WaMu Judge Lets Shareholders Retain Bankruptcy Role (Update1) It is INSANE if DEPOSITORS are given less priority than SHAREHOLDERS

It is INSANE if DEPOSITORS are given less priority than SHAREHOLDERS

See this Bloomberg report:

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Shareholders of Washington Mutual Inc., the former parent of the biggest U.S. bank to fail, deserve their expanded role in the company’s bankruptcy case, a judge ruled.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Mary Walrath yesterday rejected a request from Washington Mutual’s lawyers to disband a court- sanctioned committee appointed to represent the interest of shareholders.

Shareholders “have a right to a place at the table,” Walrath said during a hearing in Wilmington, Delaware.

TO read the full story, click here: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=email_en&sid=aKXk5O6nPiEA

We roll out the Welcome mat for FDIC, Hughes, Hubbard & Reed, House and Senate members

Hi, for those of you who study this site in order to gain knowledge, study for a court case, or merely for voyeuristic amusement, you should know, we are watching you as well.

For those of you helping the depositors of Indymac in some way legislatively, we THANK YOU immensely for your efforts, and encourage you to contact the sponsor of this website for any detail you require to assist you in your work. We also want to thank the members of the press who have really pushed and publicized for some results in our cause. It is a simple case of theft, only complicated by those denying us of the justice due to all affected by the Indymac debacle.

This topic will become a case study in some MBA program someday, if it is not already.

Be aware that we Indymac depositors intend to re-write history, and if we need to find a bunch of MBA candidates to help solve the way we have been wronged, then so be it. I know some of you in Cambridge MA, have been watching and you guys have competitors at Wharton doing same. I look forward to hearing from your great minds to aim our firepower in the right direction to recoup lost savings.

Cheers,

Lisa

Report: Indy Mac / OneWest / Deutsch Bank Ripoff report…

Well, if our old friends at Indymac, now OneWest are up to the business as usual, the business of ripping off people. I recently read a book named “The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One”, by William Black. He features the Charles Keating misadventure back in the 80′s when colossal failures in banking history were made. Funny thing is, (sick funny) Darrel Dochow was working in the OTS and Charles Keating was under Dochow’s watch back then. History repeats itself. Since he was “retired” from the OTS in late December 2008 (with FULL retirement benefits) amid a storm cloud of banking clusters, we see that he was the key person allowing the backdating of funds to prop Indymac up, and keep it off the watch list in the eyes of the OTS and the FDIC. If it were not for this man, who should be in prison, we’d have been far a field from a bank on the watch list, all of us.

Ladies and gentlemen, it is my bold opinion that our government is responsible for taking our savings from us. It is the OTS that oversees what the FDIC is doing. If we cannot keep track of a pantie bomber, reported by his father to be a Muslim extremist, (seemingly a simple task), then how are we to ever have faith in the United States Government to keep our economy strong and back our almighty flagging dollar. Good old Ms. Sheila Bair of the FDIC will tell you “we (the FDIC) are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government.” Ha. Well, Ms. Bair, I guess we who banked at Indymac, have no faith in the credit of the United States got the shaft. I am very patriotic and love my country, I just do not have faith in some of the puppets in control now.

Since Barney Frank led the Democrats on the House Rules Committee to unanimously vote down both potential amendments proposed by Congresswoman Jane Harman and presented by Congressman David Dreier regarding the Financial Reform Bill HR 4173, are Democrats really for the people? I am hearing from a lot of dyed in the wool Democrats who believe the party has betrayed many, and is out for its own personal power grab. When Republicans on the Rules Committee (who were out numbered) voted unanimously for our cause with regard to Congresswoman Harman’s proposed amendments, I guess we are getting a picture painted for us of what is going on in goverments. It’s a power struggle. It’s nothing more than a partisan power struggle. So, even when we see Dreier (R) support Harman (D), we have Barney Frank put up a wall of his blithering jabber and shoot them both down.

People, it’s not your party, it’s your principles, and if people keep voting along party lines, from you and me, joe and jane voter, all the way to the guys and gals in Congress who make more and more rules for us to live by, then we all lose. The devil is in the details. I suggest that before you punch any voter cards in November, or primaries in June, You really read, I mean really read about the issues, and what your about to vote for when you pick the leaders for your district, state, or Nation as a whole! Please for the love of God and Country, don’t just vote this party or that because your mother or dad did, or that is the way you have always done it, or your union tells you so, or you fear being judged. Start to educate yourself NOW on these issues. If we had all been active particpants a long time ago, we would be in a little less pain now, I am sure.

