U.S. Mortgage Credit Card Delinquency Rates Decline
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Four years after filing the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history amid soured real estate bets, Lehman is still in the property business, wagering it can recover about $12.9 billion from mortgages and assets around the globe, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Its $3 billion purchase this year of the remaining 53 percent of apartment owner Archstone Inc. made it the biggest buyer of U.S. commercial property by value in the last 12 months, according to research firm Real Capital Analytics Inc. Lehman has invested $5 billion in real estate since its demise, acquiring loans and buying out joint venture partners. Lehman aims to raise $53 billion through 2016, to pay creditors an average of 18 cents on the dollar on about $300 billion of claims. The company made its first payment of $22.5 billion in April, about 53 percent more than it previously estimated was possible, after exiting court protection.
Peregrine Financial Group founder and chief executive Russell Wasendorf Sr. was indicted on charges of lying to regulators, a little over a month after he attempted suicide and confessed to bilking customers of his brokerage for years, Reuters reported yesterday. Wasendorf "overstated the value of PFG's customer segregated funds by at least tens of millions of dollars" to the Commodity Futures Exchange Commission, according to the indictment, filed in federal court in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The indictment carries a possible maximum sentence of 155 years in prison, a $7.75 million fine, and 93 years of supervised release following any imprisonment, the U.S. Attorney's office said.
General Reinsurance Corp.'s $72 million settlement of investor claims that it participated in a fraudulent transaction with American International Group Inc. was revived by a federal appeals court, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The court yesterday reversed a ruling by U.S. District Judge Deborah Batts, who had denied a request to certify a class in the case to allow the 2009 settlement to go forward. The U.S. appeals court in New York sent the case back to Batts to consider the fairness of the settlement. AIG investors sued in 2004, alleging the companies were involved in a scheme that allowed New York-based AIG to improperly inflate its loss reserves. The investors, led by three Ohio public pension funds, claimed that in late 2000 and early 2001 AIG and Gen Re engaged in a sham transaction that let AIG inflate its revenues and loss reserves.
Bank of America Corp.'s $8.5 billion mortgage-bond settlement with investors is scheduled to be considered for approval at a court hearing next May, almost two years after it was filed, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Justice Barbara Kapnick of New York State Supreme Court will hold a final hearing on the settlement, which has been tied up in litigation, on May 2, 2013, according to a scheduling order dated Aug. 10. The settlement, which would resolve claims tied to Countrywide Financial mortgage bonds, was filed in state court for approval in June 2011. Investors, including American International Group Inc., have intervened in the case seeking more information about the agreement.
General Motors Co. is bidding for the international arm of Ally Financial Inc., a move to rebuild its own lending operations and reacquire part of a business it sold more than six years ago, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The bidding process still is in the preliminary stages, and Ally has received offers from more than 30 different bidders. Ally, the largest U.S. auto lender, is the former in-house financing arm of GM, which at the time was known as GMAC. The automaker sold off a majority stake in GMAC to Cerberus Capital Management LP and other investors in 2006. GM continues to own 9.9 percent of the company.
An Iowa grand jury is expected to hear testimony from Peregrine Financial Group's president this week as it begins considering alleged wrongdoing at the failed futures brokerage, Reuters reported on Friday. Russell Wasendorf Jr., Peregrine's president and the son of the brokerage's accused chief executive, has been subpoenaed by the grand jury and will likely testify. Russell Wasendorf Sr., Peregrine's founder and CEO, was arrested on July 13 on charges of lying to federal regulators in connection with an alleged massive financial fraud at the company. Prosecutors have said that they expect to expand charges against him.
Capitol Bancorp Ltd. sought bankruptcy protection in a bid to implement a debt-for-equity swap, warning that its community banks are "dangerously close" to an FDIC takeover, Dow Jones DBR Small Cap reported today. Under the company's proposed reorganization plan, holders of nearly $6.82 million outstanding in senior notes would receive stock in the reorganized company valued at $6.82 million. Holders of $151.3 million outstanding in trust preferred securities would receive new stock valued at about $50 million.
Standard Chartered Plc has agreed to a New York Department of Financial Services demand that the bank hire an outside monitor to ensure compliance with U.S. anti-money laundering laws, Bloomberg News reported on Saturday. The agreement on the monitor, mandated by the regulator in an Aug. 6 order, stems from negotiations between the bank and state officials ahead of an Aug. 15 hearing at which Standard Chartered will be asked to explain why its license to do business in New York should not be revoked. New York banking Superintendant Benjamin Lawsky alleged London-based Standard Chartered flouted U.S. banking laws as part of a decade-long deception, helping launder about $250 billion in Iranian funds in contravention of U.S. statutes and without proper disclosure. Lawsky is said to seek as much as $700 million to settle the investigation.
JPMorgan Chase & Co., the largest U.S. bank by assets, was sued by Bank Hapoalim BM over $361.2 million in residential mortgage-backed securities in New York state court, Bloomberg News reported on Friday. Israel's second-biggest bank is seeking damages for claims including common-law fraud, fraudulent inducement and negligent misrepresentation, according to the court filing. The bank accuses JPMorgan of making material misrepresentations in the offering materials for the investments. Bank Hapoalim, based in Tel Aviv, sued Charlotte, N.C.-based Bank of America Corp., the second-biggest U.S. bank, in the same court in April over $721 million worth of residential mortgage- backed securities.