Countrywide layoffs in the Alt-A division

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I fell in to a burning ring of fire
I went down, down, down
and the flames went higher.
And it burns, burns, burns
the ring of fire :nana:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070820...2&printer=1;_ylt=Ah0Pi11X0Ul193rdzlbnBglv24cA

Countrywide said to begin layoffs

Mon Aug 20, 10:09 AM ET

Countrywide Financial Corp., the nation's largest mortgage lender, has begun laying off staff as part of its effort to ride out the credit crunch that has rocked the home loan industry, according to a report published Monday.

The job cuts occurred in Countrywide's Full Spectrum Lending unit, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing an internal e-mail sent Friday to employees of that division.

The e-mail didn't disclose how many employees were laid off from that division, which handles many Alt-A mortgages, which are given to customers who either have minor credit problems or who cannot provide full income documentation required to get a traditional prime loan.

Last week, Countrywide, which as a whole employs about 61,000 people, was forced to borrow $11.5 billion so it could keep making home loans. It was a move that rattled investors who have watched a number of smaller mortgage companies go under because of credit problems.

Countrywide Financial spokesman Daniel Weidman did not immediately respond to a phone message left early Monday seeking comment.

Its shares rose 74 cents, or 3.5 percent, to $22.17 in early trading Monday after rising 13 percent on Friday. They have traded in a 52-week range of $15 to $45.26 over the past 52 weeks.

Countrywide is the largest mortgage lender by volume, accounting for more than 13 percent of the loan servicing market as of June 30, according to the mortgage industry publication Inside Mortgage Finance.

The mortgage lending industry has been grappling with a spike in mortgage defaults and foreclosures as the housing market has cooled.

Many homebuyers have been forced into default or foreclosure because they haven't been able to sell their homes or end up owing more than their home is worth.

A jump in subprime mortgage defaults earlier this year forced several lenders out of business and prompted industrywide tightening of lending standards involving higher risk borrowers.

Like other lenders, Countrywide, based in Calabasas, has also tightened its credit guidelines and stopped selling some types of adjustable rate loans.

___

On the Net: http://www.Countrywide.com
 
Greenpoint/Capital One mortgage closed today. I gotta start looking for a new fucking job. Dammit! :eek:
 
BuffRudy said:
Greenpoint/Capital One mortgage closed today. I gotta start looking for a new fucking job. Dammit! :eek:
1900 jobs gone.

As Vetteman said, there's no need to panic. :rolleyes:
(Yes, he's an idiot.)
 
Yes, people should be very, very nervous.

I'm gonna find another job with no problem. I've got salary, savings, severance, 401K and unemployment to last me nearly a year. I'm gonna be good to go. It's the other people I work with who have house pmts, car pmts, cc bills etc... I'm in good shape compared to them.
 
BuffRudy said:
Yes, people should be very, very nervous.

I'm gonna find another job with no problem. I've got salary, savings, severance, 401K and unemployment to last me nearly a year. I'm gonna be good to go. It's the other people I work with who have house pmts, car pmts, cc bills etc... I'm in good shape compared to them.
You have a PM :)
 
BuffRudy said:
Greenpoint/Capital One mortgage closed today. I gotta start looking for a new fucking job. Dammit! :eek:

What's your experience like?
 
LadyAria said:
What's your experience like?


My experience? I've done data entry, retail sales (clothing), receptionist, admin asst, exec asst & I've even worked the front counter of a dry cleaner. I've worked in banking, mortgage, construction, medical...I've got mad skills.
 
BuffRudy said:
My experience? I've done data entry, retail sales (clothing), receptionist, admin asst, exec asst & I've even worked the front counter of a dry cleaner. I've worked in banking, mortgage, construction, medical...I've got mad skills.

It's good your well rounded. Mortgage area will have an talent surplus for a while.
 
LadyAria said:
It's good your well rounded. Mortgage area will have an talent surplus for a while.
They always have. There isn't a job posted anywhere in America that doesn't get flooded with resumes by qualified people.

Ignore the employers and their hand wringing about a lack of employees:

check their resume pile AFTER they have filtered out the unqualified applicants.
 
LovingTongue said:
They always have. There isn't a job posted anywhere in America that doesn't get flooded with resumes by qualified people.

Ignore the employers and their hand wringing about a lack of employees:

check their resume pile AFTER they have filtered out the unqualified applicants.
I've had issues hiring qualified people. With the way people purchase degrees, the country is flooded with "educated" morons.
 
Fuck that company. They loaned money to people they shouldn't have. People who should have been denied because they clearly would not be able to pay the loan back. It's too bad the workers suffer but there was writing on the wall for a housing market crash for years.
 
GranniesJizz said:
Fuck that company. They loaned money to people they shouldn't have. People who should have been denied because they clearly would not be able to pay the loan back. It's too bad the workers suffer but there was writing on the wall for a housing market crash for years.
You haven't seen the half of it yet.

A whole new round of variable loan resets are yet to come, and there is a contraction in consumer spending coming because all the people who cashed in on their rising home value to borrow-and-spend, aren't all able to do that any more.

This time around, the economy is not going to defy the laws of nature and numbers like it has before.

I said this back in 2004 in Lit, credit-based purchases were skyrocketing, and this eventually has to end.

That day is now upon us.
 
LovingTongue said:
You haven't seen the half of it yet.

A whole new round of variable loan resets are yet to come, and there is a contraction in consumer spending coming because all the people who cashed in on their rising home value to borrow-and-spend, aren't all able to do that any more.

This time around, the economy is not going to defy the laws of nature and numbers like it has before.

I said this back in 2004 in Lit, credit-based purchases were skyrocketing, and this eventually has to end.

That day is now upon us.


October, December & January are going to have a majority of rate recalcs. It's gonna be a fucking disaster....
 
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