MetLife Fined By Fed For Mortgage Lapses Ahead Of Bank Exit
Source: Bloomberg
By Zachary Tracer - Aug 7, 2012 10:23 AM AT
MetLife Inc. (MET), the insurer seeking an exit from banking to limit U.S. regulation, was penalized $3.2 million by the Federal Reserve for lapses tied to the servicing of loans and handling of foreclosures.
MetLife is among companies scrutinized by U.S. authorities including the Fed and Justice Department for abusive foreclosure practices stemming from the collapse of the housing bubble. Five larger home lenders, including Bank of America Corp., reached a $25 billion deal this year with states and the U.S. to end a probe, while reviews continued for smaller lenders.
Steven Kandarian , the chief executive officer of New York- based MetLife, has stopped initiating residential mortgages and struck a deal to sell deposits to General Electric Co. as part of a plan to depart banking. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, another regulator, said in a June 20 letter that the company would retain bank status until it addressed mortgage deficiencies.
The Board is taking action against MetLife at this time in light of MetLifes publicly announced decision to sell its subsidiary banks deposit-taking operations, the Fed said in an e-mailed statement today. The Board continues to believe that monetary sanctions in the remaining cases are appropriate and plans to announce monetary penalties against those organizations.
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Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-07/metlife-fined-by-fed-for-mortgage-lapses-ahead-of-banking-exit.html
GreenPartyVoter
(72,377 posts)life insurance as well.
Bossy Monkey
(15,863 posts)dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)Had no idea.
wonder how many other insurance compnaies became banks...