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Many Consumerism Commentary readers have written in to let me know that they recently received a check for about $98 from Bank of America. This check is not a result of the Bank of America overdraft fee class action lawsuit, but it is the result of a similar lawsuit. First of all, the overdraft lawsuit has only recently entered an appeal process. It could be another year or more before customers see any benefits from this latest class action.

The check is the benefit that customers are receiving due to an earlier class action lawsuit, Closson v. Bank of America. Customers who are eligible had a Bank of America, Fleet Bank, LaSalle Bank or U.S. Trust Company debit card and paid an insufficient funds fee, overdraft fee or similar fee before December 31, 2007. In order to receive a benefit, customers would have needed to file a claim form before May 1, 2009. The deadline to receive any benefits has long since passed, so even if you fit this description, it is too late to become a member of this lawsuit.

This is one of many class action lawsuits against Bank of America, some of which pertain to companies that were purchased by the bank, like Countrywide Financial.

  • Ross, et al. v. Bank of America, et al. This lawsuit pertains to the bank’s forcing of customers into mandatory binding arbitration, much like Wells Fargo is doing today. This is a new class action lawsuit.
  • Closson v. Bank of America. This is the class action lawsuit I described above. Bank of America encouraged its customers to use debit cards that were designed to increase the number of fees. If you received a check in December 2011, it is likely a result of this lawsuit.
  • Bank of America overdraft lawsuit. Nearly 1,000 Consumerism Commentary readers have offered their thoughts about Bank of America’s processing of customers’ debits in a certain order that ensured that they could maximize fee revenue from overdrafts. Read more here.
  • Homeowner lawsuits. Class action lawsuits in several states, including California and Washington, allege that Bank of America or its related companies withheld taxpayer money designed to help homeowners facing foreclosure.
  • Foreign currency conversions. Bank of America was one of many defendants (also including Visa, MasterCard, Chase, Citibank, and more) in a class action lawsuit regarding a conspiracy to set fees for foreign currency conversions, eliminating competition in this particular aspect of business.

Class action lawsuits are usually settled by the defendants, often without admitting any wrongdoing. As a result of settlement, affected customers often only receive a small award while the lawyers representing the class receive significant payments for their work and time. For example, in the overdraft fee settlement, lawyers will receive $123 million, or 30% of the settlement fund, unless the verdict is successfully appealed. At the same time, each affected customer will only receive a portion of the overdraft fees paid. That could be $35 or less per individual.

Are you included in a Bank of America class action lawsuit? Have you received a check in the mail from Bank of America and you don’t know why?

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Imagine you’re shopping for a new high-definition television. You’re looking around the store for the television with the best picture from a brand you trust. You pick the one you like, not the least expensive model but not the most expensive, either. You take it home, plug it in, and all the television can display is an image that’s been painted on. You open a panel in the bank, and where you expected to see electronics, there’s only crumpled-up newspapers. You were sold a dud, and didn’t know it until you had taken the “television” home. Furthermore, there’s no return policy.

No one should allow a company to sell a product whose components are drastically different than what’s advertised, particularly if the opportunity to evaluate the components doesn’t rise until after the product is sold. This is similar to the reason the Federal Housing Finance Agency is suing Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, and other banks. The products were mortgage-backed securities. Banks sold these securities to investors as if they were low-risk investments. For a while, there wasn’t a problem. Eventually, the banks had trouble finding qualified borrowers to bundle into securities and extended loans to riskier home buyers.

ForeclosureSelling the mortgages as securities meant that every investment would be somewhat diversified across a wide selection of mortgages, and this diversification should have kept risk low, but the banks — and most likely the investors, as well — continued these transactions because everyone was profiting.

The banks were complicit in making the mortgages appear better by falsifying borrower income statements. Perhaps other parties were aware that the securities were riskier than advertised, but no company, not the investors nor the companies providing insurance for these investments, stepped in to bring attention to the risk. Every company was making too much money to stop and consider the downstream effects.

The FHFA is making the allegations and will file a suit in federal court within the next few days, according to the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. The banking industry’s position is that a downturn in the economy caused the loss of value on mortgage-backed securities, not that mortgages offered to people who couldn’t afford them caused the downturn in the economy. Now the industry is concerned that a suit in which banks are required to buy back the investments would put the economy back on this ice.

For many years, the government (and the real estate industry and the banking industry) promoted home ownership in the United States. Owning a home became the new definition of the “American Dream.” Owning your own property is the only way to be free, and this philosophy stemmed from feudalism in England. Those who owned land ruled over others. It’s not quite the same in the United States; homeowners are still subject to their local governments, but the feeling of freedom that accompanies home ownership has persisted. Land ownership in feudalism was for the aristocracy, and unlike feudal times when there was little socioeconomic mobility, the promise of America meant that anyone could be a land owner — anyone could be in the upper class.

