Washington (AFP) - British banking giant Barclays has agreed to pay a $2 billion fine to resolve a fraud case involving mortgage derivatives sold in the run-up to the 2008 global financial crisis, the US Justice Department said Thursday.
Authorities
said the loans underlying the investment vehicles "were significantly less
creditworthy than Barclays represented," and the company
"intentionally misrepresented" key facts about the mortgages
involved.
Federal
prosecutors also reached settlements with two former Barclays executives over
their roles in the sale and trading of residential mortgage-backed securities
(RMBS), a type of investment derivative that bundled home loans into securities
sold to investors.
Paul
Menefee of Austin, Texas, the former head banker for subprime RMBS
securitizations at Barclays, and John Carroll of Port Washington, New York,
former head trader for subprime loan acquisitions, will pay a combined total of
$2 million.
The
settlement made Barclays the latest major bank to be sanctioned for crisis-era
fraud nearly a decade after the collapse of major New York financial
institutions dealing in mortgage-backed derivatives sparked a global recession.
Last week,
Swiss bank UBS agreed to pay $230 million to New York state, also settling
charges the bank had misrepresented the value of mortgages underlying
securities sold before the crisis.
After a
three-year investigation, federal prosecutors accused Barclays of a fraudulent
scheme involving 36 deals in RMBS initially valued at $31 billion.
Barclays
misled investors about the assets' quality, causing billions of dollars in
losses, the Justice Department said in a statement.
The bank
lied about the creditworthiness of borrowers whose loans underpinned the
securities and who then defaulted at "exceptionally high rates," the
statement said.
In exchange
for paying the fine, the Justice Department will withdraw a civil complaint
filed against the Barclays in December 2016.

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