Another Treasury Scam
posted on
Jul 27, 2010 06:18PM
Golden Minerals is a junior silver producer with a strong growth profile, listed on both the NYSE Amex and TSX.
It appears another U.S. Treasury "non-conformance" has been identified. Funny that Obama himself introduced and promoted this new program.
Zero integrity - VHF
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The New Math Surrounding HAMP Does Not Add Up
Paul Jackson
July 26, 2010
There is no other way to say this: we’re being lied to. Willfully. Anyone who managed to read headlines around the U.S. Treasury's latest HAMP report card last week would likely have thought the program a huge success –- with more than one media outlet trumpeting impossibly miniscule re-default rates among permanent HAMP mods.
Surprisingly, even a few trade publications –- media outlets that ought to know better – took the “low redefaults!” theme and made screaming headlines out of it last week.
At HW, we chose not to run with the HAMP redefault numbers except to note that Treasury officials had added them into the latest report card. And this choice was made with purpose: we knew these numbers were fake. Nobody gets a 1.7% redefault rate 6 months after modification –- not even Uncle Sam — and any media outlet reporting that number with a straight face quite simply doesn't understand the industry it's covering.
The only way to come up with a 1.7% redefault rate is to change how redefaults are calculated. And that, dear readers, is precisely what our government did.
In the report card, buried in a footnote, is the following disclaimer: “a HAMP permanent modification is canceled for non-payment if it is more than 90 days delinquent.” It’s also apparently removed from redefault calculations, which is a great way to smear a pig in a mountain of lipstick and hope nobody notices.
The researchers at Barclays Capital were among the few paying attention to this footnote, and took the unprecedented step of issuing a separate research alert on the HAMP numbers last week, highlighting what they called “misleading” reporting by Treasury on HAMP mod performance.
I prefer to call it lying. Because if it quacks like a duck and it walks like a duck, it’s a duck.
Redefault calculations aren't exactly a foreign thing, even for our government. A few years back, Uncle Sam began collecting mortgage servicing data for quarterly reporting via the Comptroller of the Currency –- so there is zero excuse to suddenly define a “new” way of calculating redefault rates.
I’ve written for months in this column about the need for the Treasury to begin reporting redefault rates on HAMP modifications, and this is what they finally give us? I’m incensed. Because it’s yet another attempt to fool the American public into believing that HAMP, an utterly failed program, is actually working. And because it’s a blatant lie.
The Barclays researchers still expect to see actual HAMP redefaults — you know, the kind that may never be reported — to reach somewhere around 60 percent over time. I concur.