After watching our President Obama’s State of the Union address last evening, I find contradictions between his statements on behalf of the administration, and the actions of the administration. President Obama clearly stated that he was not happy about the banking bailouts. He said that we, the PEOPLE were not happy with them either. You know who is? The Bank owners! That is who. So if the President is not happy and you are not happy, then why did CONGRESS vote to perform money transfusions for the BANKS and money-ectomies from us? Even after we pay taxes on our money, and put it in the bank, they are not happy. They want it all. Well, when the government has all the money and all the power and we have none of either, then who are they empowered over, and by what method of rule? I think they call that Communism.

So I will leave you with the story to confirm yet again how the banks are making out like bandits, and we are at the open end of the barrel…
Click this link to read the story of one upstanding family and how a bank plays dirty pool.

Lisa Marshall’s commentary on today’s WSJ article; Investors, With Help From Uncle Sam, Reshape IndyMac

First, since we all have short attention span, little time to read a long soliloquy, and just plain old fashioned “I need it now” mentality I will give you my request regarding this article, and all that I post, as they are worth the read, and worth commenting upon at the site of the source journal (Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Barron’s, LA Times etc.).

1) Read the article with the embedded web address HERE:

2) Post your comments on their site along with the article. If you wish to additionally comment here, great, but the writers at respective journals really need and want your feedback.

Regarding today’s WSJ article by PETER LATTMAN And RUTH SIMON: First, they want to solicit your comments. Now, I will give you my take… The fact that IndyMac- now “OneWest” owns its latest crowning jewel, First Federal increasing branch number by more than double is just another clue for Congress’s WHO DONE IT game. So, we take a peek inside at One West, and find that the owners are all strangely connected to high powered Senators, and one man specifically Sen. Charles Schumer, and others. Since Indymac was called out by Charles Schumer, and right after, a bank run occurred, the FDIC was told by the OTS to close it and run it. The FDIC was watched by the Office of the Inspector General “OIG”, who later put out a scathing, almost apologetic report on themselves that the regulatory system had failed here. How sad, not for them, but for depositors, as this was just an experiment on a slide in a lab for them. For us, it was life savings, money to fund businesses, home improvements, all taxes paid, all assured by the bank, INDYMAC, to be fully insured.

If you were in trouble at sea, needed a life raft & someone told you the only way to save yourself was to kill your fellow man, would you? I don’t think so. OneWest is the financial version of a cannibal. These four investors, weak men who would eat their own young if it meant a few million more in their bottom line. Michael Dell- the computer genius- well maybe in his garage he could develop a program that makes bank accounts ring bells to owners if they are under insured. George Soros, the self effacing billionaire can perhaps just be quiet and quit putting his self hating foot in his mouth, as cleverly stated in a Jewish World Review article from December 2, 2003 by Jackie Mason and Raoul Felder. Steven Mnuchin, maybe he can start a group for homeless with the great hypocrite, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, for soon to be homeless former IndyMac depositors and show his company’s investment film, Avatar film to entertain everyone. Perhaps Christopher Flowers can just sing a rendition of Dave Matthews “Gravedigger”, as he has self proclaimed himself a “grave dancer”.

The FDIC negotiations were likely a series of lame duck meetings, followed by, the offer by the ONEWEST investors to “take this token for Indymac & there is more where that came from, if you find yourself in a jam”. OneWest can afford to take banks off the hands of FDIC, keeping them from looking even more like the idiots they are & everyone except the people who EARNED and paid taxes on the cash is happy. Trouble is, they will be called out by those of us who do not give up until we connect all available dots. I hope one of us becomes important enough to listen to in Washington by those who care & know who we are.

Something smells really rotten in D.C., and Wall Street. You decide.

Go write about your comments on this article on the WSJ website.

One West Bank acquires failed First Federal Bank

First Federal Bank of California and Imperial Capital Bank of La Jolla closed

Both are sold immediately to other Southern California institutions. Regulators have closed 140 U.S. banks this year, 16 in California.

  • Related By E. Scott Reckard
  • December 19, 2009

Two more loss-battered Southern California banks were shut down by regulators Friday and immediately sold to two of the largest financial institutions based in the region.

Stung by defaults on tricky adjustable mortgages, 80-year-old First Federal Bank of California was closed by federal savings and loan regulators, with its 39 branches to reopen today as part of OneWest Bank.

