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Thursday, 21 August 2014

Bank of America in record $16.7bn mortgage settlement

Bank of America corporate center
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Bank of America has agreed to pay a record $16.7bn (£10bn) to US authorities for misleading investors about the quality of loans it sold.
The loans were sold by Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch before Bank of America bought them in 2008, at the height of the financial crisis.
The associate attorney general said "no institution is either too big or too powerful to escape" punishment.
The settlement will cut the bank's third-quarter profits by $5.3bn.
Bank of America will pay a total of $9.65bn in cash and provide consumer relief worth about $7bn. The cash component consists of a $5bn civil penalty and $4.63 billion in compensation payments.
Tony West, the associate attorney general, explained: "It's kind of like going to your neighbourhood grocery store to buy milk advertised as fresh, only to discover that store employees knew the milk you were buying had been left out on the loading dock, unrefrigerated, the entire day before, yet they never told you.
"And just like you might be in for an unpleasant surprise when you got home and poured yourself that glass of milk, investors -- such as public pension funds and federally-insured financial institutions -- were unpleasantly met with billions of dollars in losses when those securities investments soured."
Brian Moynihan, chief executive of the bank, said: "We believe this settlement, which resolves significant remaining mortgage-related exposures, is in the best interests of our shareholders, and allows us to continue to focus on the future."

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Analysis: Michelle Fleury This is the latest effort by authorities in the US to hold Wall Street accountable for the bad conduct that led to the financial crisis.
And the sums involved in Bank of America's settlement dwarf the $13bn paid by another bank, JP Morgan to resolve a similar matter.
Even though the penalty exceeds Bank of America's entire profits last year, this deal brings a measure of closure.
The bank, one of America's biggest, has already paid tens of billions of dollars to settle cases related to the financial crisis but this was seen as the biggest remaining legal hurdle.

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