Mortgage bonds and Greece pull down ING
• February 9, 2012 • 11:03am

Netherlands-based ING Group ($5.96 -0.04%) reported income from investments deteriorated in the fourth quarter, primarily due to poor performance on Greek sovereign bonds and mortgage investments.

The insurer reported a $65 million loss on investments in U.S. residential mortgage backed securities. The company also took a $59 million hit on the reduced valuation of derivatives related to its German mortgage portfolio.

“The economic environment became more challenging in the fourth quarter of 2011. The financial crisis spread further into the real economy, and uncertainty around the European sovereign debt crisis continued to erode confidence and amplify market volatility," said Jan Hommen, CEO of ING Group. "Despite this challenging backdrop and its inevitable impact on results, ING posted 15.1% higher full-year underlying earnings in 2011 compared with 2010,"

ING is winding down its United States real estate holdings by 2013, a mandate that is part of its $13.5 billion bailout deal from the Dutch government, under which strict repay clauses are in force.

Hommen added that ING will spend 2012 preparing its insurance operations in the U.S., Europe and Asia to operate as stand-alone entities.

Capital One Financial [ ($51.13 -0.59%) is scheduled to meet with regulators Monday about its bid to buy ING's U.S. assets.

jgaffney@housingwire.com

@jacobgaffney

More In Investments

"It will be from the lender all the way up the chain. They are asking where the problems were from the very beginning, from the lender to the aggregator, on up to the securitizer. The whole process is going to get looked at," said Rich Andreano, a partner at the D.C. firm Ballard Spahr.

New York Mortgage Trust is offering four million shares of common stock as part of its investment strategy to acquire agency residential mortgage-backed securities.

The federal RMBS fraud task force grew the number of its subpoenas to 25. It opened a website for whistleblowers and brought on board a coordinator for all investigative groups, but no action has been taken, yet.

RMBS investors hit Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and other big banks with a $1.8 bilion RMBS lawsuit in a New York courtroom.