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While Fannie Mae continues to bleed red ink like a busted crankcase, Freddie Mac turned a profit in the fourth quarter. Overall, it earned $1.5 billion -- but then had to give its "Godfather" (the U.S. Treasury) $1.7 billion in protection money, er, I mean, dividends. Sounds a bit screwy to me but then again the past 10 years in this industry have been screwy.
March 9
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Mortgage companies cut 3,200 full-time employees from their payrolls in January, according to government figures released Friday morning.
March 9 -
Freddie Mac posted net "comprehensive" earnings $1.5 billion in the fourth quarter, but must turn around and pay the U.S. Treasury a $1.7 billion dividend, which means it ultimately lost money during the period.
March 9 -
It may be a buyer's market for residential servicing rights but that isn't stopping mortgage banking firms from unloading their legacy housing receivables in an attempt to clean up their balance sheets.
March 9 -
Quandis has partnered with technology business provider CSC to offer a new short sale tracking and fulfillment portal for the company’s EarlyResolution default management solution in order to accelerate processing cycles.
March 8 -
Old Republic International Corp.'s liquidity is "moderately tighter than previously expected," warned Fitch Ratings. This places greater uncertainty on ORI's ability to fund a potential debt acceleration.
March 8 -
Suddenly, it appears that mortgage banking is hot. Okay, maybe hot is not the best word, but in the past few weeks two residential-related IPOs have hit the market: Nationstar Mortgage, and Home Loan Servicing Solutions. Both are specialty servicers (of sorts), though the latter is really just a shell corporation created to unlock MSR value for Ocwen Financial Corp. (Or maybe I'm being too critical?)
March 8
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Nationstar Mortgage Holdings Inc.'s initial public offering opened this morning on the New York Stock Exchange at $13.58 per share, which is below its pricing late yesterday at $14 per share. At 11:20 am the stock was trading at $13.89 per share.
March 8 -
It may be the best of times to be a commercial, multifamily banker and the worst of times to be a servicer of securitized multifamily loans.
March 8 -
Moody's Investor Service this week went "negative" on the mortgage insurance industry, citing the sector's weak financials and calling its future "unclear."
March 8






