American Home Mortgage files for bankruptcy protection

Published: Monday, Aug. 6 2007 11:04 a.m. MDT

NEW YORK — American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday, the latest casualty of a mortgage industry that has plunged into distress.

The Melville, N.Y.-based company's request for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection — filed in bankruptcy court in Wilmington, Del. — caps a tumultuous 10 days for what had been the nation's 10th-biggest home lender.

American Home Mortgage said it fell victim to "extraordinary disruptions" in the markets that support the mortgage industry. A cold housing market and a spike in payment defaults scared investors away from mortgage debt, including bonds and other securities backed by home loans.

American Home Mortgage's 40 biggest creditors include virtually all the major names of Wall Street. At the top of the list are Deutsche Bank AG and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Deutsche Bank had no comment. JPMorgan Chase declined to comment on its exposure.

JMP Securities analyst Steven C. Delaney said the reason American Home Mortgage went bankrupt in the first place — the exodus of buyers from the mortgage debt market — also means the company will have trouble selling its assets to raise cash.

"We are in a market now where value is a fleeting concept," Delaney said. "The market today has just basically shut down. ... They might not even find a buyer at any price today."

In a statement, American Home said it lined up $50 million in debtor-in-possession financing from WL Ross & Co. LLC. WL Ross is led by billionaire Wilbur L. Ross Jr., who has rescued failed companies in the steel, coal and textile industries.

The company hired Stephen F. Cooper to be chief restructuring officer. Cooper was also chief restructuring officer for Enron Corp.

The stock market had anticipated the company's demise. Its shares, which closed 2006 at more than $35, fell to 44 cents before trading was suspended Monday.

While bankrupt lenders carry ominous implications for the housing market and for consumers hoping to take out a new mortgage, they do not affect mortgages already issued.

A bankrupt lender simply means financial institutions will likely buy the company's loans as its assets are auctioned off; it does not imperil people's homes.

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