Morgan Stanley has reached a $3.2 billion settlement with state and federal authorities, the New York attorney general's office announced Thursday.
In the deal, the investment bank acknowledges that it misrepresented the risks of
mortgage-backed securities
Morgan Stanley knew that it was selling securities backed by residential mortgages with "material defects" — such as loans that were "underwater," where the loan was larger than the value of the house.
Internal emails helped document that the company was fully aware of the high risks of the loans it was securitizing, the New York attorney general's office writes:
"In a May 31, 2006 email, the head of Morgan Stanley's team tasked with doing due diligence on the value of properties underlying the mortgage loans asked a colleague, 'please do not mention the 'slightly higher risk tolerance' in these communications. We are running under the radar and do not want to document these types of things.'"In another email on November 21, 2006, a member of the Morgan Stanley due diligence team forwarded a list of questionable loans, seeking review and approval to purchase them and adding 'I assume you will want to do your 'magic' on this one?' "
The settlement announced Thursday was negotiated by a working group including both federal and state authorities, led by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.
The $3.2 billion deal represents an increase from the $2.6 billion that Morgan Stanley
agreed to pay last year
That additional money will be used, among other things, to help residents avoid foreclosure and fund affordable housing development.
The Associated Press helps put the value of the $3.2 billion in perspective:
"The New York-based investment bank reported a fourth-quarter profit of $908 million. It recorded $3.1 billion in legal expenses in 2014 for settlements with state and federal regulators over its role in the housing bubble and subsequent financial crisis."Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.