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星期二, 8月 07, 2018

HSBC TO PAY $26.8 MILLION FOR SECURITIZATION OF SUBPRIME MORTGAGES

HSBC TO PAY $26.8 MILLION FOR SECURITIZATION OF SUBPRIME MORTGAGES
Hundreds of Borrowers Will Directly Benefit From Settlement; AG’s Office has Secured More than $375 Million from Wall Street Securitization Firms

            BOSTON – HSBC Securities (HSBC) will pay $26.8 million to settle allegations that it purchased and securitized unfair residential mortgage loans in violation of Massachusetts law, Attorney General Maura Healey announced today.

Today’s case follows others brought by the AG’s Office against investment giants Goldman SachsMorgan StanleyRoyal Bank of Scotland, Countrywide SecuritiesJPMorgan, and Citibank regarding their roles in the subprime lending crisis. In pursuing these cases, the AG’s Office has recovered more than $375 million, including relief for thousands of residents across the state, in connection with securitization claims.

“HSBC’s securitization practices contributed to a financial crisis that deeply harmed Massachusetts communities and caused families to lose their homes,” AG Healey said. “We will continue to help consumers who were sold toxic mortgages by these banking institutions and are pleased that this settlement will provide significant relief for families that have suffered harm from unsustainable subprime loans.”

While HSBC did not originate the subprime loans in this case, it did purchase these loans from subprime lenders and securitize them. As noted in the assurance of discontinuance, filed Friday in Suffolk Superior Court, the AG’s Office alleges that many of these loans were presumptively unfair under Massachusetts law because they had debt-to-income ratios over 50 percent, included substantial prepayment penalties, had loan-to-value ratios over 97 percent, and included other problematic features.

Under the terms of the settlement, HSBC will pay a $5 million penalty to the Commonwealth and compensate governmental entities that allegedly suffered harm from HSBC’s actions, including cities and towns that incurred extra expenses due to the foreclosures caused by the unfair loans, such as Brockton, Lawrence, Lowell, Lynn, Springfield, and Worcester. The remaining $20 million will be made available to eligible homeowners for principal reductions and related payments on the loans of eligible consumers and to assist borrowers who suffered foreclosure. 

Approximately 60 homeowners are eligible to receive payments in Middlesex and Worcester counties under the HSBC settlement. Approximately 50 homeowners are eligible to receive payments in Essex county. Approximately 25 homeowners are eligible to receive payments in Bristol, Hampshire, Norfolk, Plymouth, and Suffolk counties. Eligible consumers will receive a notice from the Office of the Attorney General. Homeowners with questions should contact Attorney General’s Insurance and Financial Services Hotline at 1-888-830-6277.

The HSBC case was handled by the staff of Attorney General Maura Healey’s Insurance and Financial Services Division, including Brook Kellerman, Burt Feinberg, Madonna Cournoyer, Peter Leight, Lilia DuBois, Diane Prend, and Glenn Kaplan.

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