|
|
||||||||||||||||||
Sub-Prime Securities Litigation in the USAConsultant advising Americans in german law - Streifler & Kollegen BerlinDiesen Artikel können Sie hier auf deutsch lesen.
The subprime mortgage industry crisis is not solely an economic phenomenon but a legal one as well. It is widely believed in the United States that the substantial decrease in the value of asset-backed securities faced by investment banks and other purchasers that held previously rated investment-grade CDOs with subprime exposure, as well as junior or mezzanine tranches of MBS, will generate substantial levels of litigation. There are a number of different parties adversely affected by the losses created by the decline in the value of subprime mortgages that may bring legal claims in the USA seeking to recover some of these loses. This memo looks at the two basic categories of potential plaintiffs: CDO purchases and MBS purchasers. I. Introduction A. Loan originators Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) are debt obligations whose cash flows are backed by the principal and interest payments of pools of mortgage loans, most commonly on residential property. Individuals with strong credit qualify for traditional mortgages, whereas those with weak credit histories quality for subprime loans. Subprime mortgages are an important part of the overall mortgage market, and the share of subprime mortgages in total mortgage originations have risen from 8.6% ($190 billion) in 2001 to 20,0% ($600 billion) in 2005. Most subprime loans are made by mortgage banks and mortgage brokers, rather than by commercial banks or other depository institutions. Mortgage banks originate subprime residential mortgage loans and then sell them to investment banks, whereas mortgages brokers originate subprime residential mortgage loans on behalf of investment banks. Independent mortgaes companies sell loans for securitization to other financial service firms. Banks and thrifts, which are more highly regulated than mortgage banks and mortgage brokers, deal primarily in lower-priced prime mortgages, seliing to government sponsored enterprises such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that securitize conventional conforming loans. B. Issuers MBS sponsors or originators purchase the mortgage loans from loan originators, assemble them into asset pools, and structure them into mortgage-backed securities. After a large enough portfolio of mortgages is pooled, it is sold to a special purpose vehicle (SPV), which is an issuer of the MBS and formed for the specific purpose of funding the loans. The SPV issues securities to fund the purchase of the loans. Securities are generally split into tranches differentiated by maturity and credit risk. Tranches are categorized as either senior, mezzanine or subordinated/equity, according to their degree of credit risk. If there are defaults or the mortgages otherwise underperform, scheduled payments to senior tranches take priority over those of mezzanine tranches, and scheduled payments to mezzanine tranches take priority over those of subordinated/equity tranches. The SPV has a trustee whose primary role is to hold all the loan documents and distribute payments received from the loan servicer to the bondholders. Although trustees are typically given broad authority with respect to certain aspects of loans under Pooling and Servicing Agreements, they may delegate authority to servicers. Loans that do not conform to MBS requirements are often packaged into CDOs. Like an MBS, a CDO has a sponsoring organization, such as an investment bank, that establishes an SPV that issues securities, typically multiple tranches differentiated by maturity and credit risk, to invest in financial assets. The party that is entrusted with managing the CDO’s assets is the “collateral manager”. CDOs are often designed to meet specific investor needs. Investors can specify the desired maturity and credit risk characteristics of securities, which results in more highly-tailored, but less liquid securities than might overwise be available. The information exchange and time necessary to confer with investors in many instances precludes them from being publicly-tradable on registered exchanges or markets. Investors must therefore rely on dealers to execute trades. C. Collateral appraisers MBS and CDO sponsors typically hire firms, known as collateral appriasers or “due-diligence firms,” to review and verify the quality of loans sold to SPVs. These reviews evaluate the credit and collateral risks of the loans in the pool and verify the information provided by loan originators to MBS sponsors. Reviews include verifying a borrower’s identiy, place of residence, and employment status. They typically review note, mortgage riders, title, and mortgage insurance details and may include a property appraisal, as well as a review of the loan originators’ property and closing procedures. Collateral appraisers in 2007 included Clayton Holdings, First American, LandAmerica Financial Group, and Stewart Information Services Corporation. D. Investors Hedge funds, life insurers, pension funds, mutual funds, and wealthy individuals by MBS and CDOs. In certain instances, institutional bond buyers are subject ot legal limitations that permit them only to buy investment-grade or AAA-rated debt. For ERISA fiduciaries, who must “use care, skill, prudence, and diligence” in the course of investment plan assets, purchasing unrated MBS and CDO securities runs the legal risk that those investments will be deemed to be imprudent. The advent of investment grade MBS and CDOs dramatically changed the investment opportunities of many pension funds. Before investment grade MBS and CDOs, these institutions were largely precluded from investing in real estate. Investment grade MBS and CDOs allowed them to have real estate exposure in their portfolios while limiting credit risk. II. Subprime mortage litigation in the United States The residential subprime mortgage industry crisis is one of the foremost economic issues facing the world today. With US housing prices high and interest rates low through 2006, millions of American households with weak credit histories purchased homes or refinanced existing homes, using adjustable rate mortage loans designed for high-risk borrowers known as subprime residential mortgage loans. Investment banks securitized those loans into residential mortgage backed securities (RMBS) and collateralized debt obligations (CBOs), selling risk-differentiated tranches to investors. With the rise of interest rates and the decline in housing prices in 2007-2008, more than two million homeowners have faced or are facing interest-rate resets on loans that will increase their mortgage payment by as much as 30 percent. Some cannot or will not be able to pay their higher mortgage obligations and will default. The effect of these defaults and foreclosures are being felt by investors in the RMBS and CDO markets, loan originators, credit appraisers, underwriters, bond rating agencies, bond insurers, and others. An example of the first type of subprime litigation would be litigation brought against and by operating companies that invested corporate cash in subprime mortgages as investments and suffered substantial losses as a result. The second category of non-class litigation includes litigation brought by the investment banks against mortgage originators (for example, a subsidiary of Deutsche Bank has already filed 15 lawsuits against mortgage originators for violation of repurchase agreements); registered Mortgage Backed Securities purchasers bringing claims under the 1933 Securities Act against underwriters for misleading statements in the offering process; and disputes between different Collateralized Debt Obligation tranche holders as to how to distribute assets of liquidating Collateralized Debt Obligations. A. Claims by Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO) purchasers At least four likely candidates for misleading disclosures in the registration statement or offering communications for registered MBS present themselves, all relating in some way to the underwriting quality of the underlying mortgages themselves: i. outright fraud with respect to the documentation surrounding the mortgage origination rendering statements in the offering process false; ii. lack of adequate disclosure of underwriting standards for the underlying mortgages; iii. the extent to which exceptions were made to whatever the underwriting standards were; and iv. the pricing of the various MBS tranches. Plaintiffs may be able to rely upon information that is being uncovered by the on-going investigations of the New York and Connecticut Attorney Generals, as well as by the SEC in terms of what was actually known by the due-diligence firms concerning mortgage underwriting quality and the extent to which that information was shared with the investment banks. Streifler & Kollegen |
![]()
| |||||||||||||||||