- American Home Mortgage
Infobox_Company
company_name = American Home Mortgage
company_
company_type = Defunct Corporation
slogan =
foundation =New York, NY (1987 )
location =Melville, NY
key_people =Michael Strauss , CEO & President
num_employees =
industry =Finance
products =Financial Services |Investment management
revenue = loss$1.1 BillionUSD (2006)
net_income = loss$426.5 Million USD (2006 )
homepage = [http://www.americanhm.com www.americanhm.com]American Home Mortgage Investment Corporation (Pinksheets|AHMIQ) was the 10th largest retail
mortgage lender in the United States and was structured as areal estate investment trust (REIT).It has filed for
bankruptcy . [ [http://www.pinksheets.com/pink/quote/quote.jsp?symbol=AHMIQ Pink Sheet information] ] . The company stated that it was focused on earning net interest income from self-originated loans and mortgage-backed securities, and through its taxable subsidiaries, from originating and servicing mortgage loans for institutional investors.Mortgages were originated through the company's employees as well as through mortgage brokers and purchased from correspondent lenders and were serviced at the company's servicing center in Irving,
Texas .The company filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Wilmington Delaware federal court, on August 6, 2007. The week before the filing, the company said that many of its lenders had demanded their money back, and that AHM was also unable to deliver on about US$ 800 million in commitments for housing loans, and had laid off nearly ninety percent of its 7,000 employees.cite news | first= | last= | author= Associated Press | title=AHM Files for Bankruptcy | date=2007-08-06 | publisher= | url =http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-American-Home-Bankruptcy.html | work =New York Times | pages = | accessdate = 2007-08-06 | language = ]History
Founded in 1987 in New York City, the company became a publicly traded on
NASDAQ in September 1999. The company moved its corporate headquarters toMelville, NY in 2000. Since its beginning as American Home Mortgage Holdings, Inc., it was engaged only in the origination and servicing of mortgages. Following its acquisition of Apex Mortgage Capital in December 2003, the Company became aREIT and changed its name to American Home Mortgage Investment Corp., the new parent company of American Home Mortgage and moved from NASDAQ to NYSE. The company has made numerous acquisitions since 1999 including Marina Mortgage of Irvine, CA, First Home Mortgage of Mt Prospect, IL, Columbia National of Columbia, MD, and retail branches from Principal Residential Mortgage, Waterfield Financial, Irwin Mortgage, and 86 Washington Mutual offices. In December 2004, the company moved its listing from NASDAQ to NYSE, under the new ticker symbol, AHM. [ [http://www.nyse.com/about/listed/ahm.html NYSE Listing's Database: AHM] ]On July 31, 2007, the company announced that it can no longer fund home loans and may liquidate assets, putting its survival in doubt. The Melville, New York-based real estate investment trust retained Milestone Advisors and Lazard to help it evaluate options and advise "with respect to the sourcing of additional liquidity including the orderly liquidation of its assets." [ [http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=68091&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1034180&highlight= CorporateIR.net: American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. Provides Update on Liquidity] ] American Home's announcement shows how concerns about credit quality and homeowner defaults have spread beyond subprime lenders, which lend to people with weaker credit, to lenders that make higher-quality loans. "The chances are pretty high that the company either goes bankrupt or materially restructures, leaving little value for shareholders," said Bose George, an analyst at
Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc. in New York. American Home has specialized in prime and near-prime loans. It has, however, made many loans that allow borrowers to produce little documentation of income or assets. It recently commanded about 2.5 percent of the U.S. mortgage market.Financial difficulties
On August 2, 2007, Michael Strauss sent an email to the entire company announcing company's serious financial difficulties.
It is with great sadness I announce today that American Home Mortgage has been forced to close. Unfortunately, the market conditions in both the secondary mortgage market as well as the national real estate market have deteriorated to the point that our business is no longer viable. What this means for most of our employees is that Friday, August 3, 2007 will be your last day of employment. Detailed information regarding payroll, benefits and other human resource related matter will be available Friday morning for distribution in the office. I would like to personally thank every single individual working for the company for their efforts. It has been my privilege to be associated with such a wonderful team.Fact|date=August 2007
Following Strauss's email, at least one employee of AHM has stated that the western division of AHM had been purchased by IndyMac Bank, saving those employees' jobs.Fact|date=August 2007 In 2008, IndyMac also failed—one of the largest bank failures in American history. On July 11, 2008, IndyMac Bank was placed into conservatorship by the FDIC and on August 6, 2008, the bank filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
External links
* [http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/research/profile.asp?Symbol=AHM MoneyCentral American Home Mortgage Investment Corporation]
* [https://www.americanhm.com/ Official site.]
* [http://www.snl.com/InteractiveX/article.aspx?CDID=A-6304631-12902&KPLT=2 Facing liquidity crunch, American Home Mortgage suspends dividend payment (July 28, 2007)]References
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