Credit Scoring at Center of Mortgage Lawsuit

A company that did business with a controversial mortgage issuer may soon see resolution of a lawsuit that alleged the company misrepresented the quality of its loans in an effort to get them insured.

The insurance company MBIA may be approaching settlement in a suit with the notorious mortgage lender Countrywide over the quality of many of the loans it backed, which the former claims cost it some $3 billion, according to a report from the Guardian. Countrywide is famous for its role in granting consumers mortgages it knew they couldnโ€™t afford โ€“ in some cases altering negative data on applications to make them more palatable for approval โ€“ but is now owned by Bank of America following a 2008 acquisition.

In particular, MBIA alleges that the controversial lender may have misrepresented, or misreported, consumersโ€™ many consumersโ€™ credit scores as being 701, rather than 698, the report said. Though a three-point difference may seem relatively innocuous, itโ€™s important because those with ratings of 701 were considered โ€œgoldโ€ borrowers, compared with โ€œpreferredโ€ for those at 698. Upon reaching the higher level, borrowers received more favorable interest rates because Countrywide set its threshold at 700.

โ€œSteven Butler, [MBIAโ€™s top witness] concluded that 56 percent of the loans his team analyzed contained at least one indisputable breach,โ€ Harry Fong, an executive director with MKM Partners, told the media outlet. โ€œMBIAโ€™s lawyers also played a video clip where one senior Countrywide employee, who reviewed the same loan files, did not agree on a single breach out of the total 49,000 breaches Mr. Butler found in the sample of 8,000 loans.โ€

The legal arguments in the case โ€“ which will be used to determine whether there is cause for a trial โ€“ ended earlier this week, and now both sides await a judgeโ€™s ruling, the report said. However, many experts believe that there is a strong possibility of a settlement between the two sides.

Countrywide was infamous for its leniency in extending home loans to subprime consumers, and many experts say that it played a major role in the housing marketโ€™s meltdown because it knew the people to whom it issued these mortgages could not afford them and were therefore very likely to default on their payments within a period of a few years or less.

Image: zeevveez, via Flickr

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