뉴스 - 미국·캐나다

美FHFA, 모기지 관련 월가은행 고소 방침

정석_수학 2011. 9. 3. 08:07


FHFA, 모기지 관련 월가은행 고소 방침

아시아경제 - ‎16 시간 전‎
[아시아경제 박병희 기자]미국 연방주택금융청(FHFA)이 모기지(주택담보대출)와 관련해 10여개 대형 은행들을 고소할 계획이라고 뉴욕타임스가 1일(현지시간) 보도했다. 투자자들에게 모기지 증권의 가치를 제대로 알려주지 않은 채 수십억 달러 수익을 노렸다는 ...

美 대형 은행, 수십억불 MBS 소송 `비상`

머니투데이 - ‎13 시간 전‎
미국의 대형 모기지 업체 패니 매와 프레디 맥을 관리하고 있는 미국 연방주택금융국(FHFA)이 모기지담보증권(MBS) 손실과 관련해 10여개 은행을 대상으로 소송을 제기할 것으로 보인다고 1일(현지시간) 미국 언론들이 전했다. FHFA는 3년 전 은행들이 MBS를 만들어 ...

美 대형은행들, 모기지증권 판매 줄소송 `위기`

이데일리 - ‎17 시간 전‎
[이데일리 양미영 기자] 미국 대형은행들이 서브프라임 위기 전 모기지증권을 무분별하게 판 혐의로 연방주택공사(FHFA)로부터 줄소송을 당할 위기에 처했다. 1일(현지시간) 뉴욕타임스(NYT)에 따르면 FHFA는 JP모간과 골드만삭스, 뱅크 오브 아메리카(BoA), ...

미국 대형 은행들 줄소송 당한다

한겨레 - ‎10 시간 전‎
[한겨레] 이형섭 기자 미국 연방주택금융국(FHFA)이 2008년 금융위기를 부른 주택담보대출(모기지)과 관련해 뱅크오브아메리카, 제이피(JP)모건 체이스, 골드만삭스, 도이체방크 등 대형 은행들을 고소할 계획이라고 <뉴욕 타임스>가 1일 보도했다. ...

美주택당국, 17개 은행에 무더기 모기지 소송

머니투데이 - ‎2 시간 전‎
미국의 대형 모기지 업체 패니 매와 프레디 맥을 관리하고 있는 미국 연방주택금융국(FHFA)은 3년 전 은행들이 모기지담보증권(MBS)을 만들어 판매하면서, 이 상품의 위험성을 제대로 고지하지 않았다며 이의를 제기한 바 있다. 내달 7일은 이의를 제기한지 꼭 3 ...

보베 "모기지 차환 프로그램 실패할 것"

머니투데이 - ‎17 시간 전‎
로치데일증권의 유명 애널리스트 리처드 보베는 미국 정부가 고려중인 것으로 알려진 대규모 `주택담보대출(모기지) 차환 프로그램`이 결국은 실패로 끝날 것이라고 주장했다. 리처드 보베 애널리스트는 1일(현지시간) 자신의 분석보고서와 CNBC와의 인터뷰 등을 ...







Feds Plan Mortgage Suit Against Banks: Report

Stock quotes in this article:BACGSJPM 

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Bank of America (BAC_)JPMorgan Chase (JPM_) and several other large banks will be sued by a federal housing regulator over billions in mortgage loans that were packaged and sold to investors, according to the New York Times.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) will file a lawsuit in the next several days against "more than a dozen big banks" saying that they misrepresented the quality of loans later bundled into mortgage-backed securities (MBS), according to the article.

The newspaper cites three sources familiar with the matter, adding that the deadline to file the legal action is September 6.

The suit will argue that the banks did not comply with federal securities laws by failing to perform due diligence on thousands of loans which were backed by either false or inadequate information. Many of the loans later defaulted and MBS investors faced severe losses.

The FHFA oversees government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Both housing agencies own a total of $30 billion in MBS investments, the article states.