Pasadena-based OneWest, created early this year from the ashes of collapsed home lender IndyMac Bank, agreed to assume all of First Federal’s deposits, so no customers will lose money, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said.

In Friday’s other California failure, Imperial Capital Bank of La Jolla, rocked by troubled loans for apartments and commercial mortgages, was dealt off by the FDIC to City National Bank of Los Angeles, which is emerging as one of the survivors of the banking industry’s near-meltdown.

Like OneWest, City National agreed to assume all of the acquired bank’s deposits, even amounts that exceeded the FDIC’s caps on insurance coverage.

Imperial Capital’s nine branches — six in California, one in Maryland and two in Nevada — are to reopen Monday as City National offices.

City National was the largest commercial bank with headquarters in Southern California until Pasadena’s East West Bank agreed last month to take over a failed rival in the Chinese American niche, San Francisco’s United Commercial Bank. That deal beefed up East West, giving it $19 billion in assets to City National’s $18 billion.

The latest combinations gives City National more than $21 billion in assets and OneWest about $24 billion, although such comparisons matter little given the fact that the acquirers will have to spend much of their time downsizing by working through portfolios of distressed loans. Indeed, OneWest’s balance sheet is still stuffed with IndyMac loans that had been targeted for sale before the private market for mortgages dried up, although the FDIC is sharing losses on those loans.

The failures bring to 140 the number of U.S. banks that have gone under this year as many loans made during the housing boom earlier this decade have soured.

Of California’s 16 bank failures this year, First Federal and Imperial Capital rank No. 3 and No. 4, respectively, based on total assets.

OneWest is owned by a group of private equity investors that teamed up this year to buy IndyMac Bank from the FDIC months after the Pasadena thrift failed under the weight of defaults on lightly documented loans. The investors had said they hoped to buy nearby banks that also had run into problems with residential mortgages.

First Federal, a savings and loan originally based in Santa Monica, fit that description, having booked $547 million in losses over the last seven quarters on so-called pay-option adjustable-rate mortgages. Such loans, also known as option ARMs, allowed borrowers to pay so little each month that their loan balances could increase.

Babette Heimbuch, chief executive of First Federal and its parent company, FirstFed Financial Corp., tendered her resignation last week. The S&L had $6.1 billion in total assets and $4.5 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30.

In addition to assuming all of the deposits of the failed bank, OneWest agreed to purchase essentially all of the assets, with the FDIC absorbing some of the losses on them.

OneWest also announced that it would join in what is becoming an industry-wide moratorium on home foreclosures during the holiday season.

City National, which recently moved its headquarters from Beverly Hills to Los Angeles, serves mostly wealthy individuals and small businesses. It has remained well-capitalized despite recent losses on construction and commercial lending.

Imperial Capital, with $4 billion in assets and $2.2 billion in deposits, failed to meet a Dec. 14 deadline set by state regulators to raise $200 million in capital. It had lost $112 million in the first three quarters of this year.

City National is taking on about $3.4 billion of Imperial Capital’s assets. The FDIC agreed to assume a portion of future losses on those assets. The agency said it would keep the remainder of Imperial Capital’s portfolio for now.

“Imperial Capital Bank is a very good fit for City National, given that eight of its nine locations are in communities we serve,” Russell Goldsmith, chief executive of the bank and its parent company, City National Corp., said in a statement.

Because some of Imperial Capital’s branches are close to City National locations, Goldsmith said he expected that some branches would be closed. But others, such as Imperial’s San Francisco site, will be added to City National’s existing 64-branch network, he said.

“We haven’t made any final determinations yet,” he said.

Neither acquiring bank released details about layoffs, which normally follow bank mergers because they tend to create overlap not only in the branches but also in back-office operations.

City National said it would keep Imperial Capital’s 140 employees on the payroll, with health benefits, through the holidays while studying the issue.

The failure of First Federal is expected to cost the deposit insurance fund $146.3 million. Losses on Imperial Capital’s failure were estimated at $619.2 million.

Earlier Friday, regulators closed five banks in other states: RockBridge Commercial Bank in Atlanta; New South Federal Savings Bank of Irondale, Ala.; People’s First Community Bank of Panama City, Fla.; Independent Bankers’ Bank of Springfield, Ill.; and Citizens State Bank, New Baltimore, Mich.

scott.reckard@latimes.com

Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times

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