- Sep 16-17, 2025|San Diego, CA
US Treasuries fell for a fifth day as demand for long-term government debt across the globe wanes amid a flurry of bond auctions this week.
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Besides the investment, Citi was also the sole bookrunner on Vontive's first-ever securitization, made up of $150 million of residential transition loans.
May 30 -
The company anticipates a $139.8 million contingency liability and nearly $60 million related expense in a court battle with Pine River Capital Management.
May 30 -
The regulator has postponed the building code in question, but is otherwise battling the challenge raised during the Biden administration.
May 30 -
Uncover the key reasons why lenders should care about liner failures and how environmental risks can derail loan performance when ignored during review.
May 30 -
Rocket Companies and Mesa have both launched credit cards geared that offer homeowners perks and points for paying their mortgage and buying housing-related items.
May 30
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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Like the current HUD secretary, Andrew Hughes holds close ties to former department head Ben Carson, actively supporting his past presidential ambitions.
June 11 -
The government measure of inflation for May ticked up modestly, adding to the signals that the Federal Reserve is unlikely to move on interest rates when it meets next month.
June 11 -
The Trump administration's plan to fire 90% of the staff at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has raised constitutional questions about whether courts can decide whether a president is taking "care that the Laws be faithfully executed."
June 11 -
The deal is secured by a portfolio dominated by mortgage loans considered non-qualified or exempt from ability to repay rules.
June 10 -
Shelia Bair, who chaired the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from 2006 to 2011, said that while post-crisis reforms may have overregulated banks, the current deregulatory swing could undermine important protections and lead to another banking crisis.
June 10