Regulators Seize IndyMac

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ALEX VEIGA | July 11, 2008 10:30 PM EST | AP

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This Jan. 2008 file photo shows the sign of an IndyMac Bank branch office in Burbank, Calif. IndyMac Bancorp Inc. has stopped accepting new loan submissions in its retail and wholesale forward mortgage lending channels and plans to slash 3,800 jobs, or more than half its work force. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)

LOS ANGELES — IndyMac Bank's assets were seized by federal regulators on Friday after the mortgage lender succumbed to the pressures of tighter credit, tumbling home prices and rising foreclosures.

The bank is the largest regulated thrift to fail and the second largest financial institution to close in U.S. history, regulators said.

The Office of Thrift Supervision said it transferred IndyMac's operations to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation because it did not think the lender could meet its depositors' demands.

IndyMac customers with funds in the bank were limited to taking out money via automated teller machines over the weekend, debit card transactions or checks, regulators said.

Other bank services, such as online banking and phone banking were scheduled to be made available on Monday.

"This institution failed today due to a liquidity crisis," OTS Director John Reich said.

The lender's failure came the same day that financial markets plunged when investors tried to gauge whether the government would have to save mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Shares of Fannie and Freddie dropped to 17-year lows before the stocks recovered somewhat. Wall Street is growing more convinced that the government will have to bail out the country's biggest mortgage financiers, whose failure could deal a tremendous blow to the already staggering economy.

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The FDIC estimated that its takeover of IndyMac would cost between $4 billion and $8 billion.

IndyMac's collapse is second only to that of Continental Illinois National Bank, which had nearly $40 billion in assets when it failed in 1984, according to the FDIC.

News of the takeover distressed Alan Sands, who showed up at the company's headquarters in Pasadena, Calif., to find out when he could withdraw his funds.

"Hopefully the FDIC insurance will take care of it," said Sands, of El Monte, Calif. "I'm also kind of kicking myself for not taking care of this sooner, sooner as in the last couple of days."

A couple of dozen customers could be seen outside the building, reading fliers handed out by FDIC staff. The agency set up a toll-free number for bank customers to call.

IndyMac Bancorp Inc., the holding company for IndyMac Bank, has been struggling to raise capital as the housing slump deepens.

IndyMac had $32.01 billion in assets as of March 31.

A spokesman for the lender referred media queries to the FDIC.

The banking regulator said it closed IndyMac after customers began a run on the lender following the June 26 release of a letter by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., urging several bank regulatory agencies that they take steps to prevent IndyMac's collapse.

In the 11 days that followed the letter's release, depositors took out more than $1.3 billion, regulators said.

In a statement Friday, Schumer said IndyMac's failure was due to long-standing practices by the bank, not recent events.

"If OTS had done its job as regulator and not let IndyMac's poor and loose lending practices continue, we wouldn't be where we are today," Schumer said. "Instead of pointing false fingers of blame, OTS should start doing its job to prevent future IndyMacs."

The FDIC planned to reopen the bank on Monday as IndyMac Federal Bank, FSB.

Deposits are insured up to $100,000 per depositor.

As of March 31, IndyMac had total deposits of $19.06 billion.

Some 10,000 depositors had funds in excess of the insured limit, for a total of $1 billion in potentially uninsured funds, the FDIC said.

Customers with uninsured deposits could begin making appointments to file a claim with the FDIC on Monday. The agency said it would pay unsecured depositors an advance dividend equal to half of the uninsured amount.

During a conference call with reporters, FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair said the agency would cover all insured deposits and then try to recover its costs by selling IndyMac's assets.

"We anticipate trying to market the institution as a whole bank," Bair said. "How much money we derive from that will depend on who gets paid what."

Holders of unsecured IndyMac debt may not fully recover their investment, Bair said.

"Generally if a creditor is secured, they are at the top of the claims priority," she said. "If they are unsecured, they're pretty low on the claims priority and probably will take some type of haircut with this, but we have not had a chance to do a thorough analysis to know ... how extensive those losses will be."

IndyMac spent the last two weeks trying to reassure customers that it was not near default.

On Monday, IndyMac announced it had stopped accepting new loan submissions and planned to slash 3,800 jobs, or more than half of its work force _ the largest employee cuts in company history.

In the letter to shareholders, IndyMac Chairman and Chief Executive Michael W. Perry said the drastic measures were made in conjunction with banking regulators to improve the company's financial footing and "meet our mutual goal of keeping Indymac safe and sound through this crisis period."

