The deal is the latest chapter in the bursting of the housing
bubble in 2007, when JPMorgan and others among the nation's largest
banks sold low-quality, mortgage-backed securities that collapsed in
value. Investors were left with billions of dollars in losses.
In blunt criticism of those banks, the Justice Department's No. 2
official said Monday that too many financial institutions had failed
in their duty to ensure that their businesses were run cleanly.
Recounting the conduct that JPMorgan and other banks engaged in,
Deputy Attorney General James Cole told the American Bankers
Association that too many supervisors incentivized excessive risk
taking, knowing that risky products "could be unloaded down the
road, ... leaving someone else to deal with the consequences."
According to the person familiar with the talks between JPMorgan and
the Justice Department, the final issue in the settlement revolved
around the $4 billion to compensate consumers. Some $1.5 billion
will be a write-down to reduce the principal of homeowner loans;
$300 million will enable homeowners to pay less now on their
mortgages; and the remainder of the $4 billion will go toward
reducing mortgage interest rates, originating new loans and helping
revive blighted properties in some of the hardest hit areas of the
housing crisis, such as Detroit. An independent monitor will be
appointed to oversee the assistance to homeowners.
The person familiar with the negotiations spoke on condition of
anonymity because the deal had not been finalized. When it is
signed, it will eclipse the record $4 billion levied on oil giant BP
in January over the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history.
Another person familiar with the talks, also speaking only on
condition of anonymity, said the two sides were "very close" to a
final agreement.
Still to come is a decision on whether the Justice Department will
file criminal charges against JPMorgan. An investigation is under
way by the U.S. Attorney's office in Sacramento, Calif.
The nation's biggest bank will pay more than $6 billion to
compensate investors, pay $4 billion to help struggling homeowners
and pay the remainder as a fine.
JPMorgan has said most of its mortgage-backed securities came from
Bear Stearns Cos. and Washington Mutual Inc., troubled companies
that JPMorgan acquired in 2008.
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As part of the $6 billion to investors, $4 billion will resolve
government claims that JPMorgan misled mortgage finance giants
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac about risky mortgage securities the bank
sold them before the housing market crashed. That part of the deal
was announced Oct. 25. Fannie and Freddie were bailed out by the
government during the crisis and are under federal control.
The Justice Department and the banks reached a tentative settlement
in mid-October on the $13 billion, but the negotiations hit a
stumbling block that has now been resolved. As part of any
settlement, JPMorgan wanted to be able to collect money from a
receivership involving Washington Mutual Inc., the biggest U.S.
savings and loan. The S&L failed and was purchased by JPMorgan. The
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which maintains stability and
public confidence in the banking system, said JPMorgan should be
responsible for any liabilities regarding the Washington Mutual
acquisition. Under the arrangement, JPMorgan cannot seek
reimbursement from the FDIC for any part of the deal, the person
close to the talks said Monday night.
The $13 billion JPMorgan settlement amount is only about half of
its record 2012 net income of $21.3 billion, or $5.20 a share, which
made it one of the most profitable U.S. banks last year.
Mounting legal costs from government proceedings pushed JPMorgan to
a rare loss in this year's third quarter, the first under CEO Jamie
Dimon's leadership. The bank reported Oct. 11 that it set aside $9.2
billion in the July-September quarter to cover the string of legal
cases against the bank. JPMorgan said it has placed $23 billion in
reserve to cover potential legal costs.
On Friday, the company announced it had reached a $4.5 billion
settlement with 21 major institutional investors over
mortgage-backed securities issued by JPMorgan and Bear Stearns
between 2005 and 2008. The investors, which include Goldman Sachs,
said the bank deceived them about the quality of high-risk mortgage
securities.
[Associated
Press; MARCY GORDON and
PETE YOST]
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