NEW YORK (AP) — Bank  of America and its Countrywide unit will pay $8.5 billion to settle  claims that the lenders sold poor-quality, mortgage-backed securities  that went sour when the housing market collapsed. The deal,  announced Wednesday, cames after a group of 22 investors demanded that  the Charlotte, N.C., bank repurchase $47 billion in mortgages that its  Countrywide unit sold to them in the form of bonds. The group,  which includes the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Pimco Investment  Management and Blackrock Financial Management, argued that Countrywide  enriched itself at the expense of investors by continuing to service bad  loans while running up servicing fees. Bank of America, which bought Countrywide in 2008 for $4 billion, has denied those claims. Bank  of America CEO Brian Moynihan said Wednesday that the settlement would  minimize “future economic uncertainty” in the banking business and  “clean up the mortgage issues largely stemming from our purchase of  Countrywide.” The settlement is subject to court approval and covers 530 trusts with an original principal balance of $424 billion. Citi  analyst Keith Horowitz said the settlement, which amounts to only 2  percent of the original principal balance, removes one of the largest  investor risks for Bank of America. “We think this could prove to  be a step forward” for Bank of America, Mr. Horowitz said. It would show  investors that the bank can manage through crisis without raising  additional capital. As a result of the settlement, Bank of America  put its second-quarter loss at $8.6 billion to $9.1 billion. Excluding  the settlement and other charges, the bank expects to post a quarterly  loss of $3.2 billion to $3.7 billion. Shares of Bank of America  Corp. jumped more than 4 percent, or 48 cents, to $11.30 before the  market opened, with investors happy that the bank can put a very big  uncertainty behind it. Investors now may be more confident that  they can get similar concessions from other major U.S. banks that  created markets for mortgage-backed securities with questionable  pedigrees. Yet stocks in the financial sector were rising in  electronic trading Wednesday, likely because the Bank of America deal  presents a framework for others to follow.
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