JPMorgan Chase & Company has tentatively agreed to pay $13 billion
to settle allegations surrounding the quality of mortgage-backed
securities it sold in the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis, a person
familiar with the negotiations between the bank and the federal
government has said.
If the agreement is finalised it would be the government’s
highest-profile enforcement action related to the financial meltdown
that plunged the economy into the deepest recession since the Great
Depression of the 1930s.
The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal has not
been finalised, said Attorney General Eric Holder, Associate Attorney
General Tony West, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon and the bank’s general
counsel, Stephen Cutler, negotiated the tentative settlement in a Friday
night phone call.
The person said the tentative agreement does not resolve a criminal
investigation of the bank’s conduct. It is being handled by federal
prosecutors in Sacramento, California.
On Friday night, Holder told the bank that a non-prosecution agreement
was a non-starter, meaning that the Justice Department will continue to
conduct the criminal investigation of the financial institution, said
the person.
As part of the deal, the Justice Department expects JPMorgan to
cooperate with the continuing criminal probe of the bank’s issuance of
mortgage-backed securities between 2005 and 2007, the person said.
JPMorgan spokesman Brian Marchiony and Justice Department spokesman Brian Fallon declined to comment.
Of the $13 billion, $9 billion is fines or penalties and $4 billion will
go to consumer relief for struggling homeowners, the person said.
When the housing bubble burst in 2007, bundles of mortgages sold as
securities soured and the investors who bought them lost billions.
In the aftermath, public outrage boiled over that no high-level Wall
Street executives had been sent to jail. Some lawmakers and other
critics demanded that the big bailed-out banks and senior executives be
held accountable.
In response, the government in January 2012 set up a task force of
federal and state law enforcement officials to pursue wrongdoing with
regard to mortgage securities.
In September, JPMorgan agreed to pay $920 million and admit that it
failed to oversee trading that led to a $6 billion loss last year in its
London operation.