WASHINGTON — A landmark $25 billion settlement with the nation’s top mortgage lenders was hailed by government officials Thursday as long-overdue relief for victims of foreclosure abuses. But consumer advocates countered that far too few people will benefit.
The deal will reduce loans for only a fraction of those Americans who owe more than their homes are worth. It will also send checks to others who were improperly foreclosed upon. But the amounts are modest.
Maine officials say the state will get $21 million under a settlement between 49 states and the five largest mortgage lenders over foreclosure abuses.
Maine Attorney General William Schneider said Thursday the settlement is “the best first step to get relief directly to eligible Maine borrowers who were harmed.” The mortgage lenders will have three years to fulfill the terms.
Of Maine’s share, Schneider said, $7 million will go to borrowers in default and $1.9 million is set aside for those who lost their homes. Another $4.5 million represents refinancing costs for borrowers who are “underwater,” meaning they owe more than their house is worth.
The remainder, $8.2 million, goes to foreclosure prevention programs, legal assistance to homeowners and the Maine general fund.
It’s unclear how much the overall deal will help struggling homeowners keep their homes or benefit those who have already lost theirs.
About 11 million households are underwater, meaning they owe more than their homes are worth. The settlement would help 1 million of them.
“The total number of dollars is still small compared to the value of the mortgages that are underwater,” said Richard Green, director of the University of Southern California’s Lusk Center for Real Estate.
Federal and state officials announced that 49 states joined the settlement with five of the nation’s biggest lenders. Oklahoma struck a separate deal with the five banks. Government officials are still negotiating with 14 other lenders to join.
The bulk of the money will go to California and Florida, two of the states hardest hit by the housing crisis and the ones with the most underwater homeowners. The two states stand to receive roughly 75 percent of the settlement funds.
Of the five major lenders, Bank of America will pay the most to borrowers: nearly $8.6 billion. Wells Fargo will pay about $4.3 billion, JPMorgan Chase roughly $4.2 billion, Citigroup about $1. 8 billion and Ally Financial $200 million. The banks will also pay state and federal governments about $5.5 billion.
The settlement ends a painful chapter of the financial crisis, when home values sank and millions edged toward foreclosure. Many companies processed foreclosures without verifying documents. Some employees signed papers they hadn’t read or used fake signatures to speed foreclosures — an action known as robo-signing.
President Barack Obama praised the settlement, saying it will “speed relief to the hardest-hit homeowners, end some of the most abusive practices of the mortgage industry and begin to turn the page on an era of recklessness that has left so much damage in its wake.”
The deal requires the banks to reduce loans for about 1 million households that are at risk of foreclosure. The lenders will also send $2,000 each to about 750,000 Americans who were improperly foreclosed upon from 2008 through 2011. The banks will have three years to fulfill terms of the deal.
The states have agreed not to pursue civil charges over the abuses covered by the settlement. Homeowners can still sue lenders on their own, and federal and state authorities can still pursue criminal charges.
The deal, reached after 16 months of contentious negotiations, is subject to approval by a federal judge. It’s the biggest settlement involving a single industry since the $206 billion multistate tobacco deal in 1998.
But for the many people who lost their homes to foreclosure in the past two years, some of them improperly, a check for $2,000 is small consolation.
“Two thousand dollars won’t cover my moving costs,” said Brian Duncan, who was evicted from his Tempe, Ariz., home last April.
Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, who led the 50-state talks, said the $2,000 checks represent the homeowners’ best hope of being reimbursed for any amount. They would have had trouble winning settlements in court because of the time-consuming complexity of litigation, Miller said.
Mike Heid, president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, said the agreement “represents a very important step toward restoring confidence in mortgage servicing and stability in the housing market.”
Mark Vitner, a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities, said the settlement may help the housing market in the long run. That’s because it lets banks proceed with millions of foreclosures that have been stalled. Many lenders had refrained from foreclosing on homes as they awaited the settlement.
“We’ve got a lot of issues to work our way through in the housing market,” Vitner said. “What this settlement does is allow that process to get started.”
For the banks, the settlement comes mainly as a relief. If each state had sued the lenders and won, the total settlements could have run into the hundreds of billions. And all the lenders have set aside adequate reserves.
“It’s really a wash,” said Paul Miller, bank analyst at FBR Capital Markets. “A billion dollars is nothing for these large trillion-dollar banks.”
The bulk of the settlement will go toward reducing underwater mortgages and refinancing some of them. But the banks had realized they weren’t going to collect the loans and had already written down their value, Miller noted.
The deal requires banks to make foreclosure their last resort. And they can’t foreclose on a homeowner who is being considered for a loan modification.
Still, the federal government has a dubious track record of enforcing such rules. The Obama administration’s signature foreclosure-prevention program has failed to help more than half of those who have applied to have their mortgage payments lowered permanently. Many have complained that the program is a bureaucratic nightmare.
