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Capital One said it will shut down GreenPoint Mortgage

Capital One said it will shut down GreenPoint Mortgage and eliminate most of the jobs by the end of year. The company will “cease residential mortgage origination” effective immediately and close GreenPoint’s Novato, Calif., headquarters and 31 locations in 19 states.

The company said it will honor commitments to customers with locked rates who have loans already in the pipeline.

“Over the past few months, we have experienced an unprecedented disruption in the secondary mortgage markets,” Capital One Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Richard D. Fairbank wrote in an internal memo to employees. “I made the decision to wind down the business with a heavy heart.”

GreenPoint specializes in no-documentation and Alt-A mortgage loans for borrowers with slightly better credit than subprime borrowers. In his memo, Fairbank said that market has seen a “significant reduction in liquidity and continuing volatility.”

The decision to close GreenPoint will hit McLean, Va.-based Capital One with an $860 million charge, or $2.15 per share, the vast majority of which will come in 2007. Capital One lowered its 2007 earnings guidance by 14 percent to $5 per share.

Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected earnings of $7.05 per share. Analysts estimates typically exclude one-time charges.

Capital One made the announcement after markets closed Monday. Its shares fell $2.03 to close at $66.72, then fell another 82 cents in after-hours trading.

Capital One said its other business lines remain solid and in line with expectations, adding that it will continue to sell home loans through Capital One Home Loans and its bank branches.

“Capital One’s other businesses are supported by ample liquidity and funding including deep access to deposits, a ’stockpile’ of subordinated credit card funding in place that allows approximately $9 billion of AAA credit card funding going forward, and a $25 billion portfolio of highly liquid securities,” Perlin said.

As the nation’s housing market has cooled, the mortgage lending industry has struggled with a dramatic rise in mortgage defaults and foreclosures. Many homebuyers have been forced into default or foreclosure because they haven’t been able to sell their homes or end up owing more than their home is worth.

As a result, it has become more difficult for lenders like GreenPoint to sell the mortgages they originate to investors.

“The reductions in demand and pricing in the secondary mortgage markets make it difficult to operate our wholesale mortgage banking business profitably,” said Gary Perlin, Capital One’s chief financial officer.

Source = Yahoo/Finance

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