Switzerland’s largest bank, UBS, has agreed to pay $50 million (CHF46 million) in the United States to settle federal civil charges of misleading investors in its sale of risky mortgage bonds before the 2008 financial crisis.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced the settlement with the bank’s investment arm UBS Securities on Tuesday. The SEC said the bank failed to disclose that it had kept $23.6 million in payments it received as it acquired collateral for the mortgage-backed securities. The agency said the money should have gone into the securities for the benefit of investors.
UBS agreed to pay a $5.7 million penalty. In addition, it agreed to return the $23.6 million and a $10.8 million fee it received and disclosed for putting together the 2007 transaction. It will also pay $9.7 million in interest. UBS neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing.
The UBS investment involved pooled securities known as collateralised debt obligations (CDOs), which Wall Street banks sold at the height of the housing boom. CDOs combine slices of debt that have varying levels of risk.
When the real estate bubble burst in 2007, home values plunged and millions of people defaulted on their mortgages and lost their homes. Investors who bought the CDOs and other securities backed by mortgages lost billions. The SEC has said that inaccurate statements by banks in packaging and selling mortgage bonds contributed to the investors‘ losses.
«UBS is pleased to put this investigation behind us, which involved a legacy business that was closed almost five years ago,» the bank said in a statement on Tuesday. «We believe this settlement marks the conclusion of all SEC investigations relating to UBS’s structuring and marketing of CDOs backed by residential mortgage-backed securities.»
Settlements
The settlement with UBS was the latest in a series of SEC actions regarding Wall Street firms‘ conduct in the years preceding the 2008 crisis. The roughly $50 million that UBS is paying is smaller than most of the previous accords with other big banks.
Goldman Sachs agreed in July 2010 to pay $550 million to settle similar SEC charges of misleading buyers of a complex mortgage investment. JPMorgan, the largest US bank by assets, settled similar charges in June 2011 by agreeing to pay $153.6 million, and reached another agreement over mortgage bonds for $296.9 million last November.
Credit Suisse, Switzerland’s second-largest bank, agreed to pay $120 million.
Last month saw a much larger UBS settlement related to US mortgage investments. It was announced that UBS would pay $885 million to settle US government claims that it violated securities laws in its sales of mortgage-backed bonds between 2004 and 2007 to two federally-controlled mortgage finance companies.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees the two companies known as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, had sued UBS and 17 other major banks over their sales to Fannie and Freddie of about $196 billion in mortgage securities that soured when the housing market collapsed.