Thursday, July 12, 2012

Force-Placed Insurance Under Attack



New York State’s Department of Financial Services is investigating several large banks to determine whether they fraudulently steered homeowners into overpriced insurance policies.

The investigation centers on so-called force-placed insurance that has become increasingly common since the downturn of the housing market began and homeowners who have had trouble keeping up with payments on their home insurance. Unless you have been foreclosed on, most of you have probably never heard of force-placed insurance, or at least have little understanding of the instrument. Force-placed insurance was a niche industry before the recession and housing bubble, but it has grown drastically in the last few years. As homeowners struggle to meet their mortgage bills, they often lapse on their home insurance payments first.

Mortgage lenders have long required home buyers to buy enough insurance to cover the lenders’ stake in the property in order to protect their collateral from fires and other hazards. The contracts routinely allow for the lender to buy another policy if the homeowner lets his own policy lapse. The lender either uses money from the mortgage escrow account, or if that isn’t sufficient, advances the money and gets reimbursed when the house is sold.

JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo are among the major companies involved in the inquiry by the Department’s office. Benjamin M. Lawsky, the superintendent of New York State’s Department of Financial Services, is leading the investigation.

Mr. Lawsky’s office issued 31 subpoenas or other legal notices related to the case in early October 2011. His office has already turned up instances where mortgage servicing units at large banks steered distressed homeowners into insurance policies up to 10 times as costly as the homeowners’ original plans. In some cases, those policies were offered by affiliates of the banks themselves. That introduces a potential conflict of interest because companies may have an incentive to place homeowners in policies offered by their affiliates rather than looking for the best rates on the open market. In other cases, there may have been kickbacks between unrelated companies.

Potential wrongdoing may occur when both mortgage servicing and insurance units are within the same company or affiliated in some way. The investigation is yet another legal battle for the nation’s largest banks and points to the sorts of problems they may continue to face nationwide.

It can be argued that the increased cost is to be expected to some degree because homeowners who missed insurance payments on old policies are risky customers. However, Mr. Lawsky’s office views some of the increases as exorbitant. For instance, in one case his office is examining, a homeowner who paid $2,000 a year to State Farm ended up paying $6,000 a year to a new insurer.

In many cases, banks are servicing loans on behalf of mortgage security investors, and banks have a duty to maximize recoveries on behalf of those investors. Force-placed insurance is one way banks try to protect against losses.

The investigators are looking for the potential conflict at Bank of America involving a unit called Balboa Insurance that it owned until last year. That unit’s interaction with the bank’s mortgage servicing is an important focus for Mr. Lawsky.

JPMorgan is a focus of the inquiry because in recent years, the bank held a small financial stake in an insurance company called Assurant on behalf of its clients.

Mr. Lawsky’s office is also investigating banks that do not own insurance companies to see if they received kickbacks for steering their mortgage clients’ business to particular insurers. His office has not yet reached a settlement in this area with a large bank, but some smaller players in mortgage servicing, like Goldman Sachs, have already agreed to his demands that they change their practices with force-placed insurance. Mr. Lawsky’s investigation has already had positive outcomes for the average American.

Three days of hearings were held in May regarding Mr. Lawsky’s investigation. Consumer advocates at the hearing said force-placed insurance typically costs three to 10 times the price of regular homeowners’ insurance. Mr. Lawsky said the insurers appeared to be paying less than 25 cents in claims for every dollar of premium they received, an extraordinarily low loss ratio.

Consumer advocates told the regulators the force-placed insurance business appeared fraught with sweetheart deals: A mortgage lender would take out the coverage with its own handpicked insurer; the insurer, in turn, would recycle much of the money back to the lender.

In some cases, the insurers did this by buying reinsurance from a subsidiary of the same bank that had brought them the insurance deal in the first place. In other cases, the insurers would send a “commission” back to the bank, which also happened to have its own insurance agency.

In some cases, the insurers sent these payments to bank subsidiaries with no employees, raising questions about what the money was for. For instance, Assurant sent payments to Banc One, a reinsurance subsidiary of JPMorgan Chase that has no employees, Banc One officials said under questioning. It is incorporated as a “captive,” a type of insurer that provides little disclosure of its financial condition.

Representatives of these “Too Big to Fail” banks and insurers who appeared at the hearing, said their business relationships and the profits from them were appropriate and that they were cooperating with the department. However, force-placed insurance has been extraordinarily profitable for these goliath-like banks and insurers in the last few years, growing from $1.4 billioin in 2004 to $5.5 billion of premiums in 2010 alone.

Two insurers, Assurant and QBE Insurance, control about 90 percent of the market for coverage in New York state. CitiMortgage did not testify at the hearings but a spokesman for Citigroup, Sean Kevelighan, said that whenever a homeowner showed proof of other insurance, the force-placed policy was canceled. “Hundreds of thousands of people are going to get foreclosed on, and Chase is profiting immensely from the reinsurance,” Mr. Lawsky said. “It just doesn’t smell right.”

J. Robert Hunter, the director of insurance for the Consumer Federation of America, said he thought the round-trip transactions gave banks a financial incentive to buy the highest-priced insurance, because then they stood to get a bigger share back.

Mr. Hunter told Mr. Lawsky that force-placed insurers should be required to charge premiums that were in line with their cost of doing business, something now required of health insurers.

Class-action lawsuits on behalf of homeowners have been filed around the country. The majority of these suits have been filed in Florida, New Jersey and New York. The lawsuits in Florida allege Wells Fargo received an 11 percent commission from Assurant for every force-placed policy the insurance company issued to the bank’s note holders. Wells Fargo has since stopped accepting those commissions, said bank spokesman Tom Goyda — but not before the bank collected $177 million in “pure profit” from Assurant on such transactions, the suit alleges.

Assurant handles 80 percent of Wells Fargo’s force-placed policies, while QBE Insurance — a defendant named in another Florida suit — issues the rest.








Tuesday, July 10, 2012

NCAA Class Action Lawsuit News


The Birmingham News reported last week on the latest in the NCAA class action lawsuit regarding former players. It appears the lawsuit is heating up and the Plaintiffs have won a victory in their discovery fight. Chris Hellums, a partner at Pittman, Dutton & Hellums, P.C., is quoted in the article. The story was posted on al.com and a link to the article is below.

http://www.al.com/sports/index.ssf/2012/07/sec_and_swac_must_produce_limi.html

Monday, July 2, 2012

Another Recent Alabama Federal Opinion


In Pittman v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 2012 WL 2368541 (M.D. Ala. June 21, 2012), the Pittmans were undergoing serious financial problems but went on a European vacation.  When they returned, they reported that their home had been burglarized, with expensive art and jewelry taken.  For many justifiable reasons, State Farm questioned the claim and commenced an investigation. 

While the Pittmans cooperated in many ways, they refused to produce certain requested banking and credit records or to execute authorizations that would have allowed State Farm to obtain the records.  A condition precedent for coverage under the policy was compliance with stated post-loss duties that included responding to State Farm’s request for the subject rejects. 

In granting State Farm a summary judgment, the court noted that the Pittmans had to fully fulfill their duty to cooperate, with partial cooperation not excusing full cooperation and found that State Farm’s requests were reasonable.  The rendition of the facts in the opinion strongly suggest “wrongdoing” on the Pittmans’ part.  Still, the lesson is that, in this situation, an insured must fully comply with all post-loss duties.