Critics also note that the settlement will apply only to privately held mortgages and not to those owned by mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Banks own about half of all U.S. mortgages, or roughly 30 million loans. Fannie and Freddie own the other half.
The deal is “another sad example of Wall Street not being held accountable for fraud, perjury and crimes that created the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression,” said Dennis Kelleher, CEO of Better Markets, a group that advocates stricter financial regulation. “The math does not add up in a massive ‘robo-signing’ scandal that is nothing more than systemic criminal conduct.”
The settlement also ends a separate investigation into Bank of America and Countrywide for inflating appraisals of loans from 2003 through most of 2009. Bank of America acquired Countrywide in 2008.
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Associated Press Writers Michael Virtanen in Albany, N.Y., Pallavi Gogoi in New York and Ben Feller, Christopher S. Rugaber and Marcy Gordon in Washington contributed to this report.



I wonder where that money will disappear to ?
We will never see this money mentioned again. The last three words of the(AP) article says it all.
What they meant to say is that the .2 million will go to foreclosure prevention programs, legal assistance to homeowners and the remaining $8 million will get lost in the Maine general fund.
That will be needed to help pay the 1.2 million pension to the former Turnpike director who does not even have to pay back what he stole.
Well Maine doesn’t have a law that takes away a public employees pension when they have been convicted of a felony. Even Massachusetts has a law to revoke public pensions when a person is convicted of a felony.
I do recall either reading or hearing a news report that the majority of his pension will be spent in paying back the Turnpike Authority.
I believe that he has to pay back only $155,000 and that will come out of his pension …………….
Drop in the bucket- sounds like.
Who oversaw this $21M portion of the $25Billion, 49 state settlement, on behalf of the State of Maine and where are those figures?
The Maine General Fund, who would have thunk up that. A sad day for Maine home owners that are caught up in this debacle. There should not be any settlement at all. These sleazy mortgage lenders should be tarred and feathered. And then pay every penny back that was stolen. Such a shame. The Maine General Fund. I find that even more shameful. Dam.
Great!, use the general fund money to offset the tax cuts, which inturn, will offset the DHHS crap!
We all own more than what our homes are worth. Were do I sign up…….Oh stupid me.. I made MY payments and paid attention to the contracts I signed……I guess I won’t qualify…….
Oh and you kept your job when the housing bubble took down wall street. Please do not blame the poor. Too many of us are six paychecks away from where they are at.
I didn’t blame the poor. People need to take responsiable for what’s under their control and plan ahead as much as possible. Instead of a 6 month safety net, I planned for a 3 year one….And Oh
Obama cash for the people who went in over their heads and bought more than they could afford, enabled by banks who got their mortgages covered by the Feds at Fannie and Freddie.
America=stuck on stupid and not willing to make the stupid pay.
The Maine General Fund, just what we need more money to the “entitlement” programs…
Wow!!! This is crazy the banks have to pay becasue the entitled bought more house then they could afford. Now hard working responsible borrowers will have to make up for these costs with higher fees and rates. Once again the responsible ones get to bail out the entitled ones. Its time we become accountable for our own actions noboby held a gun to your head making you sign the mortgage.
Poor Bankers!
Man have you been brainwashed!
A white collar criminal does not have to hold a gun to your head. The houses cost more than they could afford because of criminal actions. These criminal actions are being settled through this 25 billion settlement. Just a drop in the bucket of the real cost to our economy and the people who try to keep up with these criminals
Perhaps, ‘…because of deceptive practices…’ would be a more apt description. If this were being considered a colossal series of felonies, a lot more people should/would be in jail.
We can only dream.
So let me get this straight. If you invested in a house that ended up becoming worth less than you paid for it, and you borrowed probably the max about, you are going to get a bailout. But in my case, I didn’t overpay for my home because I bought a sensible house, didn’t borrow through the teeth, and instead invested my money which has also depreciated, I get nothing for my stock loss… Nope, I just have to pay more to the banks to help them recover the cost they are paying these folks that bought their $300K homes that were really only worth $180…
YUP, That pretty much sums it up. I know some of those “poor” people. Just got done a bankrupty and within a month financed a $45,000 car and took a ten day cruise and still has the house that is not worth what they paid for it. Just a matter of time before they default again, and those of us who pay our bills will pay for it through higher fees and interest.
Just think about how many houses are going to be sold now. I doubt the banks are going to loan much money for a while.
Right. Our hearts just bleed for the mortgage industry.
Where do you suppose the term ‘predatory lending’ originated?
Even Alan Greenspan had to admit the one thing he never ‘banked’ on, after 40 years, was the banks not regulating themselves!
Dont recall any bank puting guns to anyone’s head to take a loan, get a clue!
Most banks were forced to write these loans under penalty of CRA(Community Reinevestment Act). The loans were insured by Fannie and Freddie. Barney Franks boy friend was a big wig at Freddie Mac and made millions in bonuses packing these loan guarantees from banks and selling them to investors on Wall Street.
