What the heck ever happened to Uncle Sam’s subprime (real estate) lender, Springleaf Financial? Good question. A year ago Uncle and a group of private investors filed with the SEC to spin off the subprime lending and servicing division of American International Group, by selling $500 million worth of stock to the public – through a REIT structure. Well guess what? Answer: a year has passed and there’s been no IPO. (Springleaf’s previous name was American General Finance, a once well regarded nonprime lender/servicer based in Evansville, Ind.) Springleaf owns $13.4 billion of residential real estate loans and $3.5 billion of consumer finance loans. Over the years it has mostly declined to talk to the media. But the story gets more interesting: A unit of Fortress Investments manages the company and one of Springleaf’s servicing partners is Nationstar, which recently went public. But wait: isn’t Nationstar trying to buy Residential Capital Corp./GMAC from Uncle Sam? Indeed it is. Stay tuned.
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The lender has delayed and denied requests to make its CEO available to testify under oath since December, suggesting his testimony was unnecessary.
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The number identifying it as such is significant, but not universal, as servicers also face product-specific challenges and determine whether and how to use AI.
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Mortgage lock volume fell 5.4% in May as rates climbed, but declining pull-throughs suggest some borrowers are reconsidering loan plans amid ongoing rate volatility, Optimal Blue found.
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Zachary Carpenter, tapped to take over as Farmer Mac CEO in March 2027, will now take over the position on July 1, with Bradford Nordholm as CEO emeritus.
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Originators slightly loosened credit for conventional and jumbo products in May but they've held steady after larger growth to begin the year.
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The share of warehouse lenders offering funding lines and sublimits for seconds has risen to new heights according to a Mortgage Bankers Association survey.
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