of Attorney General Tom Miller of Iowa, who is attempting to come to some agreement with the banks regarding their role in the mortgage crisis. This agreement is said to involve a penalty of $20 billion or higher, and a commitment from the banks to cease their fraudulent behavior. Nevada has given up on this effort, as have officials in New York, Delaware, and Massachusetts. The banks have so far refused to accept any agreement until they get what they really want – a release “from all future liability for past mortgage practices and mortgage-backed securities they sold to investors”, according to some sources.
That the banks are pushing so hard for a blanket indemnity from all fraudulent behavior tells you that they must have a good deal of fraudulent behavior seeking absolution. They also feel in a strong enough position to demand it. Too bad these 46 attorneys general aren’t spending their time doing what Nevada has been doing – investigating the thousands of complaints many of them have received. Too bad there are so many of them that think the banks can be trusted to live up to their commitments once they get their blanket indemnity. Nevada has learned the hard way that Too Big to Fail also means Too Big to Manage, and Too Big to Obey the Law.
Bank of America, with its size and reach all across the United States, has proven itself to be a menace to the American economy. There are probably quite a few other banks its size which also pose a danger to the economic foundations of this country, which certainly rest in large part on respect for the law. Free market capitalism cannot survive if the major financial players disrespect, disregard and disobey the law.
President Obama should spend the hour it takes reading the state of Nevada’s complaint against Bank of America. It should be right up there with his national security briefing. If, after reading this, he still insists that Eric Holder remain in his job as US Attorney General, having done nothing for three years about these crimes, then Obama is owned by the bankers every bit as much as Congress. That would tell us that there are so far, at most, only four state attorneys general, plus a number of honest judges, bankruptcy trustees, and mediators, who are left standing up for the rule of law and the rights of the consumer.