Wells Fargo Agrees To Pay $2.09 BIllion Penalty For Mortgage Loan Abuses

The Justice Department announced that embattled Wells Fargo, which has seen its name feature in virtually every prominent banking scandal in the past year, will pay a civil penalty of $2.09 billion under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) based on the bank’s alleged origination and sale of residential mortgage loans that it knew contained misstated income information and did not meet the quality that Wells Fargo represented.

According to the DOJ, investors, including federally insured financial institutions, suffered billions of dollars in losses from investing in residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) containing loans originated by Wells Fargo.         

“Abuses in the mortgage-backed securities industry led to a financial crisis that devastated millions of Americans,” said Acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California, Alex G. Tse. “Today’s agreement holds Wells Fargo responsible for originating and selling tens of thousands of loans that were packaged into securities and subsequently defaulted. Our office is steadfast in pursuing those who engage in wrongful conduct that hurts the public.”

“This settlement holds Wells Fargo accountable for actions that contributed to the financial crisis,” said Acting Associate Attorney General Jesse Panuccio. “It sends a strong message that the Department is committed to protecting the nation’s economy and financial markets against fraud.” 

The United States alleged that, despite its knowledge that a substantial portion of its stated income loans contained misstated income, Wells Fargo failed to disclose this information, and instead reported to investors false debt-to-income ratios in connection with the loans it sold.

Wells Fargo also allegedly heralded its fraud controls while failing to disclose the income discrepancies its controls had identified. The United States further alleged that Wells Fargo took steps to insulate itself from the risks of its stated income loans, by screening out many of these loans from its own loan portfolio held for investment and by limiting its liability to third parties for the accuracy of its stated income loans.

Wells Fargo sold at least 73,539 stated income loans that were included in RMBS between 2005 to 2007, and nearly half of those loans have defaulted, resulting in billions of dollars in losses to investors.  

Wells Fargo stock dipped on the news, and is now back to unchanged on the day.

 

 

via RSS https://ift.tt/2O4U0nd Tyler Durden

Explaining The High Cost Of US Health Care: No Skin In The Game

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk,

Costs are expensive because there is almost no skin in the game. Graft has taken over.

The Wall Street Journal has an interesting article on healthcare: Why Americans Spend So Much on Health Care—In 12 Charts.

The U.S. spends more per capita on health care than any other developed nation. It will soon spend close to 20% of its GDP on health—significantly more than the percentage spent by major Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development nations.

What is driving costs so high? As this series of charts shows, Americans aren’t buying more health care overall than other countries. But what they are buying is increasingly expensive. Among the reasons is the troubling fact that few people in health care, from consumers to doctors to hospitals to insurers, know the true cost of what they are buying and selling.

Contributions to employer-sponsored health coverage aren’t taxed, which makes it less expensive for companies to pay workers with health benefits than wages. Generous benefits lead to higher spending, according to many economists, because employees can consume as much health care as they want without having to pay significantly more out of their own pockets.

The prices of many medicines are hidden because pharmacy-benefit managers—the companies that administer drug benefits for employers and health insurers—negotiate confidential discounts and rebates with drugmakers.

Price Growth Since 2000

Hospitals are becoming more consolidated and are using their market clout to negotiate higher prices from insurers.

Tax Benefits

Contributions to employer-sponsored health coverage aren’t taxed, which makes it less expensive for companies to pay workers with health benefits than wages. Generous benefits lead to higher spending, according to many economists, because employees can consume as much health care as they want without having to pay significantly more out of their own pockets.

The tax benefit is the country’s biggest single income-tax break, costing billions to government revenue.

WSJ Misses the Big Picture

The charts are interesting but the WSJ misses the big picture: There is no incentive anywhere to reduce costs.

No Skin in the Game

Where the hell is “skin in the game”?

  • Those covered by Medicare have no skin in the game. And that is precisely why Medicare for All would be an abomination.