The plan was supposed to generate roughly $5 billion to $10 billion per year of new loans backed by government-sponsored mortgage companies, Perry said at the time.

But the run on its deposits ultimately short-circuited the strategy, prompting regulators to take action Friday.

___

Associated Press writer Raquel Maria Dillon in Pasadena contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

FDIC IndyMac page: http://www.fdic.gov/bank/individual/failed/IndyMac.html

Toll-Free Customer line: 1-866-806-5919.

LOS ANGELES — IndyMac Bank's assets were seized by federal regulators on Friday after the mortgage lender succumbed to the pressures of tighter credit, tumbling home prices and rising foreclosur...
LOS ANGELES — IndyMac Bank's assets were seized by federal regulators on Friday after the mortgage lender succumbed to the pressures of tighter credit, tumbling home prices and rising foreclosur...
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- Harrier I'm a Fan of Harrier 13 fans permalink

The story is historic. Laws were consciously changed for lenders to take advantage of the ignorant. After the Keating scandal of which John McCain was a part of, the real story is not who gets bailed out, but how people can buy and entire nations political system screw over everyone and their mother from everything they have and then turn around and get paid again for doing it instead of helping anyone that was hurt. That is the story.

Everyone has seen it before. In this case, the law makers have outright refused to change back the laws. IndyBank was greedy and the government knew this was going to happen as soon as the laws were passed. This could not have gone any other way. Nobody should keep their money in the bank except month to month expenses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 PM on 07/13/2008

You're absolutely right!! I don't think many people know this about McCain....if they did/do, I'm sure he's counting on them not remembering his involvement.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 07/14/2008

Get rid of all Lobby Money , Lobby Money Democracy is raping the Americans in Finances, Health Care, Retirement, Oil, and Soldiers with Blackwater , Halliburton, etc...

Lobby Money Democracy, hold the Constitution, it gives Dick and GW heartburn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 07/13/2008

Wonder if Phill Gramm would want to eliminate the FDIC (why should the government be involved in insuring people's money, all they do is whine, capitalism will take care of it). DO you want an administration like this?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:57 AM on 07/13/2008
- Heretic I'm a Fan of Heretic 2 fans permalink

GWB, touting homeownership for minorities and low income people on the rise, a few years before the entire house of cards came tumbling down:

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/10/20021015.html

Hmmm. Interesting coincidence how he touted this as a policy success back in 2002.

Someone sold off the initial profits. The wealthy buying up the devalued assets for a dime on a dollar..
Transfer of more assets from the low to middle class to the wealthy, and the taxpayers pick up the check for the debt. The next (Democratic) government will have to dig out of this mess.

Am I the only one smelling a rat?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:29 PM on 07/12/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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Not at all, Heretic, but methinks you are just getting out of bed in the morning, awakening to that smell, and it ain't coffee.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 PM on 07/12/2008
- levelshot I'm a Fan of levelshot 24 fans permalink
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Great post! I've pointing to this same link for the past year now to some Rethugs I know who are punch drunk after investing heavily in real estate like fools that this policy is what got this country into the mess we're in today and all i get is the blank McBush look and the chirping noise of crickets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 PM on 07/12/2008

I think you might be smelling not just any old rat but a Capybara the worlds largest rat...(however, they're kind of cute!)

It's also probably just coincidence that the interest rates were continually dropped during this time and that all of those new "too good to be true" loan products came about...

All week as a result of one Lehman analyst prediction which was then parroted by the Fed Reserve head (the same yahoo who kept lowering the interest rates) Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae who have performing loan portfolios because they don't buy the uglier subprime or jumbo loans that Indy Mac, Chase, Citi, WAMU, Countrywide, Wachovia (yes, they own Phil Ruzzuto's hawked "The Money Store") ...were all over the headlines yet we hear nothing about Indy Mac (no relation to Freddie) in the media and then Friday afternoon after the MSM leaves for the weekend - BOOM...they're seized....

Unfortunately this is just may be the tip of the iceberg - as Wachovia "The Money Store's Ain't Got no Money" is rumored to soon be taken over by JP Morgan Chase (I'm sure for pennies on the dollar) and WAMU is supposedly in deep trouble and the list goes on....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 AM on 07/13/2008
- Heretic I'm a Fan of Heretic 2 fans permalink

Here's one The Nation Magazine uncovered in relation to IndyMac:

"Nation magazine contributor Kai Wright, discusses his July 14 article about the mortgage crisis and its affect on the Black middle class. "
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080721/subprimeswindle_video

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 AM on 07/13/2008
- Heretic I'm a Fan of Heretic 2 fans permalink

Even better related links on the Subprime Swindle in relation to minority and middle-class homeownership:

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080714/editors

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080714/wright

Why hasn't the MSM picked up on this; is there a 2+2 here?
http://archives.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/06/17/bush.minority.homes/index.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 07/13/2008
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No. No. No. Don't you see? IndyMac is just fine. It's just a "mental recession". That's all. Let's close our eyes and think happy thoughts, and then we can fly! Oh, I'm getting it mixed up with Peter Pan.............

