The National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association is in the final stages of "publicly naming" an overly aggressive third-party lead generation company which has consistently violated the group's ethics and standards policies. A public naming is the last of six different sanctions that NRMLA can place against its members. The company, which still has the opportunity to appeal, already has been placed on probation, then suspended and finally expelled from the group, according to President Peter Bell, who declined to reveal the identity of the rogue company. "Now we're ready to report (the company) to the authorities and alert our members," he said. Four to six cases a month come before NRMLA's ethics panel, 70% because of problems with their advertising, the NRMLA leader told the conference.
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The combination adds to a wave of broader merger and acquisition activity that includes an ongoing bidding war over RoundPoint Mortgage owner Two Harbors
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The litigants, with some of the industry's deepest pockets, may be filing the rare cases to flag and potentially punish bad brokers, one expert said.
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Market watchers think Jerome Powell will maintain a low-key presence on the Fed board as he awaits the release of an inspector general report examining cost overruns at the central bank's headquarters.
May 1 -
Mordor Intelligence expects the manufactured homes market size to expand from $28.5 billion in 2025 to $30.5 billion this year, its latest report found.
May 1 -
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's support for the market lessened the impact, as could bank capital reform, and the company's normalized results outperformed.
May 1 -
Even as they continue to press for additional changes, banks get some wins from the revised Basel capital framework and a ballpark estimate of their capital outlook for the next few years.
May 1










