Friday, January 31, 2014

JPMorgan, Justice Dept. reach $13B settlement

Banking giant JPMorgan Chase Tuesday finalized a record $13 billion settlement of multiple investigations over toxic mortgage investments like those that helped spark the 2008 financial crisis.

The agreement announced by the U.S. Department of Justice and state officials in New York includes a statement of facts in which the nation's largest bank admitted it knew that residential mortgage-backed securities it marketed did not comply with underwriting guidelines and weren't appropriate for sale.

The settlement does not absolve the bank or its officials from potential criminal charges, the Justice Department said.

The penalties total more than half the $21.3 billion the bank reported in 2012 net income — and mark the largest government settlement ever paid by a single U.S. company. The agreement also ends civil, mortgage-related probes that dealt another embarrassing black eye to the strongest bank survivor of the financial crisis, and to its CEO, Jamie Dimon.

Under the deal, JPMorgan agreed to pay $9 billion to settle federal and state civil claims by various entities related to the mortgage securities. That includes a $2 billion penalty to settle Justice Department claims.

The bank will pay the remaining $4 billion in the form of relief to aid consumers harmed by the unlawful mortgage actions of JPMorgan and two subsidiaries it acquired during the crisis: investment bank Bear Stearns and failed bank Washington Mutual. The relief will come via principal forgiveness, loan modification and efforts to reduce blight.

Included in that portion of the settlement is a nearly $300 million payment to California for misleading mortgage securities information JPMorgan gave to the state's public employee and teacher pension funds between 2004 and 2008.

An independent monitor will be appointed to oversee JPMorgan's compliance with the deal.

JPMorgan shares closed up 41 cents at $56.15 in Tuesday trading.

"Without a doubt, the conduct uncovered in this investigatio! n helped sow the seeds of the mortgage meltdown," said Attorney General Eric Holder. "JPMorgan was not the only financial institution during this period to knowingly bundle toxic loans and sell them to unsuspecting investors, but that is no excuse for the firm's behavior."

The deal "will bring long-overdue relief to homeowners around the country," said New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman,who led a federal-state consortium on the case.

JPMorgan, which last month disclosed it had set aside $23 billion in litigation reserves for this settlement and other litigation, pledged complete delivery of promised mortgage forgiveness and other relief to injured borrowers before the end of 2017.

"We are pleased to have concluded this extensive agreement ... and to have resolved the civil claims of the Department of Justice and others," said Dimon, whose bank planned a conference call later Tuesday to discuss the settlement and related issues.

John Coffee, a securities regulation expert at Columbia Law School in New York, said the financial penalties appeared to signal "a new toughness" at the Department of Justice since a 2012 case involving HSBC. Prosecutors drew criticism for not seeking a criminal indictment of the London-based global bank over charges it ignored possible money laundering. Instead, HSBC paid $1.9 billion under a deferred prosecution deal later approved by a judge.

"I think there has been a remarkable shift at the Department of Justice in the last several months," said Coffee.

The agreement could serve as a template for federal prosecutors' future actions with other banks, said Carl Tobias, a University of Richmond law school professor.

The deal follows billions of dollars in other settlements reached by JPMorgan in recent months. That includes a tentative $4.5 billion settlement announced Friday with 21 major institutional investors over mortgage-backed securities sold to them before the financial crisis.

That agreement covered mortgage-back! ed securi! ties trusts issued between 2005 and 2008 by JPMorgan and Bear Stearns, the investment bank and brokerage it acquired during the financial crisis. Similar securities sold by Washington Mutual were not included, however.

JPMorgan also admitted wrongdoing and was fined more than $1 billion to settle investigations by five oversight agencies of the bank's "London whale" trading debacle. The bank initially asserted the trades, which racked up $6.2 billion in losses, had been a hedge against risk. But the strategy instead became proprietary trading for JPMorgan's benefit that was partly funded with federally insured deposits.

A securities class-action lawsuit filed by shareholders over the London whale case is among several pending legal actions faced by the bank. The public employee pension funds serving as lead plaintiffs in that case allege they lost as much as $52 million based on JPMorgan's conduct.

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