By AnnaMaria Andriotis And Rachel Louise Ensign
Federal officials reached a settlement with Hudson City Bancorp
Inc. over allegations that the Paramus, N.J., lender intentionally
withheld mortgages from minorities, signaling renewed interest in
an area that drew focus decades ago.
The Justice Department said Thursday there could be more cases
to come against banks over a practice known as "redlining," which
was barred after an outcry in the 1960s and '70s that banks were
discriminating against minorities.
If the settlement is approved by the U.S. District Court in New
Jersey, Hudson City will pay nearly $33 million, including about
$27 million for loan subsidy and outreach programs to minorities
and a $5.5 million penalty.
"Redlining is not a vestige of the past," said Vanita Gupta,
head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division on the
conference call with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to
discuss the settlement.
The $33 million case represented the largest-ever
residential-mortgage redlining settlement for the Justice
Department and is the first redlining action for the CFPB,
conceived in the Dodd-Frank financial law of 2010.
"Discriminatory practices in the mortgage market undermine
people's ability to buy a home and build long-term wealth," added
CFPB director Richard Cordray. "Rooting out discrimination to
ensure fair and equal access to credit for all qualified borrowers
remains a priority."
Hudson City neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing but in a
company statement said it "disagrees with the statistical analysis
of loans relied upon by the DOJ and CFPB as the principal basis for
[the] claims as well as the agencies' conclusions from their
investigations."
It added that it settled the matter "to avoid litigation with
these agencies so that it can focus on continuing to provide fair
credit services to its customers and working to complete its
pending merger."
The case settlement comes days before the bank is expected to
get the final word from regulators on the fate of its long-awaited
merger with Buffalo, N.Y.-based M&T Bank Corp., announced more
than three years ago. The $3.7 billion proposed tie-up is now the
longest-delayed U.S. bank deal on record valued at more than $100
million, according to Dealogic.
Shares of Hudson City rose nearly 4% after news of the
settlement, with investors seeing the resolution as a positive sign
for the merger. M&T rose less than 1%.
"With such a high-profile merger, these things kind of have to
be cleared up before" the Federal Reserve signs off, said Brian
Klock, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.
The two banks have said they expect the Federal Reserve to make
a decision either approving or denying the deal by Sept. 30.
The Justice Department defines redlining as the discriminatory
practice by banks or other financial institutions to deny or avoid
providing credit services to a consumer because of the racial
demographics of the neighborhood in which the consumer lives. The
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 and similar measures bar lenders
from redlining.
Regulators described the Hudson City settlement as part of a
larger effort under way to stop discriminatory lending. The Justice
Department says it has increased the number of active
mortgage-redlining investigations to its highest level in six
years.
Guggenheim analyst Jaret Seiberg said the settlement sets a
"disturbing precedent" as it is likely the first in a series of
similar redlining inquiries at larger banks. "This raises a risk
for all banks that they're going to have to deal with the DOJ even
more broadly than they already have to deal with them now."
Steve Zeisel, executive vice president and general counsel at
the Consumer Bankers Association, said "lenders work very hard to
ensure there is no discrimination in their lending practices and
maintain robust compliance systems to protect against it."
The Justice Department has now reached settlements with seven
mostly regional and small lenders since 2004 over accusations of
redlining.
In court papers released Thursday, regulators said that between
2009 and 2013, Hudson City avoided locating branches and loan
officers in areas with large African-American and Hispanic
populations and excluded these groups from marketing
strategies.
They also alleged the bank intentionally avoided inner-city
areas with high minority populations in New York, New Jersey and
Connecticut and instead focused on setting up locations in affluent
suburbs with a predominantly white population.
Regulators have so far declined to clear the merger of Hudson
City and M&T initially citing concerns about M&T's
anti-money-laundering systems, which that bank then spent millions
of dollars to bolster.
If the acquisition happens, M&T would become responsible for
fulfilling some of the terms of the agreement, according to the
settlement.
The CFPB has been broadening its search for discriminatory
practices; the bureau has been investigating car-loan lenders since
it opened its doors in 2011, alleging, along with the Justice
Department, that some lenders' pricing policies are leading to car
dealers charging minorities more in interest rates than other
borrowers.
Hudson City's alleged wrongdoings emerged in March 2014 during a
routine examination by the CFPB. The CFPB says the investigation
looked at branch development dating back to 2004 to determine what
effects it had on minority borrowers' access to credit between 2009
and 2013, the time period the settlement covers. Between 2004 and
2010, the bank opened or acquired 54 branches, according to court
papers filed Thursday.
Using census data, the CFPB and Justice Department found that of
the 135 branches Hudson City operates, nearly 90% are located
outside majority black and Hispanic areas. Between 2009 and 2013,
the bank didn't accept mortgage applications at some of its
branches and referred some applicants to branches "outside of and
not in proximity to majority-Black-and-Hispanic areas," according
to court papers.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 24, 2015 19:34 ET (23:34 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Hudson City Bancorp (NASDAQ:HCBK)
Historical Stock Chart
From Nov 2024 to Dec 2024
Hudson City Bancorp (NASDAQ:HCBK)
Historical Stock Chart
From Dec 2023 to Dec 2024