The Royal Bank of Scotland has agreed to pay US regulators $4.9 billion in fines to settle litigation over subprime mortgage products it sold before the 2008 financial meltown, the Financial Times reported Thursday. The US attorney's Office in Massachusetts, which oversaw talks with the bank, would not confirm the amount.
But it said in a tweet that it had reached an agreement in principle with RBS and some of its affiliates "to settle potential civil claims to RBS's structuring and sale of residential mortgage-backed securities issued b/w 2005 & 2008." Other details were still being worked out before a final settlement could be announced, according to the prosecutors
This was the last in a series of lawsuits brought against RBS by the US Justice Department. RBS, once the world's largest bank, had to be rescued by British government during the global financial crisis. Like other banks, RBS packaged toxic subprime mortgages into risky financial derivatives and sold them to customers, a practice that helped trigger the 2008 housing meltdown. RBS had already set aside a huge pot of money for fines linked to its behavior leading up to the crisis.