Page 21 - Bank of America E Case Study
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On the 10 anniversary of the financial crisis the Financial
Times commented that U.S. authorities had collected
$150 billion (127.6 billion euros) in fines “from financial
institutions for shady dealings with subprime mortgages
since the beginning of the credit crisis in 2007.” (21)
These expenses don't even include the following bank
costs:
• Since 2008 the six banks (Morgan Stanley, Goldman
Sachs, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase and
Bank of America) have also had to repurchase
("buyback") $98.9 billion worth of bad mortgages they
stuffed into collapsed mortgage-backed securities
they sold to investors around the globe.
• Besides buybacks and settlement fines, there are
restitution and other compensation charges paid out
to meet government regulations implemented in
response to the housing crisis.
• There are no credible breakdowns of what banks call
"legal and litigation" expenses that breaks out the
cost of their outside counsel. Presumably, those
charges are well into the tens of billions of dollars.
• And the bad behavior of these too-big-to-jail banks
goes well beyond these credit crisis and mortgage-
related settlements. They have collectively paid tens
of billions more for all kinds of crimes. (20)
Of all the banks penalized since 2008, BofA had,
according to the FT, handed over $56 billion to cover the