Showing posts with label ebbers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ebbers. Show all posts

July 28, 2007

Here's Countrywide Mortgage's Angelo Mozilo trying to defend why he sold $118 million in CFC stock before his company crashed

It's funny reading this on the same day that Qwest's former CEO Joe Nacchio was sentenced to six years in Federal prison and $52 million for insider trading and pumping up his numbers while he bailed out. Deja vu all over again? Hey, nobody saw it coming, right Angelo?

And for a CEO to be desperately selling as the company he runs is doing stock buybacks to prop up the price, man, that stinks to high heaven.

Ronald Redfield - Redfield, Blonsky & Co.: Were there any buybacks during the quarter? Do you find, Angelo, with all respect, you selling a material amount of shares into buybacks? You previously mentioned you own 10 million shares. How many shares do you currently own, not including options?

Angelo Mozilo: I don't know the answer to that question. I own -- including options, I think around -- I think it is around 11, 12 million, something like that. The sales of the stock had nothing to do with buybacks because that 10b5-1 agreement was made well over a year ago.

Ronald Redfield - Redfield, Blonsky & Co.: No, the legality is fine, but
one can think that perhaps the price is being held up the buybacks creating a demand.

Angelo Mozilo: Yes, well, if you think like that it's -- I don't think like that. The buybacks were done because we thought it was in the best interest of shareholders. I have -- as somebody pointed out, I'm 68 years old, I own a lot of shares, and I have 10b5-1 that is in process right now. That is selling into this market when the buybacks are not holding it up.

So it is an independent issue that is not relevant to buybacks or not buybacks. It is a personal situation that I'm selling into a market no matter where the price of the stock is.

Angelo Mozilo: Okay, some final comments. One to the individual who asked about my sale of stock. The decision to buy back stock is a collective decision, really emanates from the financial operations of the Company as to what is the best return for the investment of the shareholders, invested capital for the shareholders.
So it is totally unrelated to any of my issues relative to the sale of stock.

Secondly, as I said, I don't know the exact amount of shares that I have. But the shares that I have, actual stock I have, I have retained for 39 and a half years. Not sold a share of the initial stock that I got when Dave and I started this Company that I got, that I purchased.
The only thing that is being sold under the 10b5-1 are options with expiration dates.

March 07, 2007

Countrywide's Mozilo takes $140,000,000 off the top - and sends the CFO out to pump up the stock yesterday (so he can sell some more)


The sheer volume and brazenness of this insider selling at Countrywide is staggering. Nearly $600,000,000 in sales, and $73,000 in buys. No, that's not a misprint.

And in the middle of this historic subprime / lending meltdown, instead of coming clean like HSBC and announcing the size of the write-off, Mozilo sends the CFO out yesterday to pump up the stock (so he can sell some more), having him say "We're a top-conditioned athlete" and that they have no problems, unlike all their competitors that are going belly-up.

So, why is the top conditioned athlete selling everything he has then? If times are so rosy ahead, wouldn't he be buying or holding instead?

Note: I'm gleefully short CFC.

Wall Street Journal: How Countrywide CEO Wins Amid Mortgage Mayhem

If you're looking for a big winner in the subprime-mortgage meltdown, try Angelo Mozilo.

The take-no-prisoners chief executive of Countrywide Financial sold $140 million of his personal holdings of Countrywide's stock in the past 14 months -- before last week's news that the delinquency rate on his company's subprime mortgages was soaring.

Even so, he expects shareholders to be grateful.

Mr. Mozilo's company didn't lead the subprime race-to-the-bottom in recent years, during which mortgage companies offered ever-easier terms to ever-more questionable borrowers. But he didn't slam on the brakes, either.

March 06, 2007

As subprime lending implodes, Angelo Mozilo is selling Countrywide shares as fast as he can




While putting out reassuring words to the street, false rumors of a pending acquisition by BofA, and holding back any information about what's really going on with CFC's imploding portfolio (Sarbanes-Oxley anyone?), this guy is dumping his shares as fast as possible, while his stock, industry and country's financial system melts down

Ah, only in America folks. Only in America.

Here's his soothing words the other day, from one of the largest subprime lenders in the US:

Chief Executive Officer Angelo Mozilo said last month the company pulled back from subprime loans in 2006.

"If you look at our market share, we lost some for the first time in years, but it's all in the subprime area,'' he said in a Feb. 8 interview, adding the company holds only higher- quality prime loans at its bank. ``We were a dominant player, and now subprime is a pretty small portion of our business.''

And here's his trades just this year (note - I'm still gleefully short CFC)

2-Mar-07
46,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $441,600)
2-Mar-07
46,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $37.18 per share.(Proceeds of $1,710,280)
1-Mar-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
1-Mar-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $37.10 per share.(Proceeds of $2,597,000)
28-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $441,600)
28-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $37.91 per share.(Proceeds of $1,743,859)
22-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $40.45 per share.(Proceeds of $2,831,500)
21-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $441,600)
21-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $40.77 per share.(Proceeds of $1,875,420)
21-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
15-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
15-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $41.88 per share.(Proceeds of $2,931,600)
13-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $441,600)
13-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $41.26 per share.(Proceeds of $1,897,960)
13-Feb-07
241,081
CFC
Acquisition (Non Open Market) at $0 per share.
12-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
12-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $41.19 per share.(Proceeds of $2,883,300)
9-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $441,600)
9-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $43.69 per share.(Proceeds of $2,009,740)
8-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
8-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $43.47 per share.(Proceeds of $3,042,900)
5-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $441,600)
5-Feb-07
46,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $44.61 per share.(Proceeds of $2,052,060)
2-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
2-Feb-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $44.52 per share.(Proceeds of $3,116,400)
26-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $220,800)
26-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $40.40 per share.(Proceeds of $929,200)
24-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
24-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $41.65 per share.(Proceeds of $2,915,500)
22-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $220,800)
22-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $41.27 per share.(Proceeds of $949,210)
19-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
19-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $41.24 per share.(Proceeds of $2,886,800)
18-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $220,800)
18-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $40.35 per share.(Proceeds of $928,050)
11-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $220,800)
11-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $42.18 per share.(Proceeds of $970,140)
10-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
10-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $42.12 per share.(Proceeds of $2,948,400)
8-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
8-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $42.05 per share.(Proceeds of $2,943,500)
5-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $220,800)
5-Jan-07
23,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $42.37 per share.(Proceeds of $974,509)
4-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Option Exercise at $9.60 per share. (Cost of $672,000)
4-Jan-07
70,000
CFC
Automatic Sale at $42.22 per share.(Proceeds of $2,955,400)