Subscribe_april2012

Sponsored by:

FA News

Print |
February 16, 2012

Bank Mortgage Probes Will Proceed, New York And Delaware Say

(Bloomberg News) State and federal officials will aggressively investigate misconduct in the bundling of mortgages into securities following a settlement with banks over foreclosure abuses, the New York and Delaware attorneys general said.

The $25 billion agreement announced last week was crafted to allow further probes of banks to proceed by states and federal agencies, including inquiries into possible criminal violations, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and Delaware’s Beau Biden said today.

“We are all committed to pursuing real investigations for all the areas that we are still able to investigate, specifically and most importantly on the securitization side,” Biden said in an interview. “You’re going to see a real effort on our part and the New York attorney general to pursue the securitization pieces of this to wherever it takes us.”

The Justice Department in January announced the formation of a joint state-federal group that will investigate misconduct that led to the financial crisis through the bundling of mortgage loans into securities sold to investors. The group is led by officials from the Justice Department, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Schneiderman.

The group will share resources and information, Schneiderman said in a remarks today at a breakfast sponsored by Crain’s New York Business. Schneiderman and Biden have been cooperating in an investigation of bank mortgage practices.

‘Comprehensive Solution’

“Our goal is to cut through a lot of confusion, identify what the misconduct out there was -- criminal or subject to civil liability -- and come up with a comprehensive solution,” Schneiderman said.

The $25 billion settlement reached with Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America Corp., New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co., New York-based Citigroup Inc., San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co. and Detroit-based Ally Financial Inc. will provide mortgage relief to homeowners and sets requirements for how the banks conduct foreclosure and service loans.

The banks in return were granted liability releases protecting them from certain claims. Biden and Schneiderman said the releases are narrowly tailored to allow further investigations of bank practices.

Biden said officials haven’t taken an aggressive enough stance against banks to convince them that they are “going to pursue the facts where they take us.” He’s “increasingly hopeful” the federal-state group investigating mortgage securitization will have enough resources to do its work.

“Many more people went to jail in the S&L crisis than have been held accountable in this crisis,” Biden said. “And this crisis makes the S&L crisis look like a walk in the park.”

Bank Mortgage Probes Will Proceed, New York And Delaware Say

 
Comments
Please login to write comments.

3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 PW May 2012
Click Here

Online Extras

Putting Retirement Changes Into Perspective
Three major shifts are fundamentally changing retirement, says Columnist Robert Laura.
Read more...
 
Consider Adapting Asset Allocation To Retirement Spending Needs
“Chasing yield” can lead investors to buy questionable investments merely because they offer—at least temporarily—enticing income streams. To effectively manage retirement income, it’s important to consider the actual liabilities.
Read more...
 

FAgreen

Pickens Shuns Wounded Chesapeake First Time Since 2008
T. Boone Pickens, the Texas billionaire who spent the past decade promoting U.S. natural gas as an alternative to Middle East oil, has walked away from the nation’s second-largest gas producer and the man he calls a friend as Chesapeake Energy Corp.’s value dropped by a fourth.
Read more...

On The Move

LPL Financial Names Managing Director And Chief Human Capital Officer
Sallie Larsen brings more than three decades of human resources experience to her new role.
Read more...
 
Hatteras Funds Expands Investment Management Team
Thomas Riegert joins as associate, portfolio management.
Read more...
 

Quick Poll

Do you think buying Facebook shares now is a good idea?