Countrywide Financial Case Study

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Business ethics is a company’s standards or morals. It is what guides them make decisions that are considered right or wrong when ethical situations arise. The book states that the ethics program helps top managers create the ethical culture and prevents unethical conduct (Ferrell, Fraedrich, & Ferrell, (2018). When doing business with a company, all stakeholders want to be treated fairly. Occasionally, a company may not realize they are acting unethical. In the case of Countrywide Financial and their Subprime loans, it appears they knew exactly what they were doing. They granted loans to minorities and lower income families at a higher cost knowing these clients could not repay the loans. This unethical behavior started with Countrywide Financials’ top management: the cofounder Angelo Mozilo, the CFO, Sieracki, …show more content…

I don’t think it changed much. They were already in violation of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which requires internal auditing of financial reporting (Ferrell, Fraedrich, & Ferrell, (2018). They knew they were operating unethical, but the amount of money top management was making was to great to do the right thing. When the company did well, upper management made a lot of money. I think the Bank of America saw how much money was being made by this scam and wanted to be part of it. Why else would anyone buy a company in trouble and want to keep the same managers on the team? The offer Bank of American offered Sambol, was unbelievable! Sambol was offered: $20 million if he stayed two years after the merger, $8 million in restricted stocks, the use of a company car, use of the company jet, a financial counselor, and his country club dues (Ferrell, Fraedrich, & Ferrell, (2018). That to me is proof that Bank of America wanted to continue the scam. This package was unreal and sounds like they are willing to pay a lot of money to keep the master mind behind the

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