Civil rights suit filed in subprime meltdown
WASHINGTON - In what is apparently the first legal action of its kind, an association of community-based organizations has filed a federal civil rights complaint against two of the three largest Wall Street ratings agencies, charging that their inflated ratings on subprime mortgage bonds disproportionately caused financial harm to African-American and Latino homebuyers across the country.
The complaint, filed by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, alleges that Moody's Investor Services and Fitch Ratings Ltd. enriched themselves by assigning high ratings to bonds backed by mortgages "that were designed to fail" because of "unfair payment terms and insufficient borrower income levels."
The agencies "knew or should have known" that subprime loans disproportionately were marketed to minority consumers - a process known as "reverse redlining" - and that those borrowers would ultimately default and go into foreclosure at high rates, according to the complaint.
Neither Moody's nor Fitch had immediate comment on the allegations.
The filing cites multiple studies that found African-Americans and Latinos received a disproportionate share of subprime loans during the housing boom years. A Federal Reserve study in 2006 estimated that 45 percent of mortgages extended to Latinos and 55 percent of loans to African-Americans were subprime - a utilization rate "three to four times that of non-Hispanic whites."
Because the loans themselves often came with terms that increased borrowers' probability of default - upfront teaser rates followed by unaffordable reset payment adjustments, no required documentation of applicants' incomes or assets, plus hefty prepayment penalties - African-Americans with subprime mortgages are projected to lose between $71 billion and $92 billion through foreclosures, while Latinos are projected to lose between $75 billion and $98 billion, according to one study cited in the complaint.
"Had subprime loans been distributed equitably," the complaint estimates, "losses for whites would be 44.5 percent higher and losses for people of color would be about 24 percent lower."
A third rating agency with heavy involvement in the subprime boom, Standard & Poor's Corp., was not named in the complaint but has been "in discussions" with NCRC, according to David Berenbaum, the group's executive vice president. If the discussions with S&P prove "unsatisfactory," he said, the company could be the subject of a separate action.
NCRC filed its complaint with the Department of Housing and Urban Development's fair housing and equal opportunity unit. After a review, the department could either dismiss the allegations or refer the case to the Justice Department of the incoming Obama administration for litigation next year. If HUD fails to respond adequately, NCRC says it may file a federal lawsuit.
The civil rights complaint is the latest in a series of lawsuits, regulatory investigations and congressional criticism of the rating agencies' roles and conduct during the mortgage bond heyday years of 2003-05. In dollar terms, subprime and so-called "Alt-A" no-doc loans accounted for 32 percent of all mortgage originations in 2005. Their share had been only 10 percent just two years before. Virtually all of those high-risk loans were sold to Wall Street firms for inclusion in complex bond structures that were resold - often in bits and pieces - to pension funds and financial institutions.
The traditional function of the rating agencies has been that of Wall Street's "gatekeepers," evaluating the risks involved in the collateral backing bonds. Their assignment of investment-grade ratings to securities based on high-risk mortgages - and their subsequent mass lowering of those ratings as default losses piled up - has earned them scorching criticism from investors, regulators and Congress.
Much of the criticism focused on the fact that the agencies are paid lucrative fees for their ratings by bond issuers themselves - not investors - thereby creating potential conflicts of interest. The agencies also competed with each other to rate subprime loan securitizations - creating additional pressure to provide the most favorable possible ratings.
The Securities and Exchange Commission investigated the agencies earlier this year and found "serious shortcomings" at Moody's, Fitch and S&P, including lack of oversight of conflicts of interest. Investigators also turned up evidence that agency personnel apparently knew that some of the mortgage pools they were rating were potentially toxic.
In one instant-message exchange, an analyst reportedly called a deal "ridiculous. - We should not be rating it." A colleague responded: "We rate every deal. It could be structured by cows and we would rate it."
Critics such as Berenbaum argue that without Wall Street's mass securitizations of high-risk mortgages - with stamps of approval from the ratings agencies - far fewer subprime loans would have been made, and far fewer minority homebuyers would have ended up in foreclosure.
• Write to Ken Harney at P.O. Box 15281, Chevy Chase, MD 20815 or via e-mail at kenharney@earthlink.net.