Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Ocwen Nose Dive

from bloomberg




Ocwen Financial Corp. (OCN) plunged as much as 31 percent, the most ever, after agreeing to a settlement that prevents it from acquiring mortgage-servicing rights until the company makes improvements to satisfy New York regulators.


Executive Chairman William Erbey will step down from his roles at Ocwen and related companies under the accord announced today by New York’s Department of Financial Services. Ocwen also agreed to provide $150 million in relief for borrowers and hire a monitor.
Ocwen fell 26 percent to $16.26 at 2:55 p.m. in New York and earlier dropped as low as $15.04, the biggest intraday decline since its September 1996 initial public offering. The settlement is the culmination of a yearlong probe that came to light in February, when Ocwen said it was putting its bid to acquire $39 billion in mortgage servicing rights from Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) on “indefinite hold” at the request of DFS Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky.
Since then, Lawsky’s office has disclosed various problems at Ocwen, the largest non-bank servicer of subprime loans in the U.S., starting with what it calls conflicts of interest involving Erbey, who owns stakes in affiliated companies.
Lawsky’s office has criticized Ocwen for funneling a share of its foreclosure-related business to the affiliated entities. He has cited examples where the company backdated letters to borrowers, making it more difficult for the homeowners to modify their mortgages.

Independent Directors

In addition to the $150 million payment for homeowner relief in New York, Ocwen will add two independent directors to its board who will not own shares in any related entity.
In the last five years, Ocwen has emerged as one of the country’s largest mortgage servicing providers, acquiring rights to hundreds of billions of dollars of unpaid balances on residential loans from companies including Litton Loan Servicing LP, Saxon Mortgage Services Inc. and Homeward Residential Holdings Inc.
The settlement is the latest in which Lawsky has pressed for removal of a high-ranking executive. Earlier this year, as part of a multi-agency settlement with the BNP Paribas SA (BNP) over sanctions violations, Lawsky insisted that 13 people, including the group chief operating officer, leave the French bank.
To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Farrell in New York atgregfarrell@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sara Forden at sforden@bloomberg.netGregory Mott, Dan Reichl

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Islamic State: US air strikes kill several 'senior and mid-level' IS leaders in Iraq, Pentagon says

from abc.net.au



Posted 
Several leaders of the Islamic State group in Iraq have been killed in US air strikes in recent weeks, dealing a blow to the jihadist forces, the Pentagon says.
"I can confirm that since mid-November, targeted coalition airstrikes successfully killed multiple senior and mid-level leaders," US Rear Admiral John Kirby said in a statement.
"We believe that the loss of these key leaders degrades ISIL's ability to command and control current operations against Iraqi security forces, including Kurdish and other local forces in Iraq," he said, using an alternative acronym for the jihadists.
"While we do not discuss the intelligence and targeting details of our operations, it is important to note that leadership, command and control nodes, facilities, and equipment are always part of our targeting calculus."
The strikes showed "the coalition's resolve" in helping Iraqi forces take on the IS group, he said.
The bombing raids were carried out mostly in northern Iraq, defence officials said, but they did not say where each leader was killed.
The attacks came amid a wider effort to pile pressure on the IS group before a major counter-offensive in coming months and while Kurdish forces made gains against the militants around Sinjar near the Syrian border.

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's deputy among those killed: US

US officials named three figures who were killed in the targeted raids, and said other "mid-level" leaders were also slain.
The most significant figure was identified as Haji Mutazz, better known as Abu Muslim al-Turkmani, who was deputy to the group's chief, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Pentagon officials said a second senior militant, referred to as Abd al Basit, believed to be overseeing the group's military operations, was also killed.
In addition, a third militant, known as Radwin Talib, described as a "mid-level" figure overseeing the captured city of Mosul, was killed at some point after mid-September, officials said.
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) first reported that US forces had taken out several key leaders, quoting the military's top officer, General Martin Dempsey.
"These are high-value targets, senior leadership," General Dempsey told the WSJ.
The newspaper, quoting unnamed officials, said between December 3 and December 9, air raids killed Basit and Turkmani.
The US launched air strikes against the IS group on August 8 in Iraq, and expanded the raids to Syria on September 23.
A coalition of Western and Arab countries has joined the US-led air campaign, which focused this week on IS militants around Sinjar.
Manhunts against senior leaders have become a common tactic in Washington's war against Al Qaeda and affiliated extremists over the past decade.
Since the attacks of September 11, 2001, US intelligence agencies have repeatedly targeted senior leaders in drone air strikes in Pakistan and the American military have conducted frequent raids on the ground and in the air against senior insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan.
AFP

