The group of eight investors seeking put-backs from Bank of America includes the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Freddie Mac, Pimco Investment Management and Blackrock Financial Management. The investors own interests in a slate of 115 transactions with an original principal balance of $104 billion. Now the balance is $46 billion.
The investors want Bank of America to buy back defaulted mortgages made by its Countrywide unit, which the Charlotte-based bank acquired in July 2008. They argue that Countrywide's practice of modifying loans found to have faulty paperwork or those written outside of normal underwriting standards breached signed agreements with the investors.
By continuing to service bad loans rather than speeding up foreclosures, the group claims, Countrywide ran up servicing fees, enriching itself at the expense of investors.
Bank of America, however, has described the loan modifications as the "proper response to an unprecedented housing crisis and in furtherance of the stated policy of the federal government."
It called claims of poorly handled loans baseless.
The bank and a law firm representing the investors said Wednesday they would go beyond a 60-day discussion period triggered by a letter sent to the bank in mid-October. The bank did not say whether there was a new time limit set on the talks.
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