Attorney General Brown Announces Landmark
$8.68 Billion Settlement with Countrywide
Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. today announced a landmark, multi-state settlement with Countrywide Home Loans, Countrywide Financial Corporation and Full Spectrum Lending that is expected to provide up to $8.68 billion of home loan and foreclosure relief nationally, including $3.5 billion to California borrowers.
“With this settlement, homeowners will receive direct relief
from the catastrophic damage caused by Countrywide,” said
Attorney General Brown. “Countrywide’s lending practices turned
the American dream into a nightmare for tens of thousands of
families by putting them into loans they couldn’t understand and
ultimately couldn’t afford.”
The Countrywide settlement will likely become the largest
predatory lending settlement in history, dwarfing the nationwide
$484 million settlement with Household Finance Corporation in
2002, under which California received approximately $91 million.
The settlement marks a swift resolution of the Attorney
General’s June 30, 2008 lawsuit alleging that Countrywide, the
nation’s largest mortgage lender prior to its July 2008
acquisition by Bank of America, deceived borrowers by
misrepresenting loan terms, loan payment increases, and
borrowers’ ability to afford loans.
In a nutshell, this settlement will enable eligible subprime and
pay-option mortgage borrowers to avoid foreclosure by obtaining
a modified and affordable loan. The loans covered by the
settlement are among the riskiest and highest defaulting loans
at the center of America’s foreclosure crisis. Assuming every
eligible borrower and investor participates, this loan
modification program will provide up to $3.5 billion to
California borrowers as follows:
• Suspension of foreclosures for eligible borrowers with
subprime and pay-option adjustable rate loans pending
determination of borrower ability to afford loan modifications;
• Loan modifications valued at up to $3.4 billion worth of
reduced interest payments and, for certain borrowers, reduction
of their principal balances;
• Waiver of late fees of up to $33.6 million;
• Waiver of prepayment penalties of up to $25.6 million for
borrowers who receive modifications, pay off, or refinance their
loans;
• $27.9 million in payments to borrowers who are 120 or more
days delinquent or whose homes have already been foreclosed; and
• Approximately $25.2 million in additional payments to
borrowers who, in the future, cannot afford monthly payments
under the loan modification program and lose their homes to
foreclosure.
More specifically, the modification program covers subprime and
pay-option adjustable-rate mortgage loans in which the
borrower’s first payment was due between January 1, 2004 and
December 31, 2007. The program will be available for loans in
default that are secured by owner-occupied property and serviced
by Countrywide Financial or one of its affiliates. In addition,
the borrower’s loan balance must be 75% or more of the current
value of the home, and the borrower must be able to afford
adjusted monthly payments under the terms of the modification.
The terms of the modification will vary based on the type of
loan, including:
• “Pay-option ARM loans,” in which loan balances increase each
month if a borrower makes only a minimum payment. Borrowers may
be eligible to have their principal reduced to 95% of their
home’s current value and may also qualify for an interest-rate
reduction or conversion to an interest-only payment.
• Subprime adjustable-rate loans, such as 2/28 loans. Borrowers
may have their interest rate reduced to the initial rate. If the
borrower still cannot afford it, the borrower may be eligible
for further interest-rate reductions to as low as 3.5%.
• Subprime fixed loans. Borrowers may be eligible for
interest-rate reductions.
• “Hope for Homeowners Program.” If they qualify, some borrowers
may be placed in loans made through this federal program.
• Alt-A and prime loans. Borrowers who are in default, but have
Alt-A and prime loans, may also be considered for modifications,
depending on circumstances.
In addition to the settlement’s direct relief to borrowers, Bank
of America, who negotiated the settlement with the Attorney
General following its acquisition of Countrywide, has agreed
that it will suspend offering, under its own name or through
Countrywide, subprime loans or loans that can negatively
amortize. The bank has significantly restricted the
circumstances under which it will make so-called “no doc” or
low-documentation loans, in which borrowers do not fully
document their ability to repay their mortgages.
In addition to California, attorneys general in 10 states,
including Arizona, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Iowa,
Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and Washington, are
participating in the settlement. Attorney General Brown’s
office, along with the Office of the Illinois Attorney General,
led the negotiations for the states. The Countrywide parties to
the settlement include parent Countrywide Financial Corporation,
Countrywide Home Loans and Full Spectrum Lending.
Attorney General Brown added, “Unlike last week’s congressional
bailout, this loan-modification program provides real relief for
borrowers at risk of losing their homes. Tragically, California
and the other states have had to step in because federal
authorities shamelessly failed to even minimally regulate
mortgage lending.”
The settlement does not include Angelo Mozilo, the former
Chairman and Chief Executive of Countrywide Financial
Corporation or David Sambol, formerly the President of
Countrywide Home Loans and the President and Chief Operating
Officer of Countrywide Financial Corporation. Brown will
continue to prosecute his case against Mozilo and Sambol.







