Michael Hudson (reporter)

Michael Hudson (reporter)

Michael Hudson (reporter) (born 1961, Richmond, Virginia, USA) is an American investigative reporter and author. Hudson currently writes about business and finance for the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit journalism organization.[1] He has worked as a staff writer for The Roanoke Times in Virginia and The Wall Street Journal in New York and as a senior investigator with the Center for Responsible Lending, a non-profit research and policy group. He was co-author of Merchants of Misery: How Corporate America Profits from Poverty, Common Courage Press, 1996. He is also the author of The Monster: How a gang of predatory lenders and Wall Street bankers fleeced Americaand spawned a global crisis, which will be published in October 2010 by Times Books.[2] The book focuses on two firmsAmeriquest Mortgage and Lehman Brothersthat were key players in the rise and fall of the subprime mortgage industry.

Contents

Highlights

Columbia Journalism Review has credited Hudson as the reporter whobeat the world on subprime abuses.” [3] Hudson began investigating the subprime industry in the early 1990s. He shared a John Hancock Award for financial reporting and a Sidney Hillman Award for social justice journalism for stories in the Southern Exposure Magazines Fall 1993 issue titledPoverty Inc.,” about subprime lenders and other businesses that market to low-income and minority consumers. Those stories were also named as a finalist for a National Magazine Award. Hudson shared a George Polk Award for magazine reporting and a Harry Chapin Media Award for stories in the Summer 2003 issue of Southern Exposure about Citigroups subprime mortgage lending operations.[4]

In February 2005, Hudson and Los Angeles Times staff writer Scott Reckard broke a story aboutboiler roomsales tactics at Ameriquest Mortgage, the nations largest subprime lender and sponsor of the 2005 Super Bowl half-time show.[5] Columbia Journalism Review called theboiler roomstory and a follow-up piece “[t]wo of the most revealing stories on the culture that overtook the lending industry.” [6] Ameriquest later agreed to pay a $325 million predatory lending settlement with authorities in 49 states and the District of Columbia.

In June 2008, Irelands Sunday Business Post cited Hudsons 1996 book, Merchants of Misery, fordescrib[ing], in great detail, how mortgage-backed securities invented in the 1980s were making a large pool of money available to shady lenders who were making predatory loans to very poor customers at very high rates.” [7] At the Center for Public Integrity, Hudson has focused on whistleblower issues and other financial stories, writing about the U.S. Department of Labors record in protecting workers who filed for whistleblower status under the Sarbanes-Oxley corporate reform act[8] and about a former Fannie Mae consultant who claimed the mortgage giant had bungled its stewardship of the federal governments foreclosure-prevention effort throughmismanagement and gross waste of public funds.” [9]

Critics

Some business representatives have been critical of Hudsons reporting. Lawyers for Ford Motor Company criticized Hudsons 1990s reporting on Associates Financial Services, the Ford subprime lending subsidiary that was later the subject of a predatory lending settlement with the Federal Trade Commission. The lawyers called Hudsons book, Merchants of Misery, which included a chapter on Ford and Associates, “impertinentandscandalous.” IndyMac Bank objected to a June 30, 2008, report that Hudson wrote for the Center for Responsible Lending, IndyMac: What Went Wrong?, which found evidence that the bank hadengaged in unsound and abusive lending during the mortgage boom, routinely making loans without regard to borrowersability to repay.” [10] Shortly before the bank was seized by federal regulators, an IndyMac spokesman dismissed the report as ahit piecethatrelies on unsubstantiated anecdotal evidence.” [11] The U.S. Department of the Treasury inspector generals office later reported that its investigation indicated IndyMac had donelittle, if any, review of borrower qualifications, including income, assets and employment.” [12]

Publications and broadcast appearances

Hudsons has written as a free-lancer for a number of publications, including The Nation, Mother Jones, Forbes, The Hill, New York Times, Washington Post, AARP: The Magazine, Washington Monthly and National Law Journal. He has appeared on radio and TV on CSPAN, “NBC Nightly Newsand National Public RadiosMorning Edition,” “Talk of the NationandFresh Air with Terry Gross.”

External links

References

  1. ^ http://www.publicintegrity.org
  2. ^ http://us.macmillan.com/themonster
  3. ^ Ryan Chittum, “Opening Bell: Swiss Mess,” CJR.org, July 01, 2008. http://www.cjr.org/the_audit/opening_bell_91.php
  4. ^ Michael Hudson, “Banking on Misery,” Southern Exposure, Summer 2003. http://www.affil.org/uploads/vx/y-/vxy-CATOv8FBc54XYhu4SA/Mike-Hudson-Summer-03.pdf
  5. ^ Mike Hudson and E. Scott Reckard, “Workers Say Lender Ran 'Boiler Rooms',” Los Angeles Times, Feb. 4, 2005. http://www.latimes.com/ameriquest
  6. ^ Dean Starkman, “Boiler Room: The business press is missing the crooked heart of the credit crisis,” Columbia Journalism Review, September/October 2008. http://www.cjr.org/essay/boiler_room.php?page=all
  7. ^ Kathleen Barrington, “Main Street misery moves to the marketsSunday Business Post, June 8, 2008. http://archives.tcm.ie/businesspost/2008/06/08/story33475.asp
  8. ^ Michael Hudson, “Federal Bureaucracy Dismisses Most Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Claims,” July 22, 2010. http://www.publicintegrity.org/articles/entry/2275/
  9. ^ Michael Hudson, “Whistleblower: Fannie Mae Bungled HAMP Anti-Foreclosure Program,” Aug. 6, 2010. http://www.publicintegrity.org/articles/entry/2305/
  10. ^ Mike Hudson, “INDYMAC: WHAT WENT WRONG?” Center for Responsible Lending, June 30, 2008. http://www.responsiblelending.org/mortgage-lending/research-analysis/indymac_what_went_wrong.pdf
  11. ^ Richard Clough, “IndyMac born and died in Countrywide's shadow,” Los Angeles Business Journal, July 21, 2008. http://www.allbusiness.com/banking-finance/banking-lending-credit-services-mortgage/11582314-1.html
  12. ^ Office of Inspector General, Department of the Treasury, “SAFETY AND SOUNDNESS: Material Loss Review of IndyMac Bank, FSB,” Feb. 26, 2009 OIG-09-032 http://www.scribd.com/doc/13059311/Indymac-Bank-Thrift-Financial-Report

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