The "Man" That Got Away & Nothing Has Changed!
AN IMPORTANT MOVIE:
Subprime prosecutors hunt small game.
Last week in Cleveland, nine former employees of a former subprime lender named Argent Mortgage Co. were indicted for their roles in making nearly $13 million of fraudulent residential mortgage loans. The Cuyahoga County Mortgage Fraud Task Force, which brought the charges (it operates under authority from the Ohio attorney general) alleged, among other things, that managers at Argent coached brokers on how to falsify loan documents—say, by lying about the borrower's income—so that the borrower would appear to meet the company's standards. Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Bill Mason said that this was the first time in Ohio, and one of the few instances nationwide, that a mortgage fraud investigation led to criminal charges against the employees of a subprime lender. (Other cases have involved independent operators.)
In a way, this is great news: At least some of those who
are to blame for the crime spree that was subprime lending are paying
the price. But it's also an example of what's wrong with the fallout
from the financial crisis. Those who are paying the price are the
smallest of the small fry, while those who benefitted the most remain
untouched. And in the case of Argent, it'll stay that way.
You may not have heard of Argent, and there's a reason for
that. Argent's founder was a man named Roland Arnall, and Roland Arnall
always stayed in the shadows. But he was the father of subprime
lending. Within the industry, Argent was very well-known indeed.
Back in the late 1980s, Arnall founded a thrift called Long
Beach Mortgage, which was at the vanguard of making mortgages to people
with less than pristine credit. By the end of the 1990s, Long Beach had
been sold to Washington Mutual, and many of the people who worked there
had gone on to help build other major players on the subprime lending
scene, such as New Century. After the sale of Long Beach, Arnall founded
another lender called Ameriquest, which by 2004 was the nation's
largest subprime lender. ("Proud sponsor of the American dream" was the
company's tag line.) Argent was a lesser-known division of Arnall's
empire.
Unlike Ameriquest, whose loan officers made mortgages directly, Argent was a so-called "wholesale" lender, meaning that it bought loans from mortgage brokers. (By 2001, 50 percent of mortgages were being made through independent brokers, who sold to wholesalers like Argent.) But Arnall's name was never on the door of any of his companies, and none of them sold shares to the public. You never read about Roland Arnall in a glossy magazine; he was very private.
http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2011/06/the_man_that_got_away.single.html
'The Big Short' Blows Away Bogus Argument That Poor People Caused The Financial Crisis
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/the-big-short-movie_565c795fe4b072e9d1c27163
Unlike Ameriquest, whose loan officers made mortgages directly, Argent was a so-called "wholesale" lender, meaning that it bought loans from mortgage brokers. (By 2001, 50 percent of mortgages were being made through independent brokers, who sold to wholesalers like Argent.) But Arnall's name was never on the door of any of his companies, and none of them sold shares to the public. You never read about Roland Arnall in a glossy magazine; he was very private.
Early on, Argent began pushing subprime loans in Cleveland. Indeed, a lawsuit
filed by the city of Cleveland in 2008 against a number of subprime
lenders and Wall Street firms alleged that Argent accounted for more
than one-quarter of all the subprime loans made in Cleveland from 2002
to 2006. (The lawsuit was later dismissed.)
"When Argent showed up, they immediately jumped out because of the
volume of their activity," Tom Bier, a housing expert at Cleveland State
University, who has been analyzing county records for 25 years, told
me. "They went after the weakest fish." According to Bier's analysis,
by April 2007, 25 percent of the loans that Argent made in Cleveland had
resulted in foreclosures. So it was that Cleveland, where home prices
never rose high enough to mask the problems with the mortgages, became a
bellwether of the problems to come.
Within the industry, Arnall's companies developed a reputation for
the hard sell, and for making any loan at any price. As in most of the
industry, everyone was compensated based on loan volume, so in the
branches, all that mattered was selling as many loans as possible, by
any means necessary.
"Push, push, push," one former loan officer told me. Managers were brutal to those who weren't closing loans, and it was an open secret that there were ways to get around the company's supposed controls.
"Push, push, push," one former loan officer told me. Managers were brutal to those who weren't closing loans, and it was an open secret that there were ways to get around the company's supposed controls.
