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Posts Tagged ‘bank’

Stocks up Friday, focus still on Europe

Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

NYC, NY, United States (AHN) – U.S. stocks rose Friday morning following two days of steep losses.

Just after 9:30 a.m., the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 30 points, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 2 points and the NASDAQ was flat.

Giving stocks a slight boost Friday were comments from European Central Bank Chief Mario Daghi who criticized leaders for failing to follow through with comprehensive plans to resolve the sovereign debt crisis. Germany and France disagree on the role that the central bank should play. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has maintained that the ECB cannot act as a lender of last resort.

European stocks stabilized Friday after borrowing costs in Italy and Spain eased after record high levels in recent days had put extreme downward pressure on global markets.

There is little news on the economic calendar in the U.S. Friday to sway markets, so once again the focus remains on Europe.

After topping $100 a barrel earlier in the week for the first time since June, the December crude oil contract gained 72 cent to trade at $99.47 a barrel. Gold for December delivery was better by $2 at $1,722 a troy ounce.

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Bank of America Corp., the second- biggest U.S. lender by assets, agreed to sell almost all of its remaining China Construction Bank Corp. stake after divesting about 13 billion shares in August to bolster capital.

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Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President John C. Williams said it’s unclear whether outright purchases of Treasury securities or lengthening their duration such as in the plan announced this week is more effective in boosting the economy.

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New Zealand’s central bank may delay its next interest-rate increase until next year, economists said after Governor Alan Bollard signaled growing global risks are a threat to the nation’s export-driven economy.

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Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

New York City, NY, United States (AHN) – U.S. stocks continued to rally on Thursday pushing stocks higher for the fourth consecutive day. Investors shrugged off data that showed jobless claims for the prior week surged, reports the Philly Fed Index declined to a worse than expected negative 17.5, and news the Empire State manufacturing index fell to a negative 8.8.

Traders and investors instead applauded a show of central back unity after the European Central Bank, Bank of England, Swiss National Bank and Bank of Japan detailed plans to provide dollar loans to commercial banks in cooperation with the Federal Reserve.

All Dow components were up in early afternoon trading, and the VIX, or fear index, was down. Gold and silver lost some of their shine on the Central Banks move and a firmer dollar. Gold was last trading off 2.4% or down $41.90, trading at $1,780. Silver was off 1.23 in sympathy, at $39.50.

Eyes after the closing bell will be focused on Research in Motion Limited (RIMM) which is expected to report the fiscal second quarter results. At last check RIMM was off 0.22 at $29.50.

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Bank of America may layoff 40,000

Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – The morning after President Obama’s much talked-about and highly anticipated speech to Congress and the nation about jobs creation, news has emerged that Bank of America officials may lay off as many as 40,000 employees in a first round of restructuring that CEO Brian Moynihan is expected to discuss Monday.

The numbers are not final and could change, according to reports. In fact, Moynihan might not even discuss the number of job cuts at next week’s Barclays Capital 2011 Global Financial Services Conference in New York. What he is sure to discuss is how the bank expects to enact savings and shore up its stock price.

The planned job cuts at the nation’s second largest U.S. lender by assets are part of an overhaul at the bank to boost revenue and shareholder value. The bank has reported steep losses over the past several quarters and its stock price has sorely suffered.

Bank of America would not comment, but developments are sure to unfold over the next week.

Shortly before noon on Friday, shares of Bank of America were off slightly, trading at $7.15 on the NYSE.

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Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans said the central bank should move “aggressively” to reduce unemployment, even at the cost of temporarily pushing inflation higher.

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ProPublica Staff

Carson City, NV, United States (ProPublica) – by Paul Kiel

This post has been updated to reflect Bank of America’s response.

The state of Nevada dramatically expanded its lawsuit against Bank of America today, turning the narrow case it filed late last year into a broadside that targets virtually all aspects of the bank’s mortgage operations. Bank of America has previously denied wrongdoing.

The sweeping new suit could have repercussions far beyond Nevada’s borders. It further jeopardizes a possible nationwide settlement with the five largest U.S. banks over their foreclosure practices, especially given concerns voiced by other attorneys general, New York’s foremost among them. (You can read the suit here.)

In a statement, Bank of America spokeswoman Jumana Bauwens said reaching a settlement would bring a better outcome for homeowners than litigation. “We believe that the best way to get the housing market going again in every state is a global settlement that addresses these issues fairly, comprehensively and with finality.”

The suit also weakens a separate, 2008 multistate settlement in which Countrywide promised to evaluate troubled homeowners for loan modifications.