  • Those covered under company plans have little incentive to reduce costs. Once deductibles are met, there is “no skin in the game”.

  • Lobbyists wrote Obamacare. The results speak for themselves.

  • Congress had a golden opportunity to allow drug imports but failed to act. Drug companies can charge what they want and insurers will pony up.

  • There is no right to refuse service. Hospitals take anyone and everyone whether or not they have insurance. As such, many don’t have insurance. They have no skin in they game. Bankruptcy is a way out.

  • Massive amounts of money are wasted to keep terminal patients alive. Why? Because hospitals get paid by insurers. If hospitals didn’t get paid, and had they had right of refusal, such nonsense would stop.

  • Obama himself: Obama dictated what had to be be in healthcare plans. They labeled them Gold, Silver, and Bronze. Lovely. Arguably they should have been called dumb, dumber, and dumbest. Why? Millennials and healthy people had to overpay to support everyone else. The millennials dropped out, just as free market principles would have dictated.

Let the Free Market Work

Please, let the free market work. Let insurers offer whatever plans they want. Let people buy whatever they want. And let those without insurance pay the price. I assure you, prices will plummet.

If you need a liver transplant and your insurance doesn’t cover it. Sorry, you lose.

Costs for routine services will plunge because hospitals will not have to pay $200 for one aspirin to make up for the cost of an unpaid liver transplant.

Insurance plans ought to be able to force treatment overseas if someone is healthy enough to travel. A heart bypass operation in India is 10% of the cost here.

At a bare minimum, insurance companies ought to be able to offer such plans.

Personal Experiences – Stop and Smell the Lilacs

I seriously wonder if chemotherapy is more of a torture than a blessing. I watched my mom die in misery. The cost today is surely thousands of times higher. For what? To prolong someone’s life for six months? At what cost? And who should pay?

When my mom stopped breathing, they asked my dad if he wanted them to try and revive her. He said no. Had he not been there, what would they have done? Why?

My wife, Joanne, died from ALS (Lou Gerhig’s Disease). She was on extremely expensive drugs paid for under Medicare. Note that one does not have to be 65 to be under Medicare. Rather, Medicare picks up all costs on some terminal diseases.

Did those drugs do her any good? I doubt it. We also need to define “good”. If they kept her alive for another three months (which I highly doubt), it was another three months of pain and suffering.

I sponsored a raffle for the benefit of the Les Turner ALS Foundation. And we put on a economic conference. John Hussman did a generous match of non-raffle proceeds. All told, we raised $500,000 for the Les Turner foundation.

This was an early post promoting the fund raiser: My Wife Joanne Has Passed Away; Stop and Smell the Lilacs

I am very proud of that, and also the amazing support from the Hussman Foundation.

That’s skin in the game. Thanks again John!

Brass Tacks

We really need to get down to brass tacks.

Other countries seemingly have better healthcare because they control the cost of education, doctors fees, etc. They get cheaper drugs from the US than we have here.

Unless the US wants to control the cost of education, the cost of drugs, the cost of hospital care, and literally the cost of everything related, the US will not compare favorably to other countries.

In case you missed it, please consider “Free Stuff”: Medicare for All Cost Pegged at $32.6 Trillion for 10 Years.

Medicare for All cannot possibly work here, even if it “seems” to work elsewhere. I suggest we try the free market, not more Obamaism.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2MalWp9 Tyler Durden

Massachusetts Accidentally Bans Horse Racing

Legislators in Massachusetts forgot to pass a bill to keep horse racing legal, and hundreds of people could be out of work as a result.

Last night was a late one for the state’s lawmakers, who worked into the early hours of the morning before the end of this year’s formal legislative session. But they did not address the imminent expiration of a law that kept live-and-simulcast horse racing legal through July 31.

Bill H.4809, an “emergency law” that essentially extends the expiring legislation, had already passed both houses of the state legislature. But lawmakers went home without taking up needed procedural votes on the bill, the Associated Press reports.

