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JPMorgan in talks to settle mortgage probes: source

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JPMorgan has agreed to pay US$1 billion to settle regulatory actions related to a US$6.2 billion trading loss it incurred last year in its Chief Investment Office and to allegations of wrongful billing of credit-card customers. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

JPMorgan Chase, facing several investigations into its mortgage practices, is seeking a global settlement with US government authorities in multiple jurisdictions, a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

Negotiations have resumed with the US Department of Justice after federal prosecutors in California delayed a plan to file a lawsuit there on Tuesday.

The global settlement would cover probes of JPMorgan’s mortgage business, as well as investigations of similar operations it inherited from other banks during the financial crisis. The investigations include civil and criminal authorities from the DOJ.

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The California case involved the sale of bonds backed by subprime mortgages and other risky home loans between 2005 and 2007.

The California negotiations initially broke down over the amount the bank would pay as a penalty, sources said.

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Meanwhile, the Department of Housing and Urban Development took issue on Tuesday with a report in another publication that the agency was seeking a US$20 billion settlement from the bank over its mortgage practices. The housing agency said that was “categorically false.”

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