The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight has filed charges against three former Fannie Mae executives, including Franklin Raines, for manipulating earnings to maximize bonuses and for leading the mortgage giant into a $6.3 billion accounting scandal.Along with a notice of charges, OFHEO is seeking $100 million in civil money penalties and disgorgement of $115 million in 1998-2003 bonuses paid to Mr. Raines, a former chairman and chief executive officer; former chief financial officer Timothy Howard; and former comptroller Leanne Spencer. "The notice explains how they submitted six years of misleading and inaccurate accounting statements and inaccurate capital reports that enabled them to grow Fannie Mae in an unsafe and unsound manner," OFHEO Director James Lockhart said. "The misconduct cost the enterprise and shareholders many billions of dollars and damaged the public trust." An attorney representing Mr. Raines said the charges are "false" and called the OFHEO director a "fatally biased regulator."
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Ralo uses artificial intelligence to automate the entire process, saving consumers money by cutting out commissioned loan officers, processors and underwriters.
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Part of the proposal affects the risk weighting for certain "investment properties and other cashflow-dependent" mortgages, according to a new Pennymac report.
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William Isaac led the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. through the banking and thrift crises of the 1980s and was a frequent commentator on bank regulation after his time in public service.
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The longtime Federal Reserve chair served under four presidents and presided over the deregulatory and pro-market push of the 1990s and early 2000s that set the stage for the 2008 mortgage crisis.
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Life insurers have offloaded long-term policyholder liabilities into offshore reinsurance and captive subsidiaries, raising concerns over state oversight of opaque investment vehicles and whether insurers have adequately funded claims.
June 22 -
AI is leaving its marks in a wave of recent pro se litigation with fabricated citations and debunked arguments found throughout lawsuits, attorneys say.
June 22