Nevermind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 PM on 07/12/2008
- hypnotoad72 I'm a Fan of hypnotoad72 102 fans permalink
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Stop whining!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 PM on 07/13/2008

Total deregulation of the financial arena would work, if this was heaven--filled only with the virtuous. But this is Earth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 PM on 07/12/2008

...ain't that the truth! 8-]

None but the crooks ask for fewer laws.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 07/12/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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Astute, EB.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 AM on 07/13/2008

Both very funny. I guess this makes my old boss a crook. She was a big time Repub. sending out political emails in the office. She made fun of me in the board room when Kerry gave his speech after Bush 2 won. Her fav line was , "the mortgage business isn't black and white, it's gray." We argued a lot about what she saw as gray, then she laid me off and kept her son whom I supervised.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:36 PM on 07/12/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 242 fans permalink

It may take awhile ... but justice is a good thing! And, the just shall live by faith!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:53 PM on 07/12/2008
- shystar I'm a Fan of shystar 2 fans permalink
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Free open market system is all well and good BUT REGULATION is important to reign in CEOs, CFOs, and Boards of all coperations. Leaving the free market to regulate itself with HUMANS making key decisions is irrational.

HUMANS as a species is not perfect we may be at the top of the food chain but we still need rules and guidelines to regulate our behaviour.

The next to fall may be Freddie Mac and Frannie Mae and with all this turmoil in the economy we are called whinners.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 07/12/2008

if only the republicans didnt fill the regulatory agencirs with hack partisans

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 07/12/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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But, then....what would those positions be FOR anyway?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 07/12/2008

If Freddie and Fannie fall it will be because they purposely tripped by the Bernake and his cabal to bail out the failing commercial Federal Reserve member banks all on the taxpayers dime - all while looting their performing portfolios...Remember 95% of the mortgages in the US are still performing loans and Freddie and Fannie own many of those performing loans and very little of what might be considered even "slightly subprime" (A- Loans)...

Freddie and Fannie are not commercial banks...please don't just blindly believe the MSM "the sky is falling" fear tactics and research these companies...there is a massive slight of hand going on here - which given the last 7.5 years is just par for the course...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 AM on 07/13/2008

I'm curious. Which commercial banks did Freddie and Fannie bail out? And why does the Fed want to own the GSEs? I thought they were trying to get rid of FHA control by HUD.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 07/13/2008
- oogabooga I'm a Fan of oogabooga 9 fans permalink

The banks should keep the mortgage payments steady instead of jacking them up. Instead of foreclosures to contend with, the banks would at least have some cash flow from the borrowers. Less greed is in order.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 07/12/2008

Let's see, let's give loans to people who don't pay their bills in the first place. Great concept. And then we can be shocked when they don't pay this bill as well, and then we can listen to those on Capital hill who scream and cry about big business, call for mre laws and bailouts to big business.

Most lost their homes, for the same reason they lose their cars, they don't pay their bills. Except for the cable and cell bills.

Home ownership is not supposed to be easy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 07/12/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 138 fans permalink
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But as long as they know the GOV will bail them out with Tax money, they will keep doing the same thing. Just as if your teenage son kept wrecking cars, and you kept buying them for him. It doesnt solve the problem in either situation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 07/12/2008

are you talking about the banks? i hope!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 07/12/2008

And exactly WHO gave those "loans to people who don't pay their bills in the first place."???

Not you, not me.

An UNREGULATED bank looking to make a killing by bundling lousy loans and selling them, that's who. Don't blame the poor schlub who just wanted to buy a house. Blame a greedy banker.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 07/12/2008
- Vinca I'm a Fan of Vinca 6 fans permalink

GREED GREED, THAT'S , why so many people have lost their homes, Even when they the CEO'S walk away WITH A SACK OF MONEY< stockholders and homeowners lose, THE HOGS ARE AT THE TROUGH

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 PM on 07/12/2008
- naschkatze I'm a Fan of naschkatze 107 fans permalink

And the greedy banker is the one who will be bailed out, and "these people" will be castigated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 PM on 07/12/2008
- FogBelter I'm a Fan of FogBelter 293 fans permalink
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"Home ownership is not supposed to be easy."

