The mortgage industry's digital transformation is revolutionizing the home buying experience and upending the status quo for lenders and servicers. The Digital Mortgage Conference is the premiere event exclusively dedicated to these developments, bringing over 1,500 professionals to Las Vegas on Sept. 17-18 for keynote speakers, panels and the main attraction: live product demos showcasing the latest mortgage innovations.

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John Hekman is a director at Berkeley Research Group, LLC. He has taught macroeconomics and monetary theory at the University of Southern California, the University of North Carolina, Boston College and the University of Chicago. He was previously the Director of U.S. Economic Forecasting at Claremont Economics Institute. He holds a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago.
March 6 -
The CFPB is requesting input on adding specifications that are intended to alleviate TRID compliance concerns on construction-to-permanent single-close loans and those requiring separate construction and home loan closings.
March 6 -
Brett Dillenberg oversees six branches previously under the umbrella of LendUS that were acquired by the Ohio-based lender last year.
March 6 -
More than 90% of appraisers are white, and researchers have found that bias leads to lower valuations for homeowners of color. A Flagstar executive said the mortgage-focused bank is "not just going to sit on the sidelines and watch this happen."
March 3 -
Current forbearance volumes have returned to pre-COVID levels among loans held at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, a Fed study found.
March 3 -
A New York Fed study finds that the Community Reinvestment Act does nothing to extend credit to lower-income areas, but it's unclear whether regulators' current reform effort could change that.
March 3 -
"The committee is strongly committed to returning inflation to its 2% objective," the Fed said in its semi-annual report to Congress released Friday.
March 3 -
The disclosures follow full year and fourth quarter earnings reports in which each company revealed big declines from booming performances in 2021.
March 3 -
In the four weeks through Feb. 26, the median price for a typical home was $350,246, down 0.6% from the same period a year earlier, the brokerage said Thursday.
March 3 -
The Federal Housing Finance Agency head has said: "The status quo is not acceptable." She could not be more correct.
March 3