Horse racing is now technically banned in the state, and roughly 290 people employed in the industry could be out of work. “It looks like hundreds of peoples’ jobs fell victim to the clock here,” Chip Tuttle, chief operating officer of the Suffolk Downs racetrack in Boston, tells WGBH. “Our options…seem pretty dire for now.”

With the Massachusetts legislature adjourned for the year, the only short-term solution is for lawmakers to pass the bill during tomorrow’s informal session.

from Hit & Run https://ift.tt/2LWcCbo
via IFTTT

N.Y. Fair Vendors Have Nearby 7-Year-Old’s Porch Lemonade Stand Shut Down

Lemonade standKid sets up a lemonade stand outside his home, which happens to be next door to the Saratoga County Fair in Ballston Spa, New York. Vendors at the fair call state health officials to complain. State health officials show up, determine the kid doesn’t have a permit, and shut him down.

In case anybody needs a reminder of why a lemonade brand actually produced a marketing campaign in which it funded kids so they could legally operate lemonade stands, there you go. It’s also a helpful reminder that while we’re told that permitting and licensing programs are all about public safety, they are frequently used as bludgeons to keep competitors out of the marketplace.

And what a stupid fight this was. The Albany Times Union has the details. Vendors were selling fresh lemonade inside the fair for $7 a cup. Brendan Mulvaney, 7, was selling premixed lemonade from his family’s porch for 75 cents a cup. Four separate vendors called state health officials to complain and ask if Mulvaney had a permit. He did not. So a health inspector actually came to the family home over the weekend and shut the lemonade stand down.

According to Mulvaney’s dad, officials initially apologized after they realized they were just shutting down some kid’s stand, not somebody trying to undercut the vendors inside the fair. But on Monday, officials from the state’s Health Department said the boy would have to get a $30 temporary food permit, which is good for a year and comes with all sorts of rules.

Politicians are now falling all over themselves to get publicity for supporting the boy. Republican state Senator James Tedisco showed up at the kid’s stand after it made the news and complained, “These kids are trying to give people sweet lemonade and learn some important business skills but the overzealous state bureaucrats in the administration just keep giving taxpayers lemons.” Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (facing re-election in November) offered to pay the kid’s permit fees.

Perhaps these politicians can direct some attention to the state’s burdensome occupational licensing and training programs that do the same thing to adults that the health department did to a 7-year-old. The Institute for Justice notes that becoming a barber in New York State requires two and a half years of professional training. Becoming a child care worker requires a year of training, more than in any other state besides New Jersey.

Sadly, not enough people make the connection between these lemonade crackdowns and the broader ways licensing and permitting laws restrict people’s ability to earn a living. They see stories like this as an outrageous abuse of authority, but they often don’t question the authority itself. They really should.

from Hit & Run https://ift.tt/2O1RzBB
via IFTTT

Lumber Futures Dump As US Construction Spending Slumps – Worst June Since 2000

Lumber futures prices are limit down today, falling to their lowest price since Dec 2017, erasing much of the post-tariff surge in prices as US construction spending unexpectedly tumbles in June.

Lumber prices are freefalling back towards pre-tariff levels…

And with home starts, permits, and sales all weaker…

Iit is no surprise that US construction spending tumbled in June…

 

Bearing in mind the upward revision for May, this is the worst construction spending drop for a June since the year 2000…

 

Still seem like a sustainable 4% economy?

 

 

 

 

 

 

via RSS https://ift.tt/2O24rHT Tyler Durden

Fidelity Becomes First Company To Offer A No Fee Index Fund

In the relentless war to capture market share by slashing fees on passive market instruments such as index funds and ETFs, it was only a matter of time before someone eventually cut fees to zero. Today, Fidelity did just that.

In a statement,  the closely-held Fidelity announced it would offer two new index funds to individual investors with a zero expense ratio. The funds, which will track indexes Fidelity created, will give investors exposure to the total U.S. stock market and an international benchmark.