In 1948 my grandmother paid $8000, cash she had saved from my grandfather's drugstore to pay for their first house in San Francisco's Richmond District ... my grandfather was even unaware she had saved that much money up. When they moved in the neighbor across the street, a cop, chided my grandfather that he had paid too much, his house only cost him $7000!

There was a time in this nation where home ownership was a lot easier than it is today ... that was during a well run Democrat Developed Economy, which has since been destroyed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 07/12/2008
- Theda I'm a Fan of Theda 18 fans permalink
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Well, unfortunately, homes don't cost $7,000 nowadays.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 07/12/2008
- naschkatze I'm a Fan of naschkatze 107 fans permalink

Excuse me. Financial institutions have no responsibility in judging to whom they should issue mortgages and loans and they have no responsibility in presenting their terms not of the snake oil salesmen type? There is a reason why the majority of Americans are called "average" and many are below average. They don't have the intellectual capacity to read the fine print and know what it means, and I am not being snobby but sticking up for them. I suppose you expect them to know how to handle their money if social security were privatized, but they wouldn"t. Do you think "God" created them just so they could be bilked by "let the buyer beware" immoral Republicans?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 07/12/2008
- demright I'm a Fan of demright 4 fans permalink

There seems to be a pattern here. Does anyone remember the Savings & Loan bail out? Correct me if I’m wrong but wasn’t there a Bush or two involved in that one? UNDER EVERY BUSH THERE IS DIRT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 07/12/2008

Yep. They were brought up in it.

(sorry, I couldn't resist...)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 07/12/2008

Yep, I believe it was the younger Neil Bush. Who coincidentally got away without a scratch. Crime pays when you're a spawn of one of the nation's top crime families.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 PM on 07/12/2008
- FunkyP I'm a Fan of FunkyP 11 fans permalink

"IndyMac's collapse is second only to that of Continental Illinois National Bank, which had nearly $40 billion in assets when it failed in 1984, according to the FDIC."

That was under Saint Ronnie.

It's almost as if this is their strategy. Why is economic collapse good for Republicans? Every recession we've had in modern times has occurred under a Republican administration. They drain the economy and somehow figure out ways to take that money and leave taxpayers holding the bag. That's the chance you take when you have free markets, I guess :>)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 PM on 07/12/2008

Emphisis on FREE for them!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 07/12/2008
- FunkyP I'm a Fan of FunkyP 11 fans permalink

Bail out the banks. How come when we as individuals have financial problems it's our fault for being (stupid, inept, unsophisticated) bad decision makers, and thanks to the Bankruptcy bill Schumer and co. passed, we have to pay. (or go to debtors prison)
Millions of Americans losing their jobs and homes. It's their own fault. Bad decision making.
Just like in the Silverado scandal (remember? It was Neil and Jeb then). Let the crooks overextend, make ridiculous loans to associates, banks fails, government (taxpayer, your money and mine)bailout = profit for those lucky loanholders who are now off the hook.
What was that about learning history's lessons?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 PM on 07/12/2008

Just Republicans doing that voodoo (economics) that they are so well known to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 07/12/2008

To Dr. Phil Gramm, former senator, millionaire due to lobbyist money, and now a lobbyist himself: Please tell Senator McCain the IndymacBank problem is only a figment of everyone's imagination and was not caused by the decisions of wanton greedy stupid bankers, one of which you represent. (UBS) Tell Senator McCain, the last time I bought gas for $4.20 per gallon that was only a figment of my imagination and thank God these problems are only in my head and not in my pocketbook. Cheer up, CNBC's Larry Kudlow (drill, drill, drill) agrees with you one hundred percent. Of course, he is either an idiot or is about to lose a large amount of money in the stock market. Hopefully, Senator McCain has thrown you and Charlie Black under the bus, but you might tell him before you go to keep on trying to send jobs to Europe's Airbus, because we need Senator Obama in the White House. Also, great idea to have the government to pay for viagra and not birth control pills. Senator McCain will win the women's vote for sure!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 07/12/2008

Another tragic side effect of outsourcing, work Visas and the endless, costly bloodbath in the Middle East. What Bush did not create, he simply made worse. This is what happens when trillions go to other countries, and this administration keeps stopping us from getting the money. We can only pray that it will all end soon -- and that includes this nightmare of an administration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 07/12/2008

It's all just mental, according to McNutty's economics guru. Danged whiners in the banking industry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 07/12/2008
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