- Sep 16-17, 2025|San Diego, CA
Pinchus D. Raice is a partner and co-chairs the Financial Institutions Practice at Pryor Cashman LLP.
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Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough has ruled that Republicans cannot move ahead with slashing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's funding and Federal Reserve staff pay in the tax bill.
June 20 -
Sprout's ex-CEO Michael Strauss, who has avoided the legal proceedings, has been accused of money laundering and is facing two foreclosures in New York.
June 20 -
The credit bureau is working with Plaid to provide lenders with current and predictive cash-flow data for consumers that don't have an extensive credit record.
June 20 -
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the changes could touch the central bank's quarterly economic forecasts. He also discussed downsizing at the Fed and his tenure on the board of governors.
June 18 -
The Senate version includes restoration of the mortgage interest deduction, but a tax code revision likely would stifle foreign investment in real estate.
June 18
Only 20% of the Top Producers in the National Mortgage News survey were under 40, while almost half were between 41 and 50, and 30% even older.
Those who raced ahead of the pack of loan originators last year went the distance by offering exceptional customer service, catering to niche pockets of demand in the market.
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The CEO of Union Home Mortgage is joining Dream Finders Homes' CEO Patrick Zalupski and others in a bid to purchase the Major League Baseball team.
June 25 -
JPMorgan Chase & Co. has bundled the riskiest portions of over a dozen Freddie Mac mortgage bonds tied to small balance apartment loans in what appears to be the first time this sort of debt has been securitized not once but twice.
June 25 -
New legislation takes into account costs to residents while emphasizing accountability and safety from complex owners, Florida governor Ron DeSantis said.
June 25 -
New self-regulatory guidelines for credit cards and checking accounts are arriving at a time of deregulation in Washington, D.C.
June 25 -
The gap between costs and wages hit an inflection point and policy may determine what happens next, according to the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies.
June 24