Monday, December 8, 2014

Despite U.S. Warnings, Iraqis Push for Winter Offensive in Mosul

from nytimes


By ERIC SCHMITTDEC. 8, 2014






MANAMA, Bahrain — Allied warplanes and Iraqi ground troops are increasingly isolating Islamic State militants in the captured city of Mosul, prompting Iraqi officials to push for a winter offensive to wrest control of the area months ahead of the previous schedule — and over American warnings.
The ground campaign to retake Iraq’s second-largest city from the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS, is still most likely many weeks away, American officials said. Its timing will depend on the pace of training for additional Iraqi ground troops to retake the city and for a holding force afterward, as well as sorting out a brewing dispute between Baghdad and Washington over whether Iraq is ready to carry out such a complex urban battle.
The United States and its coalition partners have carried out more than 660 airstrikes in Iraq, making it more difficult for the Islamic State to mass large numbers of forces or to travel in convoys. These attacks, including air raids in the past few days and Iraqi ground operations in the north and west, have made it more difficult for the Islamic State to resupply and reinforce its fighters in Mosul, which ISIS seized in June when it swept in from Syria and made its headquarters in Iraq.
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But there is no indication that the militants have lost their fighting spirit, and there are still thousands of them. At least several hundred fighters are in and around Mosul, according to an American intelligence official.
Even if Iraqi forces oust the Islamic State from their territory, the strategy would do nothing to deal with the militant group’s safe haven in Syria. A successful campaign to counter the Islamic State in Iraq might actually exacerbate the situation across the border if militants from Mosul and elsewhere simply return to Syria, where the Obama administration’s plan to train and equip moderate rebels is lagging.
Any military campaign to retake Mosul in early 2015 would also push closer a decision by President Obama on whether scores of United States military advisers should leave the relative safety of the command posts in Iraq, where they work now, to join Iraqi and Kurdish forces on the front lines of a challenging urban fight.
The United States currently does not plan to advise Iraqi forces below the level of a brigade, which in the Iraqi Army usually has about 2,000 troops. It is also unclear under what circumstances the White House might allow American advisers to accompany Iraqi units onto the battlefield or to call in airstrikes, as Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has indicated might be necessary. Relatively small numbers of American Special Forces, or Green Berets, worked alongside allied Afghan militia units in 2001 to successfully rout the Taliban army, and Qaeda leaders living there as Taliban guests, in the early months of that war.
“I’m not predicting at this point that I would recommend that those forces in Mosul and along the border would need to be accompanied by U.S. forces but we’re certainly considering it,” General Dempsey said at a House hearing last month.
American and Iraqi officials had previously confirmed that planning was underway for a broad military campaign to dislodge the Islamic State from Iraq to begin in the spring. But these new indications of an offensive for Mosul early in the year show that pieces of the effort could be underway sooner than previously thought.
Allied warplanes and armed drones have carried out more than 30 airstrikes near Mosul in the past two weeks. The strikes have damaged or destroyed enemy bunkers, artillery, combat vehicles and even bulldozers erecting earthen fortifications, and killed several top Islamic State leaders, officials said.
“We have to beat ISIS in Mosul,” Hoshyar Zebari, Iraq’s finance minister and a former foreign minister, said at a security conference here on Friday.
Retaking Mosul would likely involve bloody, block-by-block fighting, based on previous urban campaigns in Iraq, like Falluja in 2004, American officials say. Success in Mosul would depend largely on the ability of the new Shiite-led Iraqi government of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to win the cooperation of the local police, many of whom are Sunnis, as well as Kurdish fighters and Sunni tribesmen.
“I’ve spent a lot of time in Mosul. It is difficult terrain,” Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III, the head of the Pentagon’s Central Command, said in October. “So we want to make sure that when we take that on, that we have the adequate capability and we’ve set the conditions right to get things done.”
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PLAY VIDEO|4:33

