TS in Ohio sent this report. If you studied the Countrywide case regarding fees added during bankruptcy you will see the same is happening at HSBC. Read this report carefully. Compare it to what attorneys are saying about Countrywide adding additional fees when the bankruptcy court is handling the payments. Here is a report from a homeowner in Ohio:
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AK in Oregon sent this op-ed piece. We are publishing it here instead of in our complaints blog:
“HSBC- predatory lenders who slam insurance, offer over market rates and fees, and treat employees with disrespect.
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Is this legal precedent that HSBC Finance should worry about? Rejecting the arguments of Countrywide executives and directors that they were unaware of lax loan operations that led to ballooning defaults, Judge Mariana R. Pfaelzer of Federal District Court in Los Angeles ruled Tuesday that she found confidential witness accounts in the shareholder complaint to be credible and that they suggested “a widespread company culture that encouraged employees to push mortgages through without regard to underwriting standards.”
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Knight Vinke, the activist investor, launched a fresh attack on HSBC yesterday, accusing Europe’s biggest bank of flattering its US sub-prime losses by failing to write down $30 billion (£15 billion) worth of mortgage assets. Knight Vinke may have a point, as HSBC claims to have US losses under control, while almost every other economist says the worst is yet to come, the economy is in a recession, and foreclosures are at the highest rate since the great depression of 1939. Who is right?
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An HSBC Finance employee advised us of this frightening move by HSBC, saying “As a current employee I am appauled to see Beneficial and HFC’s latest trick which seems to be avoiding federal caps on interest rates. As of May 5th they rolled out their new pricing sheets with rates set above the maximum Sect 32 rates set by the goverment. How can they do this? Simple – force customers to take “advantage” of their Pay Right Rewards system that lowers your interest rate by a whole .25% every year that you pay on time. This allows them to magically show you a much lower APR than the true rate you will be paying. The APR they show you assumes you will be keeping the loan for the full 30yrs and getting all 12 of the rate reductions.
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