Filed under: Deals, Launches, Industry, Countrywide Financial (CFC), Housing
If you can make money lending money to people who can’t afford mortgages, why not make money buying them back. Several former Countrywide (NYSE: CFC) managers have linked up with Blackrock (NYSE: BLK) to set up a firm, Private National Mortgage Acceptance Company, to buy troubled mortgages. According to The Wall Street Journal the new operation “seeks to raise more than $2 billion to buy distressed mortgages on the cheap, work with borrowers to restructure them, and then resell them as performing mortgages at a profit.”
The new venture stinks a bit. The people running the venture learned the business at Countrywide, the source of so much of the pain in the current mortgage crisis and the project makes Blackrock appear to be a firm ready to profit from the misfortune of others. Beyond that, the new company seems like a real money-maker.
The Blackrock-supported mortgage-buying operation will have to be careful when it enters the market. If it purchases large packages of home loans and the market keeps falling, the start-up could lose a lot of money. Let’s hope so.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.











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