ISIS’ Dark Oil Trade

ISIS’ Dark Oil Trade

How can ISIS be stopped? Cripple the organization’s oil smuggling trade.
 Video by Emily B. Hager on Publish DateDecember 1, 2014. Photo by Karim Sahib/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images.
General Austin, a former top allied commander in Iraq, added, “Certainly it will be an important fight and a difficult fight.”
USA Today last week reported some elements of a possible accelerated Iraqi offensive.
On the heels of a string of military victories, including breaking the siege of an oil refinery in Baiji, and the liberation of Jurf al-Sahkar, southwest of Baghdad, and Jalawla and Sadiya, in Diyala Province, some newly confident Iraqi officials have been pressing the Americans to back a major operation in Mosul sooner than they would like.
Among the Iraqis advocating for an offensive soon in Mosul are some officials close to the prime minister, as well as high-level officials in the Ministry of Defense.
American officials in Baghdad, however, have stressed that the Iraqi military lacks the necessary combat power and logistical capacity, noting that the initial Iraqi force the United States is now advising will consist of only nine Iraqi brigades and three similar Kurdish pesh merga units, or roughly 24,000 troops. The Iraqi spring offensive had called for at least doubling that force before mounting the assault.
Moreover, American officials say there are not enough local Sunni forces to hold the territory in Mosul once it is cleared by the security forces.
Instead, the Americans are urging the Iraqis to push forward with a plan to raise National Guard units, which would be composed of local forces. But Parliament has yet to take up a draft bill in the face of opposition from some Shiite leaders, and there is a growing sense that the effort is likely to be stalled for some time.
As the Iraqi security forces, along with Kurdish pesh merga units and Shiite militias aligned with Iran, rack up victories, there are growing calls to allow these fighters to move on Sunni-dominated areas such as Mosul and Tikrit. The Americans have opposed such a move because they worry it will deepen sectarian divisions and perhaps set off a Sunni-Shiite civil war.
Hadi al-Ameri, an Iraqi lawmaker and the head of the Badr Corps, a Shiite militia with close links to Iran that has been crucial in the recent victories, complained in a recent interview that the United States and its coalition partners “don’t want the people of Iraq to liberate Iraq.”

Mosul residents and Iraqi security officials who monitor the city say that the Islamic State has largely failed to provide civilian services like electricity and potable water, angering even residents who cheered the militants’ arrival in June.
But few see local residents rising up against the group because of how effectively ISIS has chased out, destroyed or co-opted other armed elements in the city, and especially anyone tied to the government in Baghdad.
Many in Mosul still harbor deep distrust of the Iraqi Army and its cooperation with Shiite militias. They say that ISIS has so thoroughly mixed its fighters in with the city’s civilian population that any effort to push them out could lead to a protracted guerrilla campaign that could endanger residents.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Hong Kong protests: Mongkok ground retaken from police

