With his jeans, Hawaiian shirts and graying hair wisping over his collar, Jim Hodge looks more like he belongs at a Jimmy Buffett concert than at the helm of a major mortgage company. But brokering loans has made Hodge a wealthy man.
Hodge or his companies own some 20 properties — in Houston, St. Croix, near Aspen and on the main drag of Sturgis, S.D., site of one of the largest motorcycle rallies in the USA.
To get to his far-flung homes and businesses, Hodge, 69, uses one of his companies' two airplanes, including a $3.1 million Cessna jet. His fleet of cars and Harley-Davidsons includes "Big Daddy," a custom bike his employees gave him.
"I've had a great run," he says of his 40 years in the mortgage business. "Every day I get up and say, 'Thank you.' "
But it's been a bumpy journey.
In 1991, the Mississippi savings and loan he owned, Mercantile Savings Bank, was seized. The Resolution Trust Corp. estimated the takeover and sale of the bank would cost it $5.7 million.
Regulators fined Hodge for misusing the bank's money, among other things. A 1992 cease-and-desist order stated that Hodge couldn't hold any leadership post in an insured savings association.
Hodge blamed bookkeeping errors and an overwrought government focus on savings and loans. He got the order terminated in 1998.
"It's just the most bizarre Alice in Wonderland I've ever seen," Hodge said of Mercantile's seizure.
The same year he lost his bank, Hodge launched Allied.
At its peak in 2003, Allied boasted that it originated $15 billion worth of loans a year and had more than 700 branches, according to its website. BrokerMagazine listed Allied as the nation's top loan broker for several years running.
Now, Allied is the hub of several companies run by Hodge, including a credit union, insurance office and real estate arm. Hodge's firms also provide Allied with payroll processing, corporate personnel and company merchandise.
The result is multiple revenue streams coming to Hodge — branch offices pay affiliated companies for various services in addition to a percentage of every mortgage transaction. Hodge, his wife and his grown son own Allied.
In an interview, a relaxed Hodge freely answered questions about allegations of fraud and misconduct at Allied branches.
He said the company complies with regulations and moves quickly to address problems. He said he personally approves branch managers to hire, and he demonstrated familiarity with the minutiae of sanctions against the firm.
In recent legal depositions, however, Hodge came across in a far different way: as a distant leader unfamiliar with even basic facts about Allied. In a deposition last year, he claimed to know little about federal audits and pending lawsuits and drew a blank about a meeting, held only a day earlier, to arrange lines of credit for Allied.
Attorney Susan Hutchison, who represents a former manager at a Hodge company who claims he was fired after he got a brain tumor, said Hodge told her during a break in the deposition: " 'I will fight this until my last, gasping, dying breath.' "
Hodge said his heart is still in the business and that Allied will survive the lawsuits and any broadsides from regulators.
"That's our motto," he said in his Texas drawl. "The last company standing."