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Showing posts with label bank of america. Show all posts

Bank of America, Wells Fargo May Face Fines on Foreclosures

    Feb. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co., the largest U.S. mortgage firms, said they may face fines or enforcement actions from regulators amid investigations into foreclosure procedures.
    The probes may also lead to “significant legal costs,” Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America said yesterday in its annual report to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Wells Fargo, based in San Francisco, said in its filing that penalties are likely.
    “I’m sure the banks are ready to put this past them and investors would certainly like to but this is not an issue that is going to go away,” Blake Howells, an analyst at Becker Capital Management Inc. in Portland, Oregon, said in an interview. “There will be more lawsuits that come down the road.” Becker Capital oversees $2.4 billion.
    The largest U.S. banks have been trying to reassure investors that costs from faulty foreclosure documents are manageable. Wells Fargo said yesterday it didn’t expect litigation costs to have a “material adverse” impact on its financial position. Bank of America said it faced $230 million in fees from slowed foreclosures.
    Bank of America halted foreclosures in all 50 states in October and announced in a Nov. 5 filing that it was reviewing as many as 102,000 cases to screen for faulty practices. Attorneys general in all 50 states are investigating foreclosure practices amid revelations that lenders were seizing homes without proper documents to prove they had the right to do so.
    $20 Billion Deal
    U.S. regulators may try to extract $20 billion of penalties in a settlement with banks that serviced flawed loans, two people briefed on the talks said this week. Terms of an accord, from regulators led by the Treasury Department and Department of Housing and Urban Development, haven’t been formally presented to banks, according to the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions aren’t public.
    Bank of America also said a bondholder group pressuring the lender to repurchase soured mortgages has almost doubled the number of securitizations it’s challenging.
    The group is disputing 225 securitizations, up from 115 as of Oct. 18, according to Bank of America’s filing. Pacific Investment Management Co., BlackRock Inc. and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York are among the investors, people familiar with the matter said in October.
    “On the putbacks, investors have braced themselves for a multiyear workout,” Howells said. “This might, on the margin, make people rethink the potential size of the liability.”
    Costs of Litigation
    Wells Fargo said the high end of estimated litigation losses could be $1.2 billion beyond the reserve already set aside. Bank of America’s losses may be as much as $1.5 billion. Citigroup Inc. said yesterday that as much as $4 billion in additional costs from pending legal matters are “possible, but not probable.”
    Banks are releasing estimates after the SEC, in an October letter to corporate finance chiefs, said companies should disclose potential losses “when there is at least a reasonable possibility” that they may be incurred, even if the risk is too low to require reserves.
    Citigroup, the third-largest U.S. bank by assets, also said U.S. regulators are examining how it structured and sold collateralized debt obligations as part of an investigation into mortgage-related businesses.
    The bank is cooperating with the SEC and other watchdogs, the New York-based company said in a filing. The probe is part of inquiries involving Citigroup’s “subprime and other mortgage-related conduct,” and other businesses affected by the credit crisis, it said.
    --With assistance from Hugh Son, Donal Griffin and Jody Shenn in New York. Editors: Dan Reichl, Jim McDonald.
    To contact the reporter on this story: Dakin Campbell in San Francisco at

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Bank of America, Wells Fargo May Face Fines on Foreclosures


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bank of america

     Photo of Bank of America ATM Machine by Brian ...
    Bank Of America Website Down, 6 Hours And Counting

    Bank of America’s website has been down most of the morning and there’s no sign of any progress towards restoring the site.

    The bank is responding to users about the problem on Twitter via @BofA_Help. The website hasn’t been responding for about 6 hours for some users. A BofA spokeswoman has said the problems began for the bank’s website at 4 a.m. PST.

    BofA says there is no timetable yet for when the website would be back to normal, but says the online banking outage affects “a small population of its customers.” The BofA spokesperson could not provide the number of customers currently affected. It also notes that the problems were not because of malware and customer information was not compromised.

    Twitter has been buzzing about the BofA website failure. At least one Twitter user speculates about the possibility of the website being hacked by WikiLeaks’ advocates “Anonymous.”

        @DylanWest: Wondering if Bank of America is getting DOS attacks from pro Wikileaks hackers “Anonymous” again? Whatever it is… needs to end. Now. #bofa

    Last year eBay’s, PayPal and Mastercard were faced with down websites after being targeted by groups supporting WikiLeaks. A Bank of America spokesperson told me its outage today is not the result of anything WikiLeaks related.

    About 4 hours ago, @BofA_Help began addressing the load of complaints. The responses from  have been pretty standard so far. Most are along the lines of: “We are aware of the issue and are working to resolve it as fast as possible. Please accept our apologies” and “Online Banking Outage: Bank of America is working to restore capability as quickly as possible. We apologize for any inconvenience.”

    That’s not stopping the stream of complaints from Twitter users. It’s payday for a lot of folks (well, those lucky enough to be employed these days) and many are probably trying to pay their bills online and check balances.

    But while Bank of America’s website is suffering its stock is not. Shares are up over 2% today at $15.12, and up more than 6% this week. The bank will report fourth quarter earnings next Friday, January 21.

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bank of america


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