The "Mortgagegate" Scandal: Congratulations America, You're Now in the Title-Insurance Business

[Editor's Note: On Wednesday, in the latest development in the "Mortgagegate" scandal, Fidelity National Financial Inc., the largest U.S. title-insurance firm, reversed course and said it wouldn't require an indemnity agreement before insuring individual foreclosed properties. Money Morning's Shah Gilani, a retired hedge-fund manager, warns that there's a deep game being played, and provides investors with detailed insights, and advice on the steps to take.]

U.S. taxpayers already own pieces of such problem-plagued companies as General Motors Corp., Chrysler LLC, American International Group Inc. (NYSE: AIG), Fannie Mae (OTC: FNMA) and Freddie Mac (OTC: FMCC). Now the increasingly problematic "Mortgagegate" saga could land American taxpayers in the trouble-ridden title-insurance business.

On Oct. 8, Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) indemnified Fidelity National Financial Inc. (NYSE: FNF) against any losses that Fidelity might sustain in litigation over title insurance it writes on foreclosed homes - the same homes, coincidentally, that Bank of America wants to sell to new buyers.

This arrangement amounts to U.S. taxpayers, who are the ultimate backers of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC), backstopping a giant, publicly held title-insurance company, which is backstopping a huge commercial bank, so that the bank can sell properties that it might not have proper title to.

It sounds like a Wall Street version of the "Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon," but it's no game - it's a daisy-chain scheme that once again sets American households up as the biggest losers.

As more and more of the dirty laundry of "Mortgagegate" gets aired, it's becoming increasingly obvious that the usual trio of victims - U.S. homeowners, investors and taxpayers - face risks that are far worse than we ever before imagined.

In fact, the fallout potential is so numbing and the actions that birthed it so scandalous that commentators have given the crisis such Watergate-esque titles as "Mortgagegate" (or, as some prefer, "Mortgage Gate"), "Foreclosuregate" and "Foreclosure Gate."

Here's how the dirty business of insuring clean titles is transforming Mortgagegate into a full-fledged inferno of political intrigue and financial controversy.

There are basically two types of title insurance:

  • An "owner's policy," which protects the property purchaser from claims against their rightful title to the insured property.
  • And a "lender's policy," which is purchased by mortgage lenders to protect their interest in a property as collateral for the loan they've made against it. The lender's policy, sometimes called a "loan policy," follows the assignment of the mortgage when it is sold from one lender to another.

Anytime a mortgage is made with the purchase of real estate, both the lender and buyer purchase title insurance.

With all the problems being uncovered surrounding Mortgagegate, one of the most prevalent issues has to do with titles to foreclosed properties. Foreclosures can only be pursued by the party named on the title, meaning that's the only person or company who is recognized as having the legal right to take back the property for non-payment of the mortgage.

When lenders sell the mortgages that they've made to homebuyers to other lenders, banks or mortgage-pool securitizers, they are supposed to record the "transfer" of the loan and essentially document the process in what becomes the recorded chain "chain of title."

However, the reality is that most lenders didn't bother to properly document and record changes to titles when they traded loans back and forth. So when the time came to start foreclosing on delinquent borrowers, the real trouble began: Lawyers, courts, investors, title insurers and in-arrears homeowners began to discover - en masse - that titles were often improperly recorded, were never re-recorded, or were missing altogether.

Investors, regulators, lenders and others are now beginning to see just how widespread these egregious oversights actually were.

When Risk Comes Home to Roost

What's important to understand now is that when foreclosed homes are sold to new buyers by the banks that took them back, buyers (and lenders, too) want title insurance to protect themselves against past owners, lenders, or the servicers and trustees of mortgage-backed securities pools challenging their free-and-clear ownership of the purchased property.

Imagine having a huge inventory of foreclosed homes that you can't sell because buyers can't get title insurance. After all, why would any title insurance company write a policy when there's a good chance it will later be involved in costly litigation with potentially severe damages from making good on the policies that it writes?

