BofA,
Goldman among banks facing $16 billion in fines
BofA, Goldman among banks facing $16 billion in fines
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — The settlements of lawsuits so far with
major banks pave the way for some $16 billion in additional penalties to be
paid by banks including Bank of America and Goldman Sachs Group over mortgage
securities sold to government-seized housing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Of the banks that have recently settled — including Morgan Stanley MS +1.92% last week — the settlement
amounts equate to roughly 12% to 13% of original principal balance of
securities sold to the GSEs. The remaining banks could expect to pay
approximately $16 billion in total if that settlement range holds.
Expect the majority of financial firms to settle this year on
billions of dollars from outstanding lawsuits with the government, related to
the sale of mortgage-backed securities, sources tell MarketWatch.
Out of the 18 financial institutions that have been sued by the
Federal Housing Finance Agency, seven firms have settled, including Morgan
Stanley and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. JPM +0.05%.
“Most of the banks would like to settle as part of the herd and
not stand out,” said John Coffee, a law professor at Columbia Law School. “It’s
less individual culpability that way.”
Morgan Stanley disclosed it has settled with FHFA for $1.25 billion in a
regulatory filing and the bank also added $150 million into its legal reserves
as part of the disclosure. That is approximately 12% of the $10.58 billion
securities that the FHFA states in the lawsuit the firm sold to Fannie and
Freddie.
The FHFA began to oversee the two government agencies that
guarantee the majority of U.S. residential mortgages, Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, as a result of the financial crisis. And in 2011 it sued 18 banks over alleged faulty securities the
banks sold to the two mortgage giants.
Banks including Citigroup Inc. C -0.02% and UBS AG UBS +0.78% have already settled,
however, other lawsuits remain outstanding, including against Bank of America Corp.BAC -0.12% and Goldman Sachs Group
Inc. GS -0.17%
“You have to assume the same percentage will be applied to the
other banks,” said Coffee.
Bank of America for example has two related suits stemming
from Merrill Lynch and Countrywide,
which the firm bought in 2008, totalling $51.5 billion in mortgage securities
sold to Fannie and Freddie. Including its own originations, a 13% payout would
be approximately $7.4 billion. Bank of America had no comment on the matter.
According to the FHFA lawsuit, Goldman Sachs sold $11.1 billion
residential mortgage-backed securities to Fannie and Freddie, which could point
to a settlement amount of $1.44 billion if the trend is correct. Goldman Sachs
also declined to comment.
It’s much easier to settle the remaining cases once the bigger
players settle, say sources.
However, each case is different and depends on the quality of the
investments, say analysts.
For instance, General Electric Co. GE +0.28% , at 34%, and Ally
Financial, at 28%, paid much more than the 12-13% range seen with the major
banks.
“A lot of it has to do with the underlying quality of assets,”
said Brad Hintz, analyst at Sanford Bernstein. “It’s impossible to look at the
mortgages securities and say they were of the same quality, especially leading
up to the financial crisis.”
Banks generally do not disclose how much is set aside for
litigation costs, however. J. P. Morgan recently revealed it had set aside $23 billion.
The FHFA is in a difficult place says industry watchers. The
Inspector General’s office has oversight over the agency and has to report to
Congress that includes questions of the size of settlements being too big or
too small.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren notably has criticized federal regulators
for being too soft on large institutions.
Almost 40% or more of the banks have settled and a lot more will
settle this year, noted Coffee.
“You don’t want to be the last to settle,” said Coffee.
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