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Bank of America Backs Out of Private Student Loan Business

Published 19 April 08 02:03 PM | Student Loan Girl 

On April 17, Bank of America Corp. notified student-loan packager First Marblehead Corp. that it would no longer offer private student loans, focusing instead on providing federal student loans. Bank of America’s announcement comes amid increasing unsteadiness in the federal student loan market, where nearly 50 non-government lenders in the last six months have suspended their federal student loan programs.

Bank of America exercised its right to terminate its agreement with First Marblehead after The Education Resources Institute, the Boston-based nonprofit that guaranteed the loans packaged by First Marblehead, voluntarily filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on April 7, 2008.

Bank of America’s decision delivered yet another financial blow to First Marblehead, whose shares have already been on a downward spiral over the past few weeks, tumbling 37 percent on April 8 alone, the day after TERI filed its bankruptcy petition.

Shares in First Marblehead fell another 17 percent to $3.37 on the heels of Bank of America’s announcement, with the stock down nearly 91 percent over the past year. The loans originated by Bank of America accounted for about 15 percent of First Marblehead’s total revenue for the 2007 fiscal year, according to a Boston Business Journal article (“First Marblehead Loses Major Customer, Revenue Source,” April 18, 2008).



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# michael cruz said on April 26, 2008 10:52 PM:

This, I believe is another indication of capitalism in education and how higher ed institutions took advantage of the mix of government and private loan sources.  By pricing education higher than the ability of many loan recipients to pay back comfortably, the impending student loan market crash is inevitable.

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