The secondary market for almost any foreclosed home would come to a screeching halt without title insurance. And we're not talking about a small market, either: Currently, about 2.5 million people have already lost their homes and there are estimates that as many as 5.7 million more face imminent foreclosure.

That brings us back to the BofA/Fidelity National deal.

Bank of American wanted Fidelity National Financial - America's largest title insurance company, with an estimated 50% of the market - to write title-insurance policies on the foreclosed homes that BofA wanted to sell. To get Fidelity to agree, Bank of America agreed to indemnify the title-insurance firm on any title-insurance policy written on the homes that the bank sold from its inventory of foreclosed properties.

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Needless to say, the indemnification deal was a complex one. It amounts to backstopping an entire insurance company's risk by subjecting U.S. taxpayers to liability if the title company is sued until it's insolvent and then Bank of America can't make good on the claims it's agreed to cover.

All the too-big-to-fail banks have proven once again that they run America for their own financial gain.

I say "all the too-big-to-fail banks" because the scheme doesn't work unless all the big banks indemnify all the title insurance companies. Why? Because the legality of what Bank of America is doing is highly questionable and the bank has to make sure it's done in an across-the-board fashion to eradicate any and all questions about this strategy.

Where We Go From Here

Try not to get sick, but here's what will likely happen next:

Because forcing a buyer to buy title insurance from any one company is illegal under the federal law known as the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, or "RESPA," Bank of America will have to indemnify other title insurance companies that offer insurance to buyers and lenders.

By law, buyers have to be offered a choice when they must purchase title insurance. So in order to make other title-insurance companies step up and write policies, those companies might have to be offered the same indemnification that Fidelity was granted.

Fidelity National Financial, after getting its indemnification from BofA, pressed other banks, servicers and sellers of foreclosed properties to follow suit - and required an indemnity agreement before insuring any individual foreclosed property.
For the time being, however, that hard-nosed play didn't fly. Other title-insurance companies didn't follow the industry leader's lead. They didn't immediately demand their own indemnification deals. And since Fidelity was afraid it would lose business to its competitors, Bloomberg News reported that on Wednesday Fidelity reversed course and withdrew its demand to be indemnified on any property it provides a title policy to.

But Fidelity National still kept its BofA indemnification agreement in its front pocket and has no intention of ever giving that up.

According to the memo issued by Fidelity and cited by Bloomberg, Fidelity "may make individual agreements with other lenders."

And why not? It's only going to take a few victories in court - or for any of the class-action lawsuits being filed to gain traction - before the rest of the title-insurance companies demand the exact type of indemnification that Fidelity got BofA to agree to.

If all the too-big-to-fail banks end up backstopping title insurance to this degree, the sins of Wall Street will once again reach all the way to Main Street: The banks will be in the business of underwriting insurance risk on the collateral they already own, and we - the U.S. taxpayers - will discover that we're the backstop of last resort in this latest chain of financial incompetence and deceit.

Once again, it's the banks that are being protected from the mess they made so they can go back to making profits to fill their corporate coffers and bolster their balance sheets so that they can finance American capitalism. In reality, all we're doing is financing a bunch of institutionalized Bernie Madoffs - none of whom will ever see the inside of a jail cell.

With every new Mortgagegate disclosure, the American public is getting an eyeful of how Wall Street and Washington have collaborated to play it again.

What's important now is for investors and homebuyers to be vigilant, to make sure that this mess is cleaned up, and to make sure reforms are enacted to keep this from happening again.

Otherwise, sometime down the road, we taxpayers will wake up and discover that we're again on the hook for billions, thanks to another scheme that Wall Street's serial scammers have pulled off. And we will discover that we're in yet another new "business" - perhaps something even more inappropriate than title insurance.

Let's do all we can to keep that nightmare from coming true.

