Florida joins Countrywide Financial-suing bandwagon
If pretty much every other attorney general in the country was suing Countrywide Financial (NYSE: CFC), would Florida's? Apparently. Last night the Associated Press reported that Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum has sued the company for misleading and unfair trade practices.
There's no question that Countrywide is a horrible company on a multitude of levels, but there's some irony to the allegations that the company took advantage of borrowers. Take a look at the chart for the company's stock price over the past 5 years -- how much worse would it have done if they'd treated people ethically? It's a little bit like finding out that career minor leaguer Manny Alexander was a steroid user.
In some ways the beat down on Countrywide seems unfair, more of a response to general market problems than anything else. Countrywide helped people use toxic mortgages to buy homes they couldn't afford at a time when lenders were operating on the assumption that home values always went up, interest rates never did, and everything was comin' up roses. It was a happy conspiracy and, sure, Countrywide was happily working on loans that were fraudulent -- but everyone knew the subprime game was the wild west and no one cared. Towns benefited from increased property taxes and federal loan programs encouraged home buying with little money down. But with a lot of people angry about losing their homes, these lawsuits are good politics in an election year.
There's no question that Countrywide is a horrible company on a multitude of levels, but there's some irony to the allegations that the company took advantage of borrowers. Take a look at the chart for the company's stock price over the past 5 years -- how much worse would it have done if they'd treated people ethically? It's a little bit like finding out that career minor leaguer Manny Alexander was a steroid user.
In some ways the beat down on Countrywide seems unfair, more of a response to general market problems than anything else. Countrywide helped people use toxic mortgages to buy homes they couldn't afford at a time when lenders were operating on the assumption that home values always went up, interest rates never did, and everything was comin' up roses. It was a happy conspiracy and, sure, Countrywide was happily working on loans that were fraudulent -- but everyone knew the subprime game was the wild west and no one cared. Towns benefited from increased property taxes and federal loan programs encouraged home buying with little money down. But with a lot of people angry about losing their homes, these lawsuits are good politics in an election year.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-01-2008 @ 2:01PM
Melanie Gross said...
I wish someone would look into the Fraudulent practices of American Home Mortgage also. They are just as bad if not worse than Countrywide.
They out and out lied to us...telling us over and over again that this mortgage they got us into wasn't a Reverse Amortization Mortage, but it is. We owe $19,000 more then we borrowed now in just a 7 month period. I think they are total CROOKS and should be investigated equally as Countrywide is.
7-01-2008 @ 9:24PM
keith said...
The government could have regulated the mortgage business but it did not.It is the little people that got hurt so that the security traders on wall street could make alot of money selling securities that would turn out to be worthless.
7-02-2008 @ 11:46AM
enterteam said...
I think it is pretty lame for the California and Florida AGs to wait until the B of A deal closes (yesteday), THEN announce their lawsuits. They obviously knew they wouldn't get a dime out of Countrywide, so they are going after B of A's big buck, even though they did not engage in fraudulent loan practices.