(Bloomberg) - Jamie Dimon, who's already spent $18.5 billion cleaning up mortgages at JPMorgan Chase & Co., is warning a growing list of claimants that they're in for a fight.
Investors demanding that the biggest U.S. lender buy back soured loans or compensate them for losses on mortgage securities “face a long and difficult road,” Mr. Dimon said last week in a shareholder letter. Those lining up include holders of $95 billion of bonds represented by Gibbs & Bruns, the law firm that won $8.5 billion last year from Bank of America Corp.
“We are going to fight repurchase claims that pretend the steep decline in home prices and unprecedented market conditions had no impact on loan performance,” Mr. Dimon, CEO of the New York-based lender, wrote in the April 4 letter. He'll also oppose “securities claims brought by sophisticated investors who understood and accepted the risks.”
Mr. Dimon, who updates investors on his firm's mortgage losses tomorrow, is seeking to contain expenses from faulty loans that have cost the industry more than $72 billion. Similar combative language didn't work for Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, who said in 2010 the firm will engage in “hand-to-hand combat” to fend off demands before agreeing to a string of settlements.
“They were in the same businesses as everyone else,” Mark Williams, a former Federal Reserve bank examiner who teaches finance at Boston University, said of JPMorgan. “If everyone around them is basically settling, it's hard for me to think that there's not something there that will make them settle.”
JPMorgan had a $3.6 billion liability for repurchases at the end of last year, the firm said in January. Losses of as much as $2 billion beyond that are “reasonably possible,” and the firm expects repurchase costs of $350 million per quarter, according to a January presentation. Lenders can be forced to repurchase a loan, called a putback, if data backing it including borrower income or home values proves incorrect.
The bank may have as much as $9.7 billion in further liability for loan buybacks, with about half tied to the acquisition of assets of Washington Mutual Inc. after it failed in 2008, said Pri de Silva, a senior analyst at New York-based CreditSights Inc. The Washington Mutual costs may ultimately be borne by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., he said. weiter unter http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20120412/REAL_ESTATE/120419964 |