This drive to live a better life and increase social status led to the market finding ways for more people to afford to be homeowners, from the proliferation and expectation of bank-financed purchases through mortgages to creative ways for increasing supply like condominiums, home ownership without land. The business of home ownership is profitable, so there was no need to slow down. With incentives from the government and a stigma attached to renting, potential homeowners would do anything to qualify for mortgages so they could buy a home quickly rather than saving money first, and potential lenders would do anything to find more borrowers, bundle the mortgages into securities somewhat masking the risk, and sell them to investors.

Now society is paying the price. The economy crashed after the housing bubble became uncontrollable. Homeowners lost their homes. Investors in the mortgage-backed securities and the banks that sold them are jockeying for who will be held responsible. Should the banks be required to buy back the mortgage-backed securities?

Photo: taberandrew
New York Times

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A few years ago, a friend of mine quit his job at a bank to focus on his own company. That can be a risky life change by itself, but in addition to his change in income, he and his wife were expanding their family. While I’m sure they would have been fine remaining in their apartment for a few additional years to ensure the new business could provide income, they wanted to purchase a house right away.

The mortgage broker they were talking to must have been very good. When they signed the paperwork for the adjustable rate mortgage, they were paying less per month (not including insurance and taxes) than the cost of rent in their old apartment. The premise could be valid. An adjustable rate mortgage allows you to qualify for a lower rate now while you’re earning less. Despite many studies that have recently declared that real income has been steady or has decreased for most workers over the past decade after taking inflation into account, most people have an impression that they can handle the increase in mortgage cost later because they’ll be earning more money.

For this particular friend, the decision to go with an adjustable rate mortgage paid off. His business found success early and he did not have a problem when the interest rate recently jumped. The situation could have easily gone the other way; in fact, it almost did. He managed to sign a major client at the right time, and it moved his business into profitability. Without the one client, his finances would have been in trouble.

Another friend of mine, when buying his second house, considered an interest-only mortgage. This is another good option to increase cash flow in the short term, but it means larger expenses later on. Unlike adjustable rate mortgages, if you’re paying only interest, you’re not building any equity in your home. In the beginning of mortgage repayment, building equity would be slow, anyway, but it’s helpful to start paying down the principal as soon as possible.

In the days of the runaway real estate market, homeowners could increase their equity just by watching the value of their home increase, but there are few locations where that strategy would work.

Along these same lines, homeowners would often take advantage of double-digit increases in value by refinancing their mortgage and walking away with cash. Enterprising individuals often find this cash helpful for making improvements to their home — and these improvements only pay off in terms of enjoyment of the living space, not future resale value — or investing in their own business.

Adjustable-rate mortgages, interest-only mortgages, and cash-out refinancing aren’t always mistakes. These could be the right options for many people, and several years down the road, one could look back and determine each one was, for any particular person, the best choice. These techniques often probe to be financially devastating if the housing market crashes, your income doesn’t increase as expected, or your business fails.

When plans don’t work out and the mortgage becomes too tough to handle, a family could find itself facing foreclosure.

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Imagine this: You, accompanied by the sheriff’s deputies, walk into your local Bank of America branch. You tell the sheriff to remove cash from the tellers’ drawers and seize the branch’s furniture and computers. It’s like a dream come true, especially for someone who has been on the receiving end of a bank’s foreclosure.

Now imagine this: You and your wife pay cash to buy your house, never taking out a mortgage. Bank of America, however, believes you do have a mortgage and that you haven’t made any payments. This is not like the issue where a bank can’t prove it is the true owner of a mortgage due to securitization, a situation where someone with a mortgage might be able to get out of paying an obligation because the mortgage can’t be traced to a real creditor. This is a case where a mortgage never existed, but somehow, Bank of America believed the house was owned by the bank. The bank initiates the foreclosure process, forcing you to hire an attorney despite the bank not having any legal standing. Although the court ordered Bank of America to cover your thousands of dollars in attorney fee expenses, the bank doesn’t pay. For months.

A good course of action is to initiate foreclosing proceedings on the bank, and that’s what a couple in this position did. $2,500 may be enough for a bank to repeatedly ignore, but that amount is worthwhile to a household. The sheriff invasion resulted in a check from the bank within an hour, and the check covered the attorney’s fees plus another $3,000.

It is difficult to stand up to banks, even if you know you’re in the right. Large financial institutions have what seems like endless money to throw at problems they want to go away, and another bottomless trough for money to help them maintain a good reputation in the media. While not all consumers need to battle with the financial industry, some do, and those who do are facing long odds.

TIME Moneyland

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Podcast 104: Financial Literacy Month

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Podcast 102: Tax Preparation, Tom Dziubek

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