The NJ Office of the Attorney General reported that the New Jersey Bureau of Securities has reached a $495 million agreement in principle with Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., and DLJ Mortgage Capital, Inc. (collectively “Credit Suisse”) that would resolve a lawsuit arising from the offer and sale of toxic residential mortgage-backed securities (“RMBS”) from 2006 to 2007 in the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis.
Once final, the deal will be one of New Jersey’s largest civil monetary recoveries in the State’s history and will include, among other things, approximately $300 million in restitution for investors nationwide.
The State alleged Credit Suisse made material misrepresentations in the offering documents about the risks of the RMBS, including by failing to disclose material defects of the underlying mortgages, violating New Jersey’s securities laws.
As alleged, Credit Suisse perpetrated much of the fraud from its office in Princeton, New Jersey, which was central to Credit Suisse’s business of selling the toxic RMBS to hundreds of institutional investors nationwide, including public and private pension funds, charities, educational institutions, mutual funds, hospitals, and other money managers, who in turn invested the retirement funds of workers and the savings of individual retail investors.
Credit Suisse will neither admit nor deny these allegations as part of the anticipated settlement.
As a result of New Jersey’s action, Credit Suisse will, for the first time, provide restitution to these investors in connection with an action brought by a regulatory authority.
Under the agreement in principle, Credit Suisse will also pay a civil monetary penalty of $100 million, which would be the largest ever secured by the Bureau.
It would also provide for the appointment of a Claims Administrator to help distribute the restitution to investors and permanently enjoin Credit Suisse from future violations of New Jersey’s securities laws.
“This agreement, in principle, holds Credit Suisse accountable for the loss of billions of dollars that helped put the nation in financial crisis,” said First Assistant Attorney General Lyndsay V. Ruotolo. “It has taken more than a decade of investigation and litigation to reach this historic result, but we never wavered in our resolve to get here.
The recovery Credit Suisse has agreed to pay reflects the magnitude of harm it inflicted on the public and underscores New Jersey’s commitment to pursue cases vigorously, no matter the challenges, to protect the financial interests of the investing public.”
“This settlement will provide meaningful financial relief to investors nationwide who were left holding the bag in the fallout from Credit Suisse’s conduct. It also sends a clear message that we will not allow New Jersey to be used as a base of operations for illegal schemes targeting investors,” said Acting Bureau Chief Amy G. Kopleton.
“The Bureau will continue to protect the integrity of New Jersey’s financial services industry by bringing cases against firms that unlawfully drive up profits by withholding vital information about the products they sell.”
Under Governor Phil Murphy, the Attorney General’s Office has been committed to protecting investors and consumers of financial products and services – both to hold financial institutions accountable when they harm New Jersey residents and to deter the kinds of corporate wrongdoing that contributed to the 2008 financial crisis.
Today’s settlement, in principle, is the latest result of that commitment.
The State’s lawsuit, filed in Superior Court, Chancery Division, Mercer County, alleges that Credit Suisse packaged billions of dollars worth of bad residential loans into publicly-traded RMBS, which were sold to unsuspecting investors through registration statements, prospectuses, and other offering materials containing fraudulent representations about the quality of the underlying loans.
Additionally, the lawsuit alleged that Credit Suisse failed to disclose to investors the wholesale abandonment of underwriting guidelines designed to ensure that the mortgage loans underlying its securities trusts were made in accordance with appropriate lending guidelines; that numerous loan originators had poor track records of defaults and delinquencies; and that some loan originators had even been suspended from doing business with Credit Suisse, according to the allegations.
Other material information that was not disclosed, according to the State’s lawsuit, included that:
- A significant number of the loans which Credit Suisse had examined were underwater with combined loan-to-value ratios of more than 100 percent;
- Credit Suisse’s traders had warned against the risky nature of certain types of loans and were not willing to hold them on Credit Suisse’s books at the same time Credit Suisse was unloading them to investors; and
- Credit Suisse had pocketed tens of millions of dollars in reimbursements from loan originators arising out of defective loans without passing those funds along to the trusts that actually owned the loans.
The agreement in principle with Credit Suisse is the result of investigators, analysts, attorneys, and others who spent years in dogged pursuit of redress for investors who suffered devastating financial losses due to the sale of toxic RMBS by Credit Suisse.
In January 2017, the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) reached a $5.28 billion settlement with Credit Suisse in connection with alleged misconduct in the packaging, securitization, issuance, marketing, and sale of RMBs. In December 2018, New York reached a $10 million settlement with the bank in connection with its sale of RMBS.
While the settlement with the DOJ required Credit Suisse to provide relief to underwater homeowners, distressed borrowers, and affected communities in the form of loan forgiveness and financing for affordable housing, neither settlement required Credit Suisse to provide restitution to investors.
The agreement in principle reached here would create a nearly $300 million restitution fund.