New York Life Insurance Co., TIAA-CREF, the French bank Dexia and other institutional investors joined the list of bondholders seeking compensation from Bank of America Corp. over losses on Countrywide's mortgage-backed securities.
Countrywide, which B of A bought in 2008, "recklessly" misled the investors in marketing the securities, according to a strongly worded
The investors accuse Countrywide and several executives of perpetrating a "massive fraud" in representations about the "purportedly conservative underwriting standards" in term sheets, prospectuses and other materials for the hundreds of millions of dollars in securities they purchased between 2005 and 2007.
"These representations by Defendants were recklessly or knowingly false when made," the lawsuit said. "In reality, Countrywide was an enterprise driven by only one purpose — to originate and securitize as many mortgage loans as possible into MBS to generate profits for the Countrywide Defendants, without regard to the investors that relied on the critical, false information provided to them."
Shirley Norton, a spokeswoman for B of A, said in an e-mail that the company will review the suit "but on first glance these sound like large, sophisticated [investors] who now want to blame someone for the fact that the declining economy caused their investment to lose value."
The company recently
"As a reminder, there are significant procedural hurdles that parties would have to overcome before any of these amounts become probable," chief executive Brian Moynihan told analysts Friday.
In December, B of A, which bought Countrywide in 2008, said it was holding "constructive"
Among other things, the suit filed Monday cites the











