Monday, July 8, 2013

16 Cents on the Dollar: Doing the Math on Angelo Mozilo's Big Settlement

from huffpost



Michael W. Hudson

Michael W. Hudson

Posted: October 18, 2010 07:20 PM








It is hard to see how the Mozilo settlement -- coming on the heels of another weak SEC settlement with financier Steve Rattner -- will deter future wrongdoing. . . . Indeed, it could have the contrary effect. If you can make a great fortune behaving badly, get busted, and still end up with most of that [fortune], then you've come out way ahead. At least in financial terms.
The inventive mortgage products emerging in the home-loan market were watched closely by the heaviest of the industry's heavyweights: Countrywide Financial's Angelo R. Mozilo. Mozilo's company had established itself as the largest mortgage lender in America by providing loans to home owners with good credit. Mozilo called his company "my baby." For much of his career, he had been cautious about the kinds of loans his company made. Countrywide had mostly steered clear of subprime as other lenders dived into the market throughout the 1990s. Mozilo worried that subprime loans were too risky, in some cases even "toxic."

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