The federal lawsuit comes also comes on the heels of several bank missteps in regards to mortgages.

On Monday the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.filed an objection to $8.5 billion investor settlement with Bank of America over poorly performing and documented loans.

Earlier Thursday it was also reported that a settlement was reached between Goldman Sachs(GS_) and the State of New York over so-called "robo-sigining" practices. In those cases, state regulators accused banks of falsifying or ignoring documentation requirements on home foreclosures.








Federal Regulators Sue Big Banks Over Mortgages
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ and KEVIN ROOSE
Published: September 2, 2011
 
A bruising legal fight pitting the country’s most powerful banks against the full force of the United States government began Friday, as federal regulators filed suits against 17 financial institutions that sold the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac nearly $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities that later soured.

The suits are the latest legal salvo fired at the banks accusing them of misdeeds during the housing boom. Investors fled financial shares Friday amid growing concern that the litigation could last for years and undermine earnings and balance sheets in the process.

The complaints were filed just as the stock market closed Friday afternoon, but with word leaking out of the impending legal action during the trading session, shares of Bank of America fell more than 8.3 percent, while JPMorgan Chase dropped 4.6 percent and Goldman fell 4.5 percent.

“The suits only add to the uncertainty that dogs the industry,” said Mike Mayo, an analyst with Crédit Agricole. “Banks should pay for what they did wrong, but at the same time they shouldn’t be treated as a big piñata that has the effect of delaying the housing recovery. If banks have to pay for loans they made five years ago, are they going to make new ones?”

After the savings and loan crisis in the late 1980s and early 1990s, years of litigation followed. The mortgage bust and the subsequent financial crisis have spawned a similar legal fight, said Jaret Seiberg, a financial policy analyst with MF Global in Washington. “It’s going to be exceedingly difficult and take years to play out,” he said. “There’s not much incentive for either side to settle.”

The litigation represents a more intense effort by the federal government to go after the financial services industry for its supposed mortgage failures.

Indeed, the cases were brought on the basis of 64 subpoenas issued a year ago, giving the government an edge in its investigation that private investors suing the banks lack.

The Obama administration as well as regulators like the Federal Reserve have been criticized for going too easy on the banks, which benefited from a $700 billion bailout package shortly after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in the autumn 2008.

Much of that money has been repaid by the banks — but the rescue of the mortgage giants Fannie and Freddie has already cost taxpayers $153 billion, and the federal government estimates the effort could cost $363 billion through 2013.

Even though the banks already face high legal bills from actions brought by other plaintiffs, including private investors, the suits filed Friday could cost the banks far more. In the case against Bank of America, for example, the suit claims that Fannie and Freddie bought more than $57 billion worth of risky mortgage securities from the bank and two companies it also acquired, Merrill Lynch and Countrywide Financial.

In addition to suing the companies, the complaints also identified individuals at many institutions responsible for the machinery of turning subprime mortgages into securities that somehow earned a AAA grade from the rating agencies.

The filing did not cite a figure for the total losses the government wanted to recover, but in a similar case brought in July against UBS, the F.H.F.A. is trying to recover $900 million in losses on $4.5 billion in securities. A similar 20 percent claim against Bank of America could equal a $10 billion hit.

In a suit that identifies 23 securities that Bank of America sold for $6 billion, the company “caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in an amount to be determined at trial.”

Within minutes of the filing of the suits, several banks responded with a preview of the legal arguments they will make in the coming months, namely that Fannie and Freddie were sophisticated investors who should have known the securities were not without risk, and that the losses were caused not by fraud or misrepresentation but by underlying difficulties in the housing market.
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In a statement, Bank of America said Fannie and Freddie “claimed to understand the risks inherent in investing in subprime securities and continued to invest heavily in those securities even after their regulator told them they did not have the risk management capabilities to do so.” In spite of that warning, Bank of America said, the government-controlled mortgage giants “are now seeking to hold other market participants responsible for their losses.”

