Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Morgan Stanley to pay $3.2B over its role in financial crisis

- By Michael Virtanen

Morgan Stanley will pay $3.2 billion in a settlement over bank practices that contribute­d to the 2008 financial crisis, including misreprese­ntations about the value of mortgage-backed securities, authoritie­s announced Thursday.

The nationwide settlement, negotiated by the working group appointed by President Barack Obama in 2012, says the bank acknowledg­es that it increased the acceptable risk levels for mortgage loans pooled and sold to investors without telling them. Loans with material defects were included, packaged into the securities and sold.

Morgan Stanley said it previously reserved funds for all related amounts. The bank acknowledg­ed an agreement in principle for the federal settlement of $2.6 billion in a regulatory filing a year ago.

“We are pleased to have finalized these settlement­s involving legacy residentia­l mortgage-backed securities matters,” spokesman Mark Lake said Thursday.

The Justice Department said the $2.6 billion federal penalty to resolve claims about the bank’s marketing, sale and issuance of those securities is the largest piece of settlement­s with the working group that have totaled approximat­ely $5 billion. Illinois will get $22.5 million in the settlement­s announced Thursday.

“Our work is far from over,” said New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an, who co- chairs the group. “Communitie­s across the country have not gotten back to where they were before the crash.”

Total settlement­s so far are about $64 billion, Schneiderm­an said.

The working group pre- viously reached major settlement­s with Citigroup for $7 billion, JPMorgan for $13 billion and Bank of America for $16.65 billion.

For New York state, the Thursday’s settlement includes $ 400 million of mortgage reductions and other consumer and community relief, as well as $150 million in cash.

The $400 million will go toward the creation and preservati­on of affordable rental housing, land banks, code enforcemen­t, communitie­s purchasing distressed properties, and principal reductions for homeowners, according to the attorney general’s office.

The New York-based investment bank reported a fourth- quarter profit of $908 million. It recorded $ 3.1 billion in legal expenses in 2014 for settlement­s with state and federal regulators over its role in the housing bubble and subsequent financial crisis.

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