Monday, November 21, 2011

BofA's Clash With Fannie Escalates Over Loan Buyback Stance

Nov. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp. told Fannie Mae it won't cooperate with the U.S. mortgage firm's new stance on loan buybacks, setting up the lender for a potential surge in claims and penalties.

The bank is disputing Fannie Mae's demand that lenders repurchase mortgages or cover any losses themselves if an insurer drops coverage, Bank of America said this month in a regulatory filing. The lender, ranked second by assets among U.S. banks, said it “does not intend to repurchase loans” under what it deems to be new rules, and the refusal may trigger penalties or other sanctions, according to Fannie Mae.

At stake is Bank of America's ability to contain costs from faulty mortgages, which have reached about $40 billion for refunds, lawsuits and foreclosures. The company set aside $278 million for loan buybacks in the third quarter, the least since Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan took over almost two years ago. Those expenses may rebound if Fannie Mae's rules stand, the bank said.

Read Full News


Resources for YOU:
Bookmark and Share

No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...