Other large banks also assembled huge amounts of so-called private label mortgage-backed securities for Fannie and Freddie that declined sharply in value after the housing bubble burst in 2007. JPMorgan Chase sold $33 billion, while Morgan Stanley sold over $10 billion and Goldman Sachs sold more than $11 billion. A who’s who of foreign banks were also big bundlers and sellers of these securities, like Deutsche Bank with $14.2 billion, Royal Bank of Scotland at $30.4 billion, and Credit Suisse selling $14.1 billion. All were sued Friday.

“We believe the claims brought by the F.H.F.A. are unfounded,” said Frank Kelly, a spokesman for Deutsche Bank. “Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are the epitome of a sophisticated investor, having issued trillions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities and purchased hundreds of billions of dollars more, often after hand-picking the loans they now claim should not have been included in the offerings.“

Buried in the filings themselves, however, is a damning portrait of the excesses of the housing bubble, when borrowers were able to obtain home loans without basic proof of income or creditworthiness, and banks appeared only too happy to mine profits taking the risky loans and assembling them into securities that could be sold to investors.

In the complaint against Goldman Sachs, for example, the suit says that “Goldman was not content to simply let poor loans pass into its securitizations.” In addition, the giant investment bank “took the fraud further, affirmatively seeking to profit from this knowledge.”

When an outside analytics firm, Clayton, identified potential problems in the underlying mortgages Goldman was turning into securities, the suit said, “Goldman simply ignored and did not disclose the red flags revealed by Clayton’s review.” Goldman Sachs declined to comment, as did JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse and Citigroup.

Similar behavior in terms of warnings provided by Clayton transpired at Bank of America, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, RBS and UBS, according to the complaints.




http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-09-02/bank-of-america-shares-slump-on-concern-of-lawsuit-by-u-s-finance-agency.html


U.S. Said to Prepare Mortgage Lawsuit Against BofA, JPMorgan

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Bank of America Corp. signage is displayed at a branch in Times Square, New York. Photographer: Guy Calaf/Bloomberg

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Paul Miller, managing director at FBR Capital Markets Corp., talks about a potential lawsuit by the U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency against Bank of America Corp. and other lenders over faulty mortgage loans. Miller speaks with Adam Johnson on Bloomberg Television's "Fast Forward." (Source: Bloomberg)

Bank of America Corp. (BAC) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) are among lenders that may face a lawsuit by the U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency over faulty mortgage loans, according to six people with knowledge of the matter.

The agency representing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is likely to act before next week’s deadline for legal claims, according to the people, who weren’t authorized to speak publicly. The amount may dwarf the $20 billion sought from the biggest mortgage servicers in a separate probe of lending and foreclosures by 50 state attorneys general, one person said.

Bank of America led declines in shares of U.S. lenders after the suit was reported in the New York Times earlier today. The FHFA has been demanding refunds from banks for loans sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that were based on false or missing information about borrowers and properties. The two government- backed mortgage finance firms had to be rescued by taxpayers as defaults on home loans soared toward record levels.

A lawsuit “is an uncertainty that can go on for years -- that gets the market quite nervous,” said Nader Naeimi, a Sydney-based strategist for AMP Capital Investors Ltd., which manages almost $100 billion. “Bank of America, being at the epicenter of these problems, is going to get smashed.”

Bank of America, based in CharlotteNorth Carolina and the largest U.S. lender by assets, fell 66 cents, or 8.3 percent, to $7.25 at 3:27 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. JPMorgan andCitigroup Inc. (C), both based in New York, slipped more than 4.5 percent, while San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), the biggest U.S. home lender, declined 4.4 percent.

Pressure on Shares

“Any bad news such as new lawsuits is inevitably going to put the stock under pressure,” said Richard Staite, an analyst at Atlantic Equities in London, referring to Bank of America. “There is a question hanging over the company as to whether it needs to raise new equity. If the lawsuit was to result in significant new losses, then it becomes more likely that the company might need to raise equity, which would be a difficult thing to do in the current market.”

