Mortgage companies scaled back their payrolls by 5,900 full-time employees in January, as the decline in subprime originations and rising defaults took a toll on wholesalers and mortgage brokers.The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that employment in the mortgage banking/broker sector declined from 495,100 in December to 489,200 in January. Since October, employment in the mortgage industry has declined for three consecutive months, and 15,500 employees have lost their jobs. NMN's Quarterly Data Report shows that subprime originations declined by 18.2% during the fourth quarter, to $143.6 billion. Meanwhile, rising defaults have forced over 20 subprime lending shops to close their doors. The default rate on subprime mortgages rose to 10.12% during the fourth quarter, up from 7.07% in December 2005, according to a report by Friedman, Billings, Ramsey.
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The national delinquency rate rose 15 basis points to 3.5% last month due to a calendar anomaly, marking a 4.5% month-over-month incline and 9.4% annual change.
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ICE launched a fraud detection tool for underwriters, Newrez partnered with Matic and Rate announced a free home equity monitoring tool this month.
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Nearly one-third of states now have official nonbank standards for liquidity, capital and corporate governance that firms over a certain threshold must meet.
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KBW now rates UWM as outperform, and BTIG calls the stock a buy, but both cite high leverage levels and industry macro trends depressing its stock price.
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If approved, the deal can provide relief for the approximately 662,000 individuals affected by an incident at the mortgage vendor last November.
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Properties outside of the 100-year flood zone exposed to $375 billion to $1 trillion in losses, Moodys reports
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