Fidelity said in the statement it will also cut fees by an average of 35% on its existing index mutual funds, and allow investors to open accounts with no minimum balance required.

In recent years, Fidelity has been engaged in a relentless price-cutting war with Vanguard, BlackRock and Charles Schwab, all of whom have also reduced fees dramatically on index mutual funds and exchange-traded funds.

“Fidelity is once again rewriting the rules of investing to deliver the unparalleled value and straightforward investing options that individuals need and deserve,” said Kathleen Murphy, president of Fidelity’s personal investing business, adding that the firm’s index funds are now priced lower than the cheapest share class available at Vanguard, the longtime leader in low-cost investing. The two zero-fee products will be available Friday. The other pricing changes took effect today.

“We are charting a new course in index investing that benefits investors of all ages – from millennials to baby boomers – and at all affluence levels and stages of their lives. The ground-breaking zero expense ratio index funds combined with industry-leading zero minimums for account opening, zero investment minimums, zero account fees, zero domestic money movement fees and significantly reduced index pricing are unmatched by any other financial services company.”

Murphy also told Bloomberg that “we are using our scale to provide more benefits to our clients,” a tactic quite familiar to the likes of Jeff Bezos.

While Fidelity, which manages $2.5 trillion, is best known for its actively-managed funds, in the past few years it has aggressively gone after rivals in the “passive” index arena, and now has about $400 billion in index mutual funds according to Bloomberg.

Russel Kinnel, director of manager research at Morningstar, said the zero-price funds might attract new business. “Fidelity has lots of ways to make money from customers once they are in the door,” he said. “This could work for them.”

It sure could: in kneejerk reaction, shares of its biggest competitors slumped, with BlackRock falling as much as 4.8% on and T. Rowe Price down as much as 4%, the largest decline since April for both firms.

And if zero cost doesn’t win you market share, at least it’s free marketing as this post confirms.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2Oy5nF3 Tyler Durden

Obama Unveils First Wave Of Midterm Endorsements Ahead Of November Elections

Today Barack Obama announced his first wave of endorsement of dozens of candidates in advance of November midterm elections.

In a statement, the former president said “I’m proud to endorse such a wide and impressive array of Democratic candidates – leaders as diverse, patriotic, and big-hearted as the America they’re running to represent.”

The former president expects to campaign in several states this fall and to issue a second round of endorsements in advance of Nov. 6, according to his office.

The full list of mostly female endorsed candidates is below:

via RSS https://ift.tt/2n3EigG Tyler Durden

FOMC Preview: It Should Be Boring, But…

Today at 2pm, the Fed will announce its rate decision.  No change in policy is expected and as a reminder this is a meeting that doesn’t have a press conference, nor a fresh summary of economic projections so the only focus will be on cosmetic changes to the statement.

  • Fed Funds futures show almost zero expectation for a move at this meeting versus a probability a little above 80%  in September.
  • Deutsche Bank economists expect a fairly uneventful statement with the only real change being an  acknowledgement of some recent softness in housing market data and/or trade tensions.
  • According to RanSquawk, there is a risk that the FOMC could issue a statement on the Fed’s independence, following the recent critique of high rates by US President Trump, which might be interpreted in a hawkish manner.

Some more details from RanSquawk on what to expect:

FOMC TO STAND PAT

The Fed is very likely to stand pat on policy on Wednesday, maintaining the federal funds rate target at between  1.75-2.00%; money markets price just a 2.5% chance of a rate hike in August. There will be no post-meeting press  conference with Chair Powell, nor any updated economic projections, the focus will be on the FOMC’s statement. June’s policy statement was tweaked heavily, and as a result, most analysts aren’t expecting to see any major tweaks in August. The statement, therefore, will likely endorse the current trajectory of gradual hikes, where the central bank expects to lift rates on a further two occasions in 2018, in line with money market pricing (around 95% chance, according to money markets).

