BofA Director On Countrywide: "Worst Decision We Ever Made!" As Bank Settles 'Crappy Mortgage' Suit For $8.5B; Will Swallow Add'l $5.5B In Buybacks
- Just before Bank of America Corp. swooped in to buy Countrywide Financial Corp. in 2008, the bank's then-chief executive, Kenneth D. Lewis, told analysts why he had dropped his resistance to owning a mortgage lender.
- "Arithmetic overcomes all your issues," he told analysts. "If I ever did anything in the mortgage business, I would have to eat about seven years of my words, so it would have to be pretty compelling."
- The nation's largest bank by assets has been haunted by Countrywide's numbers ever since the $2.5 billion deal was completed.
- On Wednesday, Bank of America announced, as expected, an $8.5 billion settlement with investors who took a beating on mortgage bonds issued by Countrywide before the housing market collapsed.
- The Charlotte, N.C., bank also will swallow an additional $5.5 billion to buy back other defective mortgages in the future. And it took a $6.6 billion hit for lawsuits, foreclosure snarls, a write-off in the value of its mortgage business and loan-servicing adjustments.
***
- Of all the deals Bank of America made during its climb to the top of the U.S. banking heap since the 1980s, Countrywide has spawned more regret than probably any other acquisition by Mr. Lewis or his predecessor, Hugh L.
McColl Jr. - "It turned out to be the worst decision we ever made," said one Bank of America director who voted for the Countrywide deal in January 2008. Mr. Lewis declined to comment through his attorney.
- Since the purchase, the bank's real-estate division has saddled it with more than $17 billion in losses, most of it coming from the assets inherited from Countrywide. Even Mr. Moynihan has hinted publicly that the deal was a mistake, telling shareholders in May that the bank agreed to take on Countrywide, based in Calabasas, Calif., "just when you shouldn't have done it."
***
- Since then, Bank of America's mortgage division has racked up $17.7 billion in net losses amid rising numbers of homeowner defaults. The company has lost $22 billion since the start of 2010 to investors who demanded the bank buy back Countrywide mortgage bonds.
- Other legal payouts include $8.4 billion for home-loan modifications, $108 million to the Federal Trade Commission to settle claims of excessive fees by Countrywide, and more than half of the $67 million fraud-suit settlement involving former Countrywide founder Angelo Mozilo. Mr. Mozilo declined to comment through his lawyer.
- Bank of America still faces the prospect of billions of dollars in fines from U.S. and state regulators investigating foreclosure procedures. That mess could cost the company about $7.4 billion on a pretax basis, said Glenn Schorr, an analyst at Nomura Securities.
For more, see BofA Haunted by Countrywide Deal (requires subscription; if no subscription, GO HERE - then click appropriate link for the story).
<< Home