Consumer watchdog says Berkshire Hathaway unit ignored red flags in
manufactured home loans
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[January 07, 2025] By
JOSH FUNK
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau says
in a lawsuit that a unit of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway “ignored
clear and obvious red flags” that borrowers couldn't afford the
mortgages they were given to buy manufactured homes from another
Berkshire company, but the lender called the lawsuit “unfounded.”
The CFPB said Monday that Vanderbilt Mortgage & Finance's decisions put
many families in a position where they struggled to pay their bills and
purchase basic necessities. In one example, Vanderbilt approved a loan
for a family that already had 33 debts in collection and as a result,
the family started to fall behind just eight months after the loan was
approved.
“Vanderbilt knowingly traps people in risky loans in order to close the
deal on selling a manufactured home,” CFPB Director Rohit Chopra said in
a statement.
Vanderbilt is a unit of Berkshire's Clayton Homes, which is the nation's
largest builder of manufactured homes. Both Vanderbilt and Clayton are
based in Tennessee.
“For 50 years, Vanderbilt Mortgage has increased homeownership in the
U.S. The CFPB’s lawsuit is unfounded and untrue, and is the latest
example of politically motivated, regulatory overreach,” the company
said in a statement.
A decade ago, Clayton was accused of predatory lending in a series of
news articles, but Buffett defended Clayton's lending practices and said
the company followed all state and federal laws.
After the 2008 financial crisis that was triggered by systemic failures
in the mortgage market all lenders were required to verify borrowers’
incomes and make a good-faith determination about whether they will be
able to replay a loan.
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Warren Buffett, Chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, speaks
during a game of bridge after the annual Berkshire Hathaway
shareholders meeting in Omaha, Neb., May 5, 2019. (AP Photo/Nati
Harnik, File)
The CFPB said in the lawsuit that
Vanderbilt failed to do that and at times manipulated its lending
standards when borrowers didn’t have enough income or relied on
unrealistic estimates of living expenses.
Vanderbilt affirmed that it follows all lending regulations and
considers borrowers’ incomes and living expenses. The company said
the CFPB reviewed tens of thousands of loans and less than 0.8% of
them were loans the agency said shouldn’t have been made. Vanderbilt
said the lawsuit seems to try to enforce “an unknown and unknowable
new ‘standard’ not addressed in the law.”
“Far from protecting American consumers, the CFPB’s lawsuit will
deprive credit worthy borrowers of owning a home,” the company said.
In addition to manufactured housing companies Berkshire, based in
Omaha, Nebraska, owns a broad assortment of companies, including
other manufacturers, several major utilities, huge insurers like
Geico, the BNSF railroad and some of the best-known retail brands
including Dairy Queen and Helzberg Diamonds.
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