RECENT DATA

The tone of economic data has been evolving in line with the Fed’s forecasts; Core PCE stands at 2.0% Y/Y, in line with the Fed’s forecast; the advanced Q2 GDP data showed growth of 4.1%, well ahead of the Fed’s 2.8% forecast for 2018, though this bounce might be an aberration. Whether this will result in a change to the Fed’s language on incoming data remains to be seen. Societe Generale believes that the Fed will continue to describe growth as rising at a “solid” rate. SocGen also argues that the Fed may adjust its language on the unemployment rate, arguing that since the June jobless rate rose from 3.8% to 4.0%, the statement will need to drop the reference to how the rate ‘declined’, which could see a return of the older language that states the unemployment rate “has stayed low.” Some have also been focussing on June’s removal of the reference to the FFR target being below the longer-run neutral rate, but the general view is the Fed is unlikely to tweak its forward guidance about policy accommodation.

RATE HIKE PAUSE

While the Fed’s “dots” define the neutral funds rate at 2.9%, there’s uncertainty around that projection, and the Fed’s monetary policy report in July includes estimates that would suggest they’re already very close to that level. As a result, some have expressed concern about the possibility the Fed may discuss a rate hike pause which reflects a split in the committee’s June forecasts, with eight participants favoring at least two more rate hikes this year, but seven favoring one or none. The ongoing curve flattening has added urgency to the discussion, with Fed presidents James Bullard, Raphael Bostic and Neel Kashkari raising concerns that being too aggressive on rate hikes could invert the curve.

FED INDEPENDENCE

After US President Trump recently stated he was unhappy about rising rates, suggesting that US policy normalisation would put the US at a disadvantage relative to Europe and Asia (where normalisation is proceeding at a much slower pace). Trump added that he is “letting” the Fed do what it feels best, however, which some analysts have taken to mean that the President could change his mind about his tolerance in the future, intruding on the Fed’s policymaking function. Some desks, therefore, warn of risks that the FOMC could issue a statement (either within the main policy statement, or even as an additional statement) reiterating the central bank’s independence. ING suggests that this might be interpreted as a hawkish dign, signalling the Fed’s intention to continue with a tighter policy trajectory.

TRADE TENSIONS

Naturally, there will be an eye out to see if the Fed’s mentions trade tensions, particularly after the latest Beige Book showed tariffs remain the largest concern among businesses that were surveyed. UBS does not believe this will be mentioned after Fed Chair Powell in his recent testimony to lawmakers said these risks were being ‘monitored’; since then, trade tensions have eased after the US and Europe agreed to begin trade talks, putting escalating measures on hold. Accordingly, the Fed is under less pressure to formally address trade tensions.

YIELD CURVE

It would only take one FOMC participant to adjust their rate forecast lower for the median dot to return to three hikes in 2018 (forecasts will be updated at the 25-26 September meeting). The yield curve may provide a participant with that excuse, Rabobank says, especially since the June meeting minutes stated that a number of participants thought it would be important to continue monitoring the slope of the curve, where inversions have historically portended a recession. Rabobank argues that “June’s FOMC projections – with core PCE inflation rising only modestly to 2.1% while raising the federal funds rate to 3.4% – are a blueprint for a monetary policy mistake. Before the end of 2019, by the 5th hike from now, the Fed would invert the yield curve, and that could signal a recession in early 2021.” Others have dismissed the notion that a yield curve inversion might be a sign of an upcoming recession. UBS has said that in the 1970s, when inflation was the largest part of a bond yield, and inflation was tied to the economic cycles, yield curve inversion had predictive power. But those conditions are not in place today; furthermore, the yield curve is heavily distorted by the Fed’s large balance sheet, that was built up during the crisis, again casting some doubt on whether an inverted Treasury curve would be a sign of a downturn ahead.

