More evidence disclosed on Countrywide's practices

Print
LOS ANGELES – Last Thursday California Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. disclosed “shocking new details” about Countrywide Financial’s deceptive business practices which included ignoring their own underwriting guidelines and rewarding employees for selling risky home loans.


"These shocking new details provide further evidence of Countrywide's dangerous lending practices, which included ignoring borrowers' low credit scores and rewarding employees for selling risky loans," Brown said. "In one case the company approved an adjustable rate mortgage to an 85-year-old disabled veteran with such a low credit score and high debt that he defaulted in less than six months."


On June 20 Attorney General Brown sued Countrywide for engaging in deceptive advertising and unfair competition by pushing homeowners into risky loans for the sole purpose of reselling the mortgages on the secondary market.


On July 17 Brown filed an amended lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court which reveals 20 new details about the company's scheme to deceive consumers into taking out dangerous mortgages. The information had been previously withheld from the complaint.


Some of the new information includes the fact that Countrywide’s wholesale lending officers received higher commissions for selling Pay Option Adjustable Rate Mortgages – loans that entice consumers with a very low initial "teaser" rate – and loans with weak underwriting standards. Countrywide also paid higher commissions for putting borrowers into loans with higher rates and fees than they qualified for based upon credit scores and other factors.


Countrywide ignored factors that it identified as having negative impacts on underwriting including: high debt ratios, low credit scores, and minimal down payments. Company employees regularly overrode warnings from Countrywide's computerized underwriting system, known as CLUES, which issued loan analysis reports rating consumer credit, purported ability to repay, and whether a proposed loan complied with underwriting guidelines.


The following examples describe new details about how Countrywide granted exceptions to sound business practices. These examples represent a small percentage of the large number of California residents who are facing foreclosure due to Countrywide’s dangerous practices:



Many borrowers who obtained Pay Option and Hybrid ARMs did not understand that their initial monthly payment would at some point "explode," that their initial interest rate would increase and become adjustable, or that the principal amount of their loans could actually increase. Countrywide received numerous complaints regarding these practices from borrowers, including over 3,000 complaints per year handled by the Office of the President between January 2005 and August 2007.


Countrywide gave branch managers commissions or bonuses based on the net profits and loan volume generated by each branching, thereby creating intense pressure to sell as many loans as possible, as quickly as possible, at the highest prices possible. Branch managers were rewarded for meeting production goals set by corporate management, increasing the number of loans sold per loan officer, and reducing the time periods between the loan application stage and funding--or penalized for failing to do so.


The amended lawsuit also contains updated data about Countrywide's staggering foreclosure rates. As of April this year, 21.11 percent of the mortgages owned by Countrywide Home Loans were in some stage of delinquency or foreclosure, including 47.97 percent of originated non-prime loans, and 21.23 percent of Pay Option ARMs.


In January and March, Countrywide recorded 3,175 notices of default in Alameda, Fresno, Riverside and San Diego counties alone, representing an aggregate total of delinquent principal and interest of more than $917 million.


The state's amended complaint is attached. For more information about California’s lawsuit against Countrywide please visit: http://ag.ca.gov/newsalerts/release.php?id=1582&.


{mos_sb_discuss:2}