Actions to Take: In a recent e-mail alert to subscribers of his Capital Wave Forecast advisory service, Gilani detailed his "Mortgagegate" concerns, and concluded by recommending that readers maintain tight stop-loss orders on their investment positions.
That's a stance that Gilani continues to advocate. By using stop-losses, investors will be able to stay in the market, and reap any upside - while also protecting themselves against the fallout should this controversy turn into a full-blown crisis. We like this analysis and strategy so much that we've now presented it twice here in Money Morning, wanting to make sure that our readers all benefit from the wisdom of this retired hedge-fund manager.

Says Gilani: "Banks still own most of their toxic assets. They're just buried (with the consent of the U.S. Federal Reserve and Treasury) waiting for an economic recovery and low rates to let borrowers re-finance and pay them back. Speculators, assuming low rates will generate economic growth have leveraged themselves up buying everything in sight, including mortgage-backed securities for their high yields.

Because of moratoriums put in place, if homes can't be foreclosed on until this mess is straightened out, inventories will build up, and prices could crash again later when that inventory hits the market. If homeowners who bought foreclosed homes find that the validity of the titles they now hold are challenged, lawsuits will fly. People who were foreclosed could sue to get their homes back. Title insurance companies that protect buyers of their insurance policies from title lawsuits could never make good on their policies, and would go belly-up. Governments could (and will) sue banks for potentially hundreds of billions of dollars of recording fees they were cheated out of. Criminal fines could add hundreds of billions of dollars more to their tabs.

What happens if there's widespread panic that this new round of mortgage-related stress won't be fixed quickly?

Markets could tank as leveraged players see their holdings drop and get margin calls. All the speculative, leveraged momentum trades based on a slow- but- upward recovery (especially hoped for in housing) could get upended as speculators rush for the doors.

Is this going to happen?

I certainly hope not. But it is a real, very real, possibility.

If the U.S. Federal Reserve is worried, I'm worried. And you should be, too.

If I'm wrong, great. Markets should continue their recent uptrends. But my job, first and foremost, is to protect you from devastating capital losses.

Here's hoping that I'm wrong."

[Editor's Note: Shah Gilani, a retired hedge-fund manager and renowned financial-crisis expert, walks the walk. In a recent Money Morning exposé, Gilani warned that high-frequency traders (HFT) were artificially pumping up market-volume numbers, meaning stocks were extremely susceptible to a downdraft.

When that downdraft came, Gilani was ready - and so were subscribers to his new advisory service: The Capital Wave Forecast. The next morning, because of that market move, investors were up 186% on a short-term euro play, and more than 300% on a call-option play on the VIX volatility index.

Gilani shows investors the monster "capital waves" now forming, and carefully demonstrates how to profit from every one.

But he doesn't stop there. He's also the consummate risk manager. As the article above demonstrates, Gilani also makes sure to highlight the market pitfalls that can ruin years of careful investing and saving.

Take a moment to check out Gilani's capital-wave-investing strategy - and the profit opportunities that he's watching as a result. And take a look at some of his most-recent essays, which are available free of charge. Those essays can be accessed by clicking here.]

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About the Author

Shah Gilani boasts a financial pedigree unlike any other. He ran his first hedge fund in 1982 from his seat on the floor of the Chicago Board of Options Exchange. When options on the Standard & Poor's 100 began trading on March 11, 1983, Shah worked in "the pit" as a market maker.

The work he did laid the foundation for what would later become the VIX - to this day one of the most widely used indicators worldwide. After leaving Chicago to run the futures and options division of the British banking giant Lloyd's TSB, Shah moved up to Roosevelt & Cross Inc., an old-line New York boutique firm. There he originated and ran a packaged fixed-income trading desk, and established that company's "listed" and OTC trading desks.

Shah founded a second hedge fund in 1999, which he ran until 2003.

Shah's vast network of contacts includes the biggest players on Wall Street and in international finance. These contacts give him the real story - when others only get what the investment banks want them to see.

Today, as editor of Hyperdrive Portfolio, Shah presents his legion of subscribers with massive profit opportunities that result from paradigm shifts in the way we work, play, and live.

Shah is a frequent guest on CNBC, Forbes, and MarketWatch, and you can catch him every week on Fox Business's Varney & Co.

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