INFLATION

While inflation by the Fed’s preferred PCE measure was 2.2% in June – with core inflation, excluding food and energy, at 1.9 percent – the FOMC is likely to be somewhat concerned. “As inflation has fallen short of 2 percent for more than six years, inflation can also be allowed to run above the Fed’s objective for a number of years and is expected to do so by at least a number of Fed members,” said Lindsey Piegza, chief economist at Stifel Nicolaus.

NY FED’S WILLIAMS

It is worth noting that John Williams has now taken his place as President of the NY Fed, and is therefore, the FOMC Vice Chair; that means that there is a vacancy on the SF Fed, which votes this year. As a matter of technicality, Esther George (President of the Kansas City Fed), will be the alternate voting member until a new SF Fed President has been put in place. UBS says that “even if Esther George decides to dissent in favour of a hike, consistent with her typically hawkish views, that decision would have little bearing on the decision or the path of policy.

ESTHER GEORGE

As Bloomberg reminds us, there will be a shift among voters this meeting. The San Francisco Fed is looking for a new president after former chief John Williams relocated in June to run the New York branch. As a result, Kansas City’s Esther George will cast San Francisco’s FOMC vote until a new leader has been installed, though interim president Mark Gould will attend the meeting and speak on its behalf. George, one of the most hawkish FOMC participants, recently endorsed continued gradual rate hikes, while saying an inverted yield curve may not necessarily be an economic signal.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2LRMEpz Tyler Durden

The Manhattan DA’s Office Will No Longer Prosecute You For Smoking Weed

|||Shane Cotee/Dreamstime.comManhattan’s district attorney (DA) office will no longer prosecute criminal cases based on no more than possessing or smoking marijuana, effective August 1. The new policy, which was announced in a press release, is expected to reduce marijuana prosecution by 96 percent.

The DA will still prosecute cases involving the sale of marijuana or demonstrated threats to public safety.

“Every day I ask our prosecutors to keep Manhattan safe and make our justice system more equal and fair,” said DA Cyrus Vance in the press release. Vance touted a study on marijuana and public safety, which he said found “virtually no public safety rationale for the ongoing arrest and prosecution of marijuana smoking, and no moral justification for the intolerable racial disparities that underlie enforcement.”

The study revealed that in 2017, black and Hispanic New Yorkers made up 86 percent of marijuana possession arrests; just 9 percent were white. The study also found racial disparities in police responses to marijuana complaints—disparities that it said “become all the more intolerable in light of the fact that they produce no meaningful criminal justice outcome.”

“Tomorrow, our Office will exit a system wherein smoking a joint can ruin your job, your college application, or your immigration status, but our advocacy will continue,” Vance concluded. “I urge New York lawmakers to legalize and regulate marijuana once and for all.”

Vance’s office is also working with public defense organizations to seal past marijuana convictions this fall. As with an expungement, sealing a record will make its contents unavailable to the public. Unlike an expungement, which removes a criminal record altogether, the contents of a sealed record are still accessible by court order.

from Hit & Run https://ift.tt/2LGZkjL
via IFTTT

Lira Crashes As US Reportedly Readying Sanctions Against Turks

Escalating rhetoric is about to turn into economic actions as Bloomberg reports Washington has prepared a list of Turkish entities and individuals that it will target should it decide to impose sanctions on Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government for imprisoning U.S. citizens and employees of its diplomatic mission, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.

The Lira collapsed to record lows… at 4.972 / USD.

Bloomberg adds that while negotiations to release one of the people, evangelical Pastor Andrew Brunson, are ongoing, the preparation of the so-called “designation packages” shows how close the U.S. has come to imposing unprecedented penalties against a NATO ally.

Turkey’s ETF is also tumbling…

Interestingly, the sanctions are being prepared under the Global Magnitsky Act of 2016, which allows the U.S. government to target individuals, companies or other entities involved in corruption or human-rights abuses anywhere in the world. Sanctions under the act allow for the seizure of assets in the U.S., travel bans and prohibitions on doing business with U.S. entities.

These is the same method of sanctioning that has been used to target Putin’s closest allies.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2AwzJ7T Tyler Durden