Citigroup Agrees To Pay $7 Billion In Largest Civil Fraud Penalty

Citigroup has agreed to pay $7 billion to resolve claims it misled investors about shoddy mortgage-backed securities in the run-up to the financial crisis, in a deal that includes the largest civil fraud penalty ever levied by the U.S. Justice Department, according to The Associated Press.

The settlement, announced on Monday, is more than twice what many analysts expected but less than the $12 billion the government sought in negotiations with Citi C.N, the third largest U.S. bank, the AP reported. The accord came roughly six years after the height of the financial crisis and is one of several Justice Department probes into the packaging and sale of risky home loans.

Many of the securities were marketed as safe, even though the banks knew they were destined to collapse, according to the AP. The widespread implosion of the securities fueled the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

"We're not letting up, and we're not going away," Tony West, the Justice Department's No. 3 official, said in announcing the Citigroup deal, the AP reported. "We will continue to pursue these cases," he said, adding that related announcements could come "in the very near future."

Citigroup acknowledged it was aware that "significant percentages" of sample loans did not comply with underwriting guidelines but the bank pooled them into securities anyway, according to the AP.

In one 2007 deal, a Citigroup trader told colleagues in an email he had reviewed a due diligence report on the poorest quality loans, and that they "should start praying," according to the document, the AP reported.

Many of the loans listed unreasonable borrower incomes or home values below the original appraisals, the trader wrote, saying he "would not be surprised if half of these loans went down," according to the AP. Citigroup still securitized loans from the pool, according to the document.

The settlement, signed over the weekend, capped months of negotiations, during which the government threatened to sue the bank, the AP reported.

"The penalty is appropriate, given the strength of the evidence of the wrongdoing committed by Citi," U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement on Monday, according to the AP. "Despite the fact that Citigroup learned of serious and widespread defects among the increasingly risky loans they were securing, the bank and its employees concealed these defects," Holder added.

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