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American Home Mortgage files for bankruptcy

August 6th, 2007, 7:02 am · 1 Comment · posted by Mathew Padilla

American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. on Monday filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, becoming the largest home lender outside of subprime to fail since the end of the housing boom.

Here’s more from Reuters:

The Melville, N.Y.-based real estate investment trust, one of the largest independent U.S. home loan providers, filed for protection from creditors in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.

The filing came after American Home closed most operations on Friday, laying off all but about 750 workers. The company said it had started the year with more than 7,400 employees.

American Home’s bankruptcy reflects how worries about loan defaults fueled by slumping U.S. housing prices have spread beyond subprime lenders, which lend to people with weaker credit, to companies that make higher-quality loans.

American Home invested in home loans and mortgage securities, serviced mortgage accounts and originated loans from a network of branches.

The company offered “Alt-A” mortgages, loans that fall between prime and subprime in quality, as well as adjustable-rate loans. Founded in 1987, American Home said last year it grew to become the 10th-largest U.S. retail mortgage lender by originating $59 billion in loans.

Yet American Home’s collapse was faster than that of New Century Financial Corp.. That Irvine-based subprime specialist that filed for bankruptcy on April 2, less than two months after disclosing accounting problems and mounting losses.

New Century has since liquidated most of its assets.

American Home cut its dividend and warned in late June of rising losses from sour loans, but it wasn’t until July 27 that it first revealed it was suffering a credit crunch and postponed paying a scheduled dividend.

Four days later, the company’s own lenders cut off its access to credit lines. American Home hired advisers to help it evaluate options, including a liquidation of assets. Several states told it to stop making new loans.

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Posted in: Company Watch
 
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 One Comment

  • Albert Franklin says:

    I wonder if they are going to claim, as a part of their loss, all the money the loan company set in the stock market, and loss, while playing Hedged Monte-Carlo?

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