Bank of America, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) and Deutsche Bank AG (DBK)are among firms that may be sued by the agency for misrepresenting the quality of mortgage securities sold at the height of the housing bubble, the Times said. Morgan Stanley is likely to be included in the lawsuit, according to one of the people.

Mortgage Overhang

A separate report in the Wall Street Journal said Bank of America was told by the Federal Reserve to explain what steps it would take if its financial condition worsens. Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan has committed more than $30 billion to quelling claims for faulty mortgages since he took the top job in 2010.

“It doesn’t surprise me when we wake up and there’s somebody else trying to sue them,” saidMarty Mosby, a Nashville, Tennessee-based analyst with Guggenheim Securities LLC. “The overhang and the pressure related to this residential real estate isn’t going away any time soon.”

The lawsuit involves purchases by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before the financial crisis in 2008 of private-label mortgage securities, which were assembled by firms that lack government guarantees, said two people with knowledge of plans for the lawsuit.

The suit will claim that banks misrepresented the quality of the underlying mortgages in the securities and thus are bound by their contracts to reimburse any losses, the two people said. Banks typically offer “representations and warranties” about the quality and terms of the loans, which includes a promise to buy back the loans or make up the difference if they decline in value. The FHFA plans to demand the latter, the people said.

Legal Options

Analysts and former regulators have said the cumulative impact of lawsuits from different agencies could backfire by imperiling the health of some banks. This could trigger a new round of bailouts that will hurt the same taxpayers that the government is trying to protect, they have said.

Neil Barofsky, former special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, said via e-mail he’s “strongly opposed” to regulatory forbearance for the lenders, and that any further aid to banks should come with transparency and accountability.

‘Off the Cliff’

“The government needs to be as aggressive as possible to vindicate the taxpayers’ rights to get as much money from the big banks as possible,” Barofsky said earlier on Bloomberg Television. “If this ends up pushing them off the cliff and putting them in a position where they need to be bailed out again, that bailout should be done through the front door.”

The FHFA’s lawsuit may be motivated mainly by a desire to keep its options open as the deadline for filing legal claims approaches, according to two people with ties to the banks. Negotiations were under way, and in other circumstances a lawsuit and resolution would be announced together, one person said. With the deadline looming, the FHFA may be planning to preserve its legal rights and then return to settlement talks, the person said.

“We are not discussing our litigation,” said Stefanie Johnson, a spokeswoman at the FHFA. Officials at the lenders said they couldn’t comment. In a memo to Bank of America employees, Chief Financial Officer Bruce Thompson said the lender had made “tremendous progress” in resolving claims.

UBS Lawsuit

The bank is being sued now because in many cases, the statutes of limitations have been running out, he wrote. “Now we have to simply let the judicial process work.”

The costs so far and the prospect of even more claims caused some investors to question whether the bank may need more capital. Thompson said Bank of America has “more than enough capital to run our business” and said the lender doesn’t intend to issue more common stock to meet new regulatory standards starting in 2013. “There are many non-dilutive ways for us to get there,” he wrote.

The FHFA sued UBS AG, Switzerland’s biggest bank, in July over $4.5 billion in residential mortgage-backed securities sold to Fannie and Freddie, claiming they misstated the risks of the investments. The suit seeks unspecified damages.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have operated under U.S. conservatorship since 2008, when they were seized amid subprime mortgage losses that pushed them toward insolvency.

BofA’s Options

Responding to the Fed’s call for an explanation of how Bank of America would respond to a deterioration in its financial condition, the lender outlined options including the issuance of a separate class of shares linked to the performance of its Merrill Lynch brokerage unit, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter. Such a step isn’t imminent, the newspaper said.

“I can’t imagine that it could be structured in an attractive way,” Staite said. “It doesn’t make sense for them to try to separate Merrill and list it separately.”