Underwriting Outsourcer Clayton Names New CEO

Clayton Holdings, which is cooperating with an investigation into mortgage underwriting fraud on Wall Street, named Paul T. Bossidy its new chief executive officer on Tuesday. A spokeswoman said he replaces Frank Fillips who retired from the Connecticut-based Clayton this summer. Mr. Bossidy, 48, has worked for various divisions of General Electric, including GE Vendor Financial Services. Clayton is owned by Greenfield Partners, a hedge fund. Earlier this year New York attorney general Andrew Cuomo granted Clayton immunity from prosecution in exchange for providing information on the due diligence work it conducted for Wall Street firms that securitized subprime mortgages over the past five years. One key issue AG Cuomo is looking at is underwriting "exceptions" granted by projects managers working for Clayton on Wall Street accounts. Over the past three years subprime firms funded $1.7 trillion in A- to D and other non-conforming loan types -- much of it securitized through Wall Street firms such as Bear Stearns, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Lehman Brothers, and Merrill Lynch.

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