The Federal Housing Administration will begin accepting electronic signatures on third party documents originated and signed outside of the lender's control, such as real estate contracts. A Mortgagee Letter detailing FHA's new streamlined process is posted on the HUD website. "This is just the beginning of FHA's commitment to use more electronic documents in our loan approval process," said FHA commissioner David Stevens. "Over time, we will be expanding the number and types of documents with electronic signatures which will be acceptable to FHA." The FHA expects lenders to employ the same level of care and due diligence with electronically signed documents as for paper documents with "wet" or ink signatures. Lenders are reminded that the electronic signature and date should be clearly visible in the document and that electronic documents will be subject to the same document retention requirements as paper documents.
-
M&A, complementary to widespread artificial intelligence implementation, is also high on the list of upcoming priorities for new Dark Matter CEO Vikas Rao.
3h ago -
Check out the initial reveal of the 28th edition of National Mortgage News' Top Producer survey, in a year where falling rates helped industry-wide volume.
3h ago -
The NEXA CEO accused his rival of lashing out at his company despite its own alleged wrongdoing in poaching loan officers and diverting loans.
3h ago -
The government guarantor aims to distinguish delinquencies reported as a result of a Federal Housing Administration rule change from broader market trends.
April 24 -
The Long Island-based regional bank, which has been in turnaround mode for two years, reduced its earnings per share guidance for 2026 and 2027. It cited an expected decrease in net interest income due to higher levels of payoffs and paydowns in commercial real estate.
April 24 -
Delinquencies also showed signs of overall improvement in March, despite an increase in foreclosure numbers, ICE Mortgage Technology said.
April 24