from bbc





Pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong have retaken streets in the Mongkok district cleared by the authorities just a few hours earlier.
Their victory came after clashes with riot police using batons and pepper spray.
Wielding open umbrellas as their only weapons, an estimated 9,000 demonstrators pushed back police lines.
They managed to retake territory south of a major intersection, stopping traffic in both directions.
The protesters are angry about China's restrictions on who can stand in Hong Kong's next leadership election in 2017.
Earlier, police said they had arrested 26 people for charges including assault during clashes on Friday evening. Fifteen police officers were injured in the clashes, they added.
Several protesters were seen being knocked to the ground during the latest scuffles, AP news agency reported.
Protesters scuffle with riot police in the occupied area in the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong, 17 October 2014Protesters opened their umbrellas as they pushed against police lines
Protesters build a barrier to stop riot police moving in the occupied area in the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong, 18 October 2014Protesters began rebuilding barricades after they retook some areas of Mong Kok
Protesters cry as some of the protesters are beat by riot polices in the occupied area in the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong, 18 October 2014Many of the protesters are students and young people
Protest group Occupy Central issued a statement (in Chinese) saying that the clearance operations ordered by the government had "triggered a new wave of occupations and worsened relations between police and citizens".
The Mong Kok camp in Kowloon is an offshoot of the original protest site around government offices in Admiralty on Hong Kong Island.
Protesters and police are also congregating at Admiralty, although there are no reports of clashes.
'Talks scheduled'
Earlier on Friday, Alex Chow from the Federation of Students said both his group and the government had agreed to meet next Tuesday, in talks that would be broadcast live on radio, the South China Morning Post reported.
Hong Kong leader CY Leung said on Thursday that the government was ready for talks, but China would not retract its decision to vet candidates for the 2017 elections.
The last time talks were scheduled they were cancelled by Chief Secretary Carrie Lam, who said it was impossible to have constructive dialogue while the occupation of city streets continued.
Protester numbers have dropped off since the start of the month, when tens of thousands were on the streets. But tensions escalated this week, with violent clashes as police cleared an underpass on Lung Wo Road near the chief executive's offices.
A video showing plainclothes police officers beating an unarmed protester, who is a member of the pro-democracy Civic Party, also sparked outrage.
Police said seven officers had been suspended pending an investigation.
line
Hong Kong democracy timeline
  • 1997: UK gives Hong Kong back to China under a 1984 agreement giving it "a high degree of autonomy" for 50 years
  • 2004: China says it must approve any changes to Hong Kong's election laws
  • June-July 2014: Pro-democracy activists hold an unofficial referendum on political reform; both sides hold large rallies
  • 31 August 2014: China says it will allow direct elections in 2017 but will pre-approve candidates
  • 22 September 2014: Student groups launch a week-long boycott of classes
  • 28 September 2014: Occupy Central and student protests join forces and take over central Hong Kong
  • 2017: Direct elections for chief executive due to take place
line

Sunday, October 12, 2014

ISIS approaches Baghdad as U.S. airstrikes continue

from cbs







|CBS News' Elizabeth Palmer reports from Baghdad on the continued fight against militants with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.


Saturday, October 11, 2014

Third car bomb in Baghdad on Saturday night kills 15

from reuters

BAGHDAD Sat Oct 11, 2014 2:01pm EDT


(Reuters) - A third lethal car bomb hit a Shi'ite neighborhood in Baghdad on Saturday night, killing 15 people and wounding 44 others, a police officer and a medical official said.
The suicide attacker detonated his car on a busy street in the Shaoula neighborhood, where a parked car had exploded 30 minutes earlier by an ice cream shop. That attack left eight dead and 18 wounded.
A suicide car bomb also went off in the adjoining neighborhood of Kadhimiya, killing 11 and wounding 27.

(Reporting by Ned Parker; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Still no show: North Korea's Kim misses Party birthday

