Earnings
Earnings
-
Like other mortgage lenders, the San Francisco megabank has been cutting staff since refinancing volumes started to fall. Additional layoffs are expected over the next couple of quarters, according to the bank’s chief financial officer.
July 15 -
These results are likely to be mirrored by the nonbank lenders when they report earnings, said Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.
July 15 -
Wells Fargo missed analysts’ earnings estimates as home lending slowed and the bank set aside more than expected for potentially soured loans as the Federal Reserve’s rate hikes started to cool the once-hot housing market.
July 15 -
The San Francisco bank reported a 31% increase in loan originations during the second quarter. Analysts are wondering whether it will be able to secure enough low-cost funds to avoid eroding margins.
July 14 -
Capital adequacy at the four largest underwriters remained strong at the end of 2021 even with a slight decline from the prior year, Fitch Ratings said.
July 6 -
The fast-paced rise in rates should be good for banks — until it isn't. The higher interest earned on loan payments will at some point be offset by higher interest paid on deposits. The only questions are: When, and by how much?
July 5 -
If it works as intended, by calming inflation, it will help to keep mortgage rates low in the long-term.
June 16 -
The effects on nonbanks will depend on the mix between their production and servicing operations, Fitch Ratings said.
June 1 -
The government-sponsored enterprises will start releasing information similar to what large banks already do, starting in the first quarter of 2023.
May 26 -
Revenue was also slashed by lower per-employee productivity and slipping application pull-through.
May 24 -
First quarter gain-on-sale at nine originators tracked by Keefe, Bruyette & Woods averaged 149 basis points, much higher than the 5 bps recorded for independent mortgage bankers tracked by the MBA.
May 23 -
But the REIT, which invests in mortgages that have to be verified through nontraditional means like bank statements, has seen an improvement in its outlook since the first quarter.
May 13 -
Higher rates and tight margins are affecting its non-QM and conforming businesses.
May 13 -
Only Stewart reported a quarter-to-quarter increase in net income, while upstart Doma is reducing headcount by 15%.
May 13 -
The sale of its correspondent business to Planet Home Lending, divestment in a reverse mortgage lender, Longbridge Financial, and the outsourcing of mortgage servicing rights all reinforce its focus on wholesale, company management said.
May 12 -
Its outlook is about $20 billion less than what the analyst consensus forecast had called for.
May 11 -
Forecasting that it will not turn a profit in the 2022 fiscal year, the company plans to make job cuts, suspend dividends and introduce new products.
May 10 -
The company earned $453.3 million, inclusive of a $172 million increase in the fair value of its mortgage servicing rights, but future originations and revenue are expected to decline while it plans to continue challenging market rivals on pricing.
May 10 -
While the company improved on the prior quarter’s results, efficiency measures including layoffs failed to make up for less favorable secondary market conditions.
May 10 -
New insurance written during the first quarter slipped by 20% from the prior three months and by 30% year-over-year, yet five companies had higher income than in the fourth quarter and all six earned more money than in the first quarter 2021.
May 9


















