Luminent Mortgage Capital, San Francisco, a struggling real estate investment trust that invests in mortgage-backed securities, says its chief financial officer has resigned effective Dec. 31.The resignation comes a few weeks after Luminent disclosed that Deloitte & Touche had quit as its independent auditor. The company said Christopher Zyda, its CFO and senior vice president, resigned because he did not want to relocate to Philadelphia when Luminent closes its San Francisco headquarters and moves its operations there. Luminent has already named vice president and controller Karen Chang to replace Mr. Zyda. Meanwhile, Luminent recently sued HSBC Capital, alleging that the lender wrongfully confiscated about $24 million in mortgage bonds that served as collateral for lines of credit. Luminent says HSBC seized the bonds this summer in regard to what it calls an "unreasonable" $5.75 million margin call. HSBC "confiscated the bonds for itself at an artificially steep discount by exploiting an aberrational market," Luminent says. HSBC has declined to comment on the lawsuit. The REIT can be found online at http://www.luminentcapital.com.
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Life insurers have offloaded long-term policyholder liabilities into offshore reinsurance and captive subsidiaries, raising concerns over state oversight of opaque investment vehicles and whether insurers have adequately funded claims.
3h ago -
AI is leaving its marks in a wave of recent pro se litigation with fabricated citations and debunked arguments found throughout lawsuits, attorneys say.
3h ago -
The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals halted the Trump administration's attempt to fire nearly two-thirds of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's workforce, upholding a March 2025 injunction.
June 21 -
Anthropic's head of banking told New York Banking Summit attendees that the future is agents that operate autonomously alongside employees.
June 19 -
The industry association said total multifamily mortgage debt alone increased by $23 billion, or 1% in Q1, representing a $2.32 trillion increase from Q4 2025.
June 18 -
Chair Travis Hill said SVB showed banks can't always sell securities fast enough to cover deposit outflows, but acknowledged the "stigma problem" with discount window borrowing remains unsolved.
June 18