Most broadly, Nevada’s action signals that the banks’ problems with home mortgages—the main cause of the financial crisis—continue to burden them and rattle investors. Bank of America, the nation’s largest bank and mortgage servicer, has seen its stock plunge about 40 percent since March, due in part to its mortgage liabilities. Nevada’s action won’t help.

Nevada’s attorney general charges that Bank of America and the now-defunct mortgage giant Countrywide acquired by the bank in 2008, deceived borrowers and investors at almost every stage of the process.

According to the suit, borrowers were duped into unaffordable loans and then victimized again through a misleading mortgage modification program that homeowners tried to use to avoid foreclosure. Finally, the suit says, the bank filed fraudulent documents to move forward with the foreclosures.

“Taken together and separately, deceptive practices have resulted in an explosion of delinquencies and unauthorized and unnecessary foreclosures in the state of Nevada,” the suit alleges.

The state’s suit had previously been confined to the modification issue. At that time, Bank of America also said homeowners would be best served not through litigation but through reaching a multistate settlement to “broaden programs for homeowners who need assistance.”

In expanding the suit, Nevada’s Catherine Cortez Masto joins New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman in stepping up investigations of the bank. In addition to initiating a broad investigation of banks’ securitization practices, he recently filed a suit charging that Bank of America had fraudulently foreclosed on homeowners.

A coalition of all 50 state attorneys general has been seeking a settlement with the five largest banks to address their foreclosure practices, such as the filing of thousands of false sworn statements with state courts. Some critics have said the states were speeding to an agreement without thoroughly investigating the banks’ abuses.

Last week, fissures in the coalition became public when Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, who leads the 50-state coalition, removed New York’s Schneiderman from the group’s executive committee because, he said, Schneiderman had “actively worked to undermine” its efforts by opposing any quick settlement. As part of any settlement (reportedly in the range of $20 billion to $25 billion), the banks have been seeking a wide-ranging release from future legal claims, not just those related to foreclosure practices. Schneiderman has publicly rejected that idea and pushed ahead with his investigation.

Masto’s suit signals that Nevada may also reject any settlement in the near future on the foreclosure issues. Two other attorneys general, notably those from Massachusetts and Delaware, have also recently voiced concerns about any broad waiver of claims.

Geoff Greenwood, the spokesman for Iowa’s attorney general, declined to comment on Nevada’s suit.

Nevada’s newly expanded suit also undermines a previous settlement between Countrywide and numerous attorneys general. In 2008, as part of that settlement, Bank of America agreed to implement a mortgage modification program to address charges that Countrywide’s marketing and lending practices had defrauded borrowers. That promised wave of modifications never came, however, so Nevada alleges Bank of America has breached the agreement. The expanded suit revives those allegations.

In its new claims, Nevada also charges that Countrywide bungled the process of bundling loans into securities by not properly documenting the transfer of assets. Despite the lack of documentation, Bank of America has fraudulently pursued foreclosure on these homes anyway, the suit charges.

New York’s Schneiderman made similar charges earlier this month when he sued the Bank of New York Mellon, which, as trustee for several pools of Countrywide loans, was supposed to oversee the securities for investors. Countrywide’s failure to transfer complete mortgage loan documentation “impair the value of the notes secured by those mortgages” and “triggered widespread fraud, including Bank of America’s fabrication of missing documentation,” the suit charges.

– Provided by ProPublica.org

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Capital standards designed to fortify the global financial system are eroding as European officials, beset by a debt crisis, rewrite the regulations and U.S. rulemaking stalls.

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Charlotte, NC, United States (AHN) – Bank of America has announced it would slash 3,500 jobs in addition to the 2,500 it let go earlier this year.

The bank is under pressure from investors to increase profitability and analysts say that pressure will likely cause additional job cuts that could rise to 10,000 in all by the end of the year.

Charlotte, N.C.-based Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) says it plans to cut the 3,500 jobs during the third quarter. It will begin notifying affected employees soon. The cuts will occur across the company, including its international operations.

Company officials did not give specific reasons for the new cuts. However, some of the problems affecting the bank include revenue growth that was much slower than expected, low demand for loans and a portfolio full of bad mortgage loans from the U.S. subprime mortgage mess that accompanied the bubble-high real estate prices and resultant economic crash.

In addition, Bank of America is getting rid of some of its business to conform to international banking laws, which includes eliminating some credit card and life insurance portfolios.

Bank of America is the largest U.S. bank by assets.

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