- Posted January 31, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Deal OK'd for Fannie to get $537M on Lehman claim
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal bankruptcy judge has approved Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s settlement with Fannie Mae, allowing the mortgage finance giant to recover about $537 million for its claim against the estate of the failed Wall Street bank over soured mortgage securities.
Judge James Peck made the ruling Wednesday. The settlement values at about $2.15 billion Fannie's claim over home loans and mortgage securities it bought from Lehman before the financial crisis. Under rules of Lehman's bankruptcy proceeding, Washington-based Fannie will receive about 25 percent of that.
Fannie and sibling Freddie Mac were rescued by the government in a $187 billion bailout in 2008 after they were hit by massive losses on high-risk mortgages.
Lehman's bankruptcy in September 2008 was the biggest in U.S. history and helped set off the financial crisis.
Published: Fri, Jan 31, 2014
headlines Oakland County
- Affinity Bar Charity Challenge
- SADO attorneys to argue before the Michigan Supreme Court at April session
- Nessel wins court ruling protecting housing-assistance program from administration’s cuts
- Residents can help direct funding to neighborhood needs
- ABA amicus brief supports law firms targeted by executive orders
headlines National
- Judge grants stay in February 2025 California bar examinees’ case against ProctorU
- Blake Lively’s sexual harassment claims against Justin Baldoni face legal setback
- TikTok creator sued by immigration firm, accused of making defamatory comments online
- 15 attorney killings remain unsolved, Baja California Bar Association says
- ABA amicus brief supports law firms targeted by executive orders
- Legal services provider 8am and NFL’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers announce partnership




