JPMorgan Chase is in advanced talks to buy Washington Mutual, one of the nation's largest residential lenders and servicers, according to a report in American Banker. No other details were available at deadline time. According to figures compiled by National Mortgage News and the Quarterly Data Report, if JPM buys WaMu and all its mortgage assets, it would challenge Wells Fargo for the No. 2 spot among residential servicers. A combined Chase/WaMu servicing platform would have $1.429 trillion in housing receivables, compared with $1.496 trillion for Wells. Bank of America and its Countrywide franchise serviced $2.025 trillion in home mortgages at midyear, according to NMN/QDR. Over the past few years WaMu has been mentioned as a takeover target, with JPM, Citigroup, and a handful of foreign banks mentioned as possible suitors. Hammered by delinquent loans (including subprime), WaMu has been hemorrhaging money. Its stock recently fell to just $1.75. Late Thursday the nation's largest thrift released a preview of its third-quarter results, saying its credit loss provision would be about $4.5 billion, with residential mortgage losses accounting for $3.4 billion of the total. In the second quarter, WaMu's loss provision totaled $5.9 billion. WaMu said net chargeoffs may increase by about 20% in the third quarter, down from a 60% increase tallied in the second quarter.
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The deal reinforces PennyMac's AI-focused pivot and will also accelerate development and growth of its proprietary servicing platform, the lender said.
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Rithm and UWM Holdings are the favorite names among publicly traded lenders, while BTIG adds coverage of Better Home & Finance at a buy rating.
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This industry executive finds subservicing mortgages impacted by rule changes and relatively higher delinquency rates helps test operations and keep them sharp.
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Higher mortgage rates and affordability pressure prompts Fitch Rating's revision from 'neutral' to 'deteriorating'
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A California appellate court reversed a lower court's dismissal of a lawsuit over CrossCountry's alleged 2021 raiding of a Seattle-area branch.
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HUD said its Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity has reduced a Biden administration case backlog by 27% and accelerated investigations.
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