At
least someone is doing some journalism somewhere – more than I can
say about the NZ media
Hope
for mortgage 'victims' with homeowners winning battle against banks
THOUSANDS
of struggling homeowners could walk away from their mortgages as a
series of court cases helps to expose widespread improper lending
practices involving some of the nation's biggest financial
institutions.
4
June, 2012
Finance
industry giants are spending millions of dollars on legal fees
fighting homeowners who have successfully exited their mortgages
because they were stung by sub-prime-style lending practices during
the last property boom. An investigation by The Australian has
revealed several mortgage providers and mortgage brokers engaged in
improper lending practices in the years before the global financial
crisis hit in 2008, including inflating borrowers' income and ability
to repay debts to secure so-called "low-doc" loans.
Courts
in several states have sided with homeowners who have defaulted on
their loans, extinguishing their mortgages. The rulings have
encouraged other lenders to reach settlements with borrowers that are
saving homeowners hundreds of thousands of dollars. And the issue
could be tested in the High Court in coming months.
Award-winning
consumer advocate Denise Brailey, who runs the Banking and Finance
Consumers Support Association, said she was dealing with more than
100 alleged victims of improper lending. "What this means is
that if you are a struggling homeowner and the bank comes knocking
you may well not have to hand over your keys," Ms Brailey said.
The
declining health of loans could have ramifications for the federal
government, which has put about $14 billion into securitised mortgage
investments - packages of home loans known as "residential
mortgage backed securities" - since the GFC.
In
October 2008, Wayne Swan announced the government would invest $4bn
to shore up the RMBS market, but that figure has ballooned and in
April last year he increased the obligation to $20bn.
Australian
Office of Financial Management chief executive Rob Nicholl said the
government had invested in superior-quality loans with relatively low
defaults rates and that it was "very cognisant of all the risks
involved".
However,
default rates among some mortgage securities, which include low-doc
loans, have surged to as much as 7 per cent of loans.
According
to Fitch Ratings, low-doc loans comprise about 8-10 per cent of every
mortgage in the Australian securitised mortgage market.
Fitch
analyst James Zanesi said that proportion of low-doc loans was
similar in the wider, $1.2 trillion Australian mortgage market.
According
to Fitch, low-doc loans were more than four times as likely to be in
default than standard loans, with 5.5 per cent of all "prime"
low-doc loans in default compared with 1.26 per cent of all standard
loans.
The
group said low-doc loans were experiencing "considerable
deterioration" and there was "no relief in sight" for
low-doc loan delinquencies.
The
Australian has amassed evidence of widespread improper lending
activity based around abuse of low-documentation lending products.
In
the race to provide credit - and earn commissions - major lenders
such as Macquarie, Suncorp and GE Money spruiked imprudent lending
practices to mortgage brokers, highlighting loopholes in their own
lending requirements.
Low-doc
or "no-doc" loans were supposed to be only for
self-employed business owners who could not provide standard loan
information. Borrowers typically pay a higher interest rate to
reflect their lack of a regular credit and income history.
But
in scores of emails those lenders - and many others - told mortgage
brokers that borrowers needed only to register an Australian Business
Number "for one day" to secure low-doc or no-doc loans.
One
email from a Macquarie Bank business development manager to brokers
says: "Why not try Macquarie for the below reasons . . . No docs
- Client only needs to be self-employed for 1 day or more . . . No
assets and liabilities required, no income needs to be stated!!!"
Macquarie
Bank and GE Money declined to comment. Suncorp spokesman Jamin Smith
defended similar emails sent by Suncorp staff, saying business
development managers did not have the power to authorise loans.
The
Australian has also discovered cases of mortgage brokers, loan
originators and others inflating borrowers' stated incomes on loan
application forms without their knowledge.
Precedent-setting
court cases have recently found that, where borrowers were given
loans they could never afford, lenders must extinguish part or all of
those mortgages. Nine judges before six courts have to date found in
favour of homeowners affected by improper loan applications, and in
almost all cases courts have ordered lenders to fully extinguish
mortgages within 30 days.
The
most clear-cut cases have occurred in NSW because of the 1980
Contracts Review Act in that state. However, courts in Victoria and
Western Australia have found in favour of borrowers under existing
legislation. Major mortgage securitiser First Mac - which has issued
$9.5bn in Australian mortgages since 2003 - lost a NSW Supreme Court
bid to repossess the family homes of three borrowers on the grounds
those borrowers were victims of loan application schemes.
The
judges found lenders had acted inappropriately by engaging in "asset
lending" - that is, lending money based solely on the fact that
the loan is secured by an asset, usually a person's home, and paying
little or no regard as to whether the borrower could afford the loan.
First
Mac appealed against the decision and in December the judges again
sided with borrowers, ordering that mortgages against two family
homes be rescinded completely, and reduced by three-quarters in a
third case. First Mac was ordered to pay court costs.
In
light of those judgments, lenders such as Westpac are scrambling to
settle with borrowers who claim to have been wronged. In many cases,
hundreds of thousands of dollars are being wiped from mortgages.
In
every court case heard, lenders had failed to make simple checks,
such as calling prospective borrowers to verify their stated incomes
or employment status.
First
Mac, based in Brisbane, has now sought to take its case to the High
Court, and a hearing as to whether the case will be heard will take
place later this month.
A
High Court spokesman said between 8 per cent and 10 per cent of
applications for such "special leave to appeal"
applications were granted.
First
Mac founder and managing director Kim Cannon did not respond to calls
last week.
In
most instances, the precedent-setting cases against the deep-pocketed
financial institutions are being funded by consumer groups or lawyers
working for little or no pay because the borrower victims are often
close to bankruptcy. Lawyers said the vast majority of the thousands
of homeowners affected by improper or unconscionable lending
activities had no idea they could legally walk away from their
mortgages.
"Lenders
have been throwing everything they have at these cases because they
know there are thousands, probably tens of thousands, of people who
have been affected," said Geoff Roberson of Champion Legal, who
has run the cases against First Mac. "The problem for many
borrowers is they don't know they have been wronged and simply roll
over when the banks come knocking."
Consumer
advocates said borrowers who believed they had been affected should
approach their lender for a copy of their loan application form,
which they were entitled to by law, and check the income levels
stated.
Ms
Brailey said not being provided with a copy of the loan application
form was a key indicator borrowers may have been subject to loan
application irregularities.
"In
every single case of the 100-plus I am dealing with, the person has
not been provided with a copy of their loan application form by their
mortgage broker or lender," she said.
She
said borrowers were entitled to such information by law. However,
banks and other lenders had "stonewalled" such requests.
"Every
time the borrowers receive the forms they are blown away," Ms
Brailey said. "Incomes have been grossly exaggerated, false
employment job descriptions have been entered or they have been
stated as being employed when they're not.
"In
one case, a lowly-paid deckhand was described as a ship's captain and
described as earning $150,000 a year."
Ms
Brailey, who has been tracking low-doc loans and loan application
issues with The Australian for several years, said she had uncovered
examples of loan application irregularities in loans approved by 14
banks and other lenders.
She
obtained emails illustrating imprudent lending practices by 36 banks
and non-bank lenders, including all of the major banks.
"We're
about to see a major train wreck," she said.
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