Credit Unions Don't Like Fannie's Settlement Offer

Fannie Mae has given more than three-dozen credit unions until next week to accept an offer of pennies on the dollar for some $125 million of their mortgages that defunct U.S. Mortgage/CU National Mortgage fraudulently sold to Fannie. So far, only two of the credit unions have accepted the offer, detailed this afternoon in a letter to Fannie Mae's federal regulator from National Credit Union Administration chairman Deborah Matz, who expressed concern at the losses faced by affected credit unions. "I appreciate Fannie Mae is also a victim of this crime," said Mr. Matz in a letter to Edward DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. "However, the financial impact of CU National's fraud on these member-owned cooperatives is significant. Indeed, for some of the credit unions, their losses will be so great as to force our agency to take drastic action under the prompt corrective action rules." Neither Fannie nor the FHFA returned telephone calls. Both the credit unions and Fannie were victims of a massive fraud perpetrated by Michael McGrath, the president of U.S. Mortgage and its CU National subsidiary which sold $140 million of mortgages held on behalf of credit unions to the GSE without authorization and kept the money. McGrath has pleaded guilty to the huge fraud, agreeing to forfeit almost $15 million in assets, leaving a $125 million loss for the CUs. Fannie has given the credit unions until Nov. 16 to accept the offer but so far only two have agreed. Fannie, which has rejected requests to give the mortgages back, has offered to settle with the credit unions for what would amount to less than 20% of the value of the mortgages. If those credit unions realize the 80% of losses it could push several of them into insolvency.

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