from usatoday

Kim Jong Un


Calum MacLeod, USA TODAY12:42 a.m. EDT October 10, 2014





BEIJING – The wait continues, so the speculation mounts, after North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un appeared a no-show Friday for a key political anniversary in Pyongyang.
Kim has not been seen in public since Sept. 3, sparking rumors of a serious illness or even a coup in the highly secretive state whose nuclear ambitions rattle the region.
In Seoul, a South Korean official played down the significance of Kim's absence. "It seems that Kim Jong Un's rule is in normal operation," Lim Byeong-cheol, spokesman for the south's unification ministry, told a press briefing Friday, reported the Yonhap news agency. He cited the North's dispatch of a top-level party-military delegation to the south last week, during which a senior figure conveyed Kim's greetings to South Korean President Park Geun-hye.
Although prolonged absences by North Korean leaders are not uncommon, this marks the longest such disappearance since Kim became Supreme Leader following the death of his father Kim Jong Il in 2011. The most recent television footage showed Kim, thought to be 30 or 31, limping heavily.
State media, in a rare comment on the ruling dynasty's personal matters, later said Kim was suffering from unspecified "discomfort." Gout seems a contender, given Kim's reported love of rich foods and alcohol, but the Reuters news agency, quoting an unnamed source Friday, said Kim had hurt his leg, required 100 days to recover, and remained in full control.
Kim was injured when he joined generals he had ordered to perform physical drills, the source said. North Korea's state-run television is usually dominated by propaganda footage of Kim providing "on-the-spot guidance" to people at farms, factories, schools and seemingly in every other aspect of North Korean life.
Despite the absence of new material since Sept. 3, Kim remains front and center as the third generation of the ruling family's personality cult, an all-pervasive phenomenon that effectively serves as the state religion. "Dear comrade Kim Jong Un is the symbol of dignity and invincibility of the Workers' Party and the banner of all victories and glory," said an editorial Friday in the Rodong Sinmun newspaper, a mouthpiece of the ruling party, Reuters reported.
If healthy, Kim would have been the central figure at events marking Party Foundation Day, Oct. 10. This year, the 69th anniversary, carries less significance and symbolism than the 70th in 2015, but Kim did attend commemorative activities on this date for the past two years, including a midnight ritual at the palace housing the embalmed bodies of his father and grandfather, Kim Il Sung, the regime founder and "Eternal President."
In a sign of global interest in Kim's whereabouts, China's state news agency Xinhua, one of the few foreign media outlets stationed in Pyongyang, dispatched a journalist to stake out the palace late Thursday, but found no police or security guards nearby that would suggest a Kim visit.
Xinhua and other Chinese media would not be permitted to report such speculation about their own Communist Party leaders, but have taken a sometimes critical view of Kim's belligerent behavior, despite Beijing being North Korea's only significant ally.
By late Friday morning local time, North Korean state media had not reported any Kim visit to Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, although it remained possible that reports later Friday could feature Kim's attendance at other anniversary events.
Some analysts cautioned that a coup remained unlikely. "Despite his extended absence, available evidence suggests Kim is still alive and still in power," Korea analyst John G. Grisafi wrote on the NKNews website Friday. "The amount of influence and power held by officials certainly varies and Kim, who is young and inexperienced, is not likely to be calling all the shots himself," he said. "However, North Korea's government is using a dynastic system and having a member of the Kim family -- or the "Paektu bloodline" -- in the top spot is critical to maintaining this system," wrote Grisafi. "Kim may need his advisers and officials, but they need him too."


Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Second Possible Ebola Case Reported In Texas

from huffpost


Posted: Updated: 
EBOLA
A person who is said to have had contact with Dallas Ebola patient Thomas Eric Duncan was taken to the hospital after reporting feeling ill, the city of Frisco, Texas, announced Wednesday.
NBC Dallas-Fort Worth reported that the person showing symptoms is an employee of the Dallas County Sheriff's Office, and had been in the apartment Duncan was staying in before he was hospitalized Sept. 28. Duncan passed away Wednesday morning.
WFAA reported that the patient is Sgt. Michael Monnig, and that Monnig went into the apartment unit without wearing protective gear in order to have a quarantine order signed.
CDC Director Tom Frieden said that he could not confirm whether or not the patient has definite symptoms of Ebola or if he had direct contact with Duncan. The state had been monitoring 48 people who may have come into contact with Duncan, but Frieden said that none of them had exhibited any suggestive symptoms.
(October 8) At 12:32 p.m. today, October 8, Frisco dispatch received a call from Care Now, 301 Main Street, regarding a patient exhibiting signs and symptoms of Ebola. The patient claims to have had contact with the Dallas ‘patient zero’. Frisco firefighter-paramedics are in the process of transporting the patient. They are also in the process of examining clinical staff and other facility patrons. That number other people impacted is unknown. No other information is confirmed, available at this time.
Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas also confirmed Wednesday that a patient was admitted to the hospital's emergency room over possible exposure to the Ebola virus.
"Right now, there are more questions than answers about this case," the hospital statement said. "Our professional staff of nurses and doctors is prepared to examine the patient, discuss any findings with appropriate agencies and officials. We are on alert with precautions and systems in place. At the same time, we are caring for routine cases which are completely separate in operations."
CBS News reporter J.D. Miles tweeted this photo of employees being escorted out of the Care Now clinic:
This is a developing story and will be updated.