Nationwide Federal/State Robosigning Settlement Not Yet Final?
- More than a day after the announcement of a mammoth national mortgage servicing settlement, the actual terms of the deal still aren't public. The website created for the national settlement lists the document as "coming soon."
- That's because a fully authorized, legally binding deal has not been inked yet. The implication of this is hard to say. Spokespersons for both the Iowa attorney general's office and the Department of Justice both told American Banker that the actual settlement will not be made public until it is submitted to a court.
- A representative for the North Carolina attorney general downplayed the significance of the document's non-final status, saying that the terms were already fixed. "Once the documents are finalized, they'll be posted to nationalmortgagesettlement.com," the representative said in an email to American Banker.
- Other sources who spoke with American Banker raised doubts that everything is yet in place.
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- Some who talked to American Banker said that the political pressure to announce the settlement drove the timing, in effect putting the press release cart in front of the settlement horse.
- Whatever the reason for the document's continued non-appearance, the lack of a public final settlement is already the cause for disgruntlement among those who closely follow the banking industry. Quite simply, the actual terms of a settlement matter.
- "The devil's in the details," says Ron Glancz, chairman of law firm Venable LLP's Financial Services Group. "Until you see the document you're never quite sure what your rights are."
For more, see Missing Settlement Document Raises Doubts on $25B Deal.
See also, Daily Finance: Why the Foreclosure Mess Settlement Proposal Can't Fix the Damage:
- [I]t can't go far enough, because it can't address one of the most confounding problems the banks have created: the millions of properties nationwide that now have "clouded" titles. To put it plainly: Because of these bad titles, property owners can't prove they own the properties they think they bought, and banks can't prove the had the right to sell them.
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