The business made Roland Arnall a very wealthy man. In 2002, Roland
and his second wife, Dawn, bought Engelbert Humperdinck's $30 million,
10-acre compound in Holmby Hills, Calif. Two years later, they bought
the second-most-expensive home in America, a 650-acre ranch in Aspen,
Colo., with a 15,000 square-foot house that had been owned by Peter
Guber, for which Arnall paid $46 million. By 2004, Roland Arnall made
the Forbes 400 list with a net worth of $2 billion; in 2005, he was No. 73, with a net worth of $3 billion.
In the summer of 2004, a group of state attorneys general began
investigating Ameriquest. (The AGs had limited power over Argent because
it didn't make its loans directly to consumers.) On Jan. 23, 2006, the
AGs announced that Ameriquest had agreed to pay $325 million to settle
allegations from 49 states that it had engaged in extensive consumer
abuse. (Ameriquest didn't do business in Virginia because it requires
extensive financial disclosure by the main shareholder of any company
doing business there, something Arnall refused to provide.) But neither
the news of the investigation nor a scathing expose of Ameriquest that ran in the Los Angeles Times in early 2005 had deterred President George W. Bush from nominating Arnall, who along with Dawn had raised more than $12 million for GOP causes and candidates between 2004 and 2008, according to the Times,
to be the ambassador to the Netherlands. A month after the settlement
was announced, Arnall was confirmed. Press reports at the time said that
the payment "cleared the way" for Arnall's confirmation.
In 2007, what was left of Arnall's companies was sold to Citigroup. The following spring, Arnall died abruptly:
He had been suffering from esophageal cancer that had metastasized.
Later that year, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency put
together a document called "Worst Ten in the Worst Ten."
It listed the 10 worst lenders in the 10 metropolitan areas with the
highest rates of foreclosure. (The survey was based on the level of
foreclosures for subprime and Alt A loans
originated from 2005 to 2007.) Argent made the top 10 in all 10 cities
and was No. 1 in Cleveland and Detroit. Long Beach Mortgage, which also
featured prominently on the list, played a big role in the demise of
Washington Mutual. Arnall's death at 68, while untimely and a terrible
blow to those who loved him, enabled him to complete his life with his
reputation relatively unscratched.
So here we are in 2011. Roland Arnall is, of course, beyond the reach
of the law. While the Cuyahoga County Mortgage Fraud Task Force wants
to follow the old prosecutor's mandate of "start at the bottom"—get the
junior people to rat out more senior people, and so on— it's not clear
that they'll be able to reach any higher into Argent. Indeed, the
indictment says that fraud was committed "without the knowledge of
Argent." After all, prosecutors can't say that Argent encouraged the
behavior without also going after someone more senior at Argent.
And in truth, it's unlikely that anyone senior at Argent specifically encouraged the individual acts of fraud. Rather, the executives at Arnall's companies created a culture in which the junior people were rewarded for getting the loans made by any means possible while everyone else looked the other way. And there's no statute under which executives can be prosecuted for creating a culture in which criminality is encouraged. Even had Arnall lived, prosecutors probably would have had a hard time making a legal case against him.
And in truth, it's unlikely that anyone senior at Argent specifically encouraged the individual acts of fraud. Rather, the executives at Arnall's companies created a culture in which the junior people were rewarded for getting the loans made by any means possible while everyone else looked the other way. And there's no statute under which executives can be prosecuted for creating a culture in which criminality is encouraged. Even had Arnall lived, prosecutors probably would have had a hard time making a legal case against him.
Argent and Arnall may be an extreme version of what's happened in the
wake of the crisis, but similar scenarios have been played out
everywhere. A young salesman at Goldman Sachs, Fabrice Tourre, is the
only individual who is facing charges from Goldman's notorious Abacus transaction. Last week, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced
a settlement with JPMorgan over the sale of securities tied to the
housing market. A man named Edward Steffelin, who headed the team at
the outside firm that managed the portfolio of securities, was also
charged. Is it really Tourre and Steffelin alone who created the
structure of these transactions and the culture in which such deals were
routinely done, and who benefitted the most from it? Give me a break!
http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2011/06/the_man_that_got_away.single.html
'The Big Short' Blows Away Bogus Argument That Poor People Caused The Financial Crisis
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/the-big-short-movie_565c795fe4b072e9d1c27163