Angelo Mozilo, the founder and former chairman/CEO of Countrywide Financial Corp. — and an icon in the industry for many years — was slapped with a massive civil fraud complaint by the Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday afternoon, accused of deliberately misleading investors in the company's stock and engaging in insider trading. David Siegal, Mr. Mozilo's attorney released a statement calling the SEC charges "baseless," adding that the lender's risks "were well disclosed to and understood by the marketplace." The SEC also sued former CFC executives David Sambol and Eric Sieracki, accusing them and Mr. Mozilo of "falsely assuring investors" that Countrywide was funding "primarily" prime quality loans and had avoided the excesses of its competitors. The two men could not be reached for comment. Last summer Bank of America bought CFC for a few dollars a share compared to a one-time high of $40. The agency released a memo that Mr. Mozilo wrote in April 2006 where he refers to Countrywide's subprime business as "the poison of ours." According to figures compiled by National Mortgage News Countrywide was the nation's largest subprime lender and servicer during its final years of operation, but had not made a serious run at A- to D lending until the early 2000s. The agency accuses him of selling $140 million of stock from November 2006 until August 2007 while "he was aware of material, non-public information concerning Countrywide's increasing credit risk." In past interviews with NMN Mr. Mozilo maintained that his stock sales were legal and followed the rule of law. In March 2007 he told this newspaper that he was selling the stock in question, noting, "I have almost all my personal net worth tied up in the company." He defended the sales, saying "I have created $25 billion in value for the shareholders. It's been one of the best performing stocks on the New York Stock Exchange. I gave them 98% of the value and took 2%. And they [the shareholders] didn't have to do the work. I did it for them."
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Mortgage fintechs are attracting investor attention and dollars with agentic AI processes in new origination-focused platforms and assistants.
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The portfolio for sale contains hundreds of millions of dollars worth of reperforming loans that the government-sponsored enterprise co-marketed with Citigroup.
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The S&P Cotality Case-Shiller home price index rose 0.8% year over year in April, while U.S. Federal Housing's index climbed 2%. Both indexes declined monthly.
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Priority Financial Network CEO Marc Shenkman allegedly told a former employee to "keep his resume out there" because he planned to get Lendwise shut down.
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Lisa Cook can keep her seat on the Federal Reserve Board thanks to the Supreme Court's procedural concerns. Deeper questions about the central bank might not come for years — if at all.
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