Basically this was a government Cluster foisted on the banks by liberals try to buy votes, simple as that! They want minorities and the poor to have the same home ownership rate as middle income avg Joe, even though the people couldnt afford it.
I guess you have no Idea about some of the deceptive practices Some of these bank do on refinace scams. You can make your payment every month and they can start foreclosure It you do not pay them like $20k extra in interest. because your payment money was held in a suspense account by the bank for over a year. With out any notice. They commit so much fraud and deception and are allowed to get away with it. Now i am not saying everyone is in that boat some just made bad choices and should loose they house.
I hope people don’t get their hopes up to much, this could very well be like a check I just received from a class action settlement …………………………………. $.06
I just got a $8.21 settlement. I bought 2 lattes and a muffin and still had to pay out of pocket!
Maine homeowners were the injured parties, not the State. The sleezy practices of the lenders were against indiviuals, not the State. Those lenders have the homeowners names and this money is theirs, not the State’s. If one cent goes to the general fund, it is wrong. The money does not in anyway belong to the State. Hope an injured party sues the State if they receive one cent less than the general fund gets.
This is laughable. Do you know why Im not underwater or foreclosed on? because I educated myself, read the fine print and didnt take the word of some slick talker trying to hook me up with a bad deal. Here we go bailing out those who figured that in the end, we WOULD bail them out…as always.
Now all those who couldn’t afford a home loan to begin
with yet went and got one because the govt gave the banks
carte blanche to give these loans to anyone, will not try to
take any of this money right? Another govt fiasco to garner
votes. How about rescuing those of us who pay each month
and didn’t think it was very wise to live above our means and
didn’t get any help from anyone.
So Maine’s share of the 25 billion is less than a tenth of a percent (.084%). Great!
Uh huh, now say to the “annointed one”, Please Sir may I have some more?
So let me get this straight.
The banks put a gun to peoples heads to take a loan, and hence these dead beats who didnt honor their comittments will now get money?
I got news for you, the banks will simply raise fees on everything so people who have bank accounts will now either get even lower interest rates on accounts or more fees etc
This is typical Obama, reward irresponsible people and punish everyone else.
BTW, it was the Community Reinvestment Act that forced banks to give away these garbage loans to dead beat speculators who grabbed the money and ran with no intention of paying their loans back. Barneys pals at Fannie and Freddie made a killing back these bogus loans. Is anyone at these agencies going to jail?
Guess these same people will get another check from President Foodstamp!
So much for playing by the rules……….The good guys do finish last….Who helps me?
These programs like Obamas Make homes more affordable Bilked home owners out of millions the banks only have to pay a small fraction back. Then the state wants thier share of the peoples money that were screwed. What about the people screwed out of 1000s . Under on program it you made your payments even month the money was put into a suspence account. Not toward your payment the they charge you 1000s extra in interest just to keep your house even though you made the payment every month. WHO is more corrupt the banks or the state?
Now that is a really hard question considering the ones your comparing ……………………………………………………………………………. I’m thinking …………………………………………………………. hummmmmmmmm …………………….. I guess they both will have too share the award for corruption equally.
No statute of limitation on fraud. At least that’s what I’ve been told. Look into it if you have been defrauded.
Taken from the posting guidelines.. “Comments should be your own work, not copied and pasted from elsewhere, though brief quoted passages to make your point are fine. And please don’t use all capital letters. There’s no need to shout.” ARE YOU KIDDING ME BDN?? Caps are text.. they do not make sound.. if this was true then, my text reader would get louder. I think you should rewrite your guidelines in a professional manner. If you don’t want sarcastic comments, then don’t write sarcastic guidelines.
how about a couple who a have jobs who got sick for a couple years got behind can barely hang on.. can not get a loan due to poor credit because inabiltyto pay co-pays, and oil prices, and yes some lack of planning is at fault but no help is there that i can find .. i feel maybe quit work sign up for state aid,welfare heat assistance, food stamps, and live like a king or a polition
Don’t forget a cellphone!
can we say money-SLAVERY ??? … yet ?
Welcome to the fractional-reserve banking slavery FRAUD.
Pardon me, for being a bit outlandish this evening …
“If the people only understood the rank injustice of our money and banking system, there would be a revolution before morning.” ~ Andrew, 1829
can we tell the TRUTH …. YET ???
This is the corporate pirates (and their political PUPPET-MONKEYS) running the country, formerly known as “America” … can anyone consider the possibility of, perhaps, waking up, YET?
DUH
I’m a little confused. I thought this money was to be used to aid the home owners,so why is a portion of the 8.2 million going into the general fund, which by the way the didn’t mention how much goes to the general fund. Why,do they have a mortgage on the capital that they havent told us about lol.
How about a marriage dispute, where the one occupying the home is refusing to pay the other parties mortgage, while the owner is not allowed inside, nor the right to evict the occupier until divorce orders change or are complete?
Will the case go through in time, before foreclosure?
And Warren Buffett’s share is so much more that he could pay for most mortgages and still live comfortably. Talk about inside trading–