The U.S. Attorney and Department of Housing and Urban Development are seeking a court injunction to ban Lend America, Melville, N.Y., from originating FHA loans, accusing the nonbank lender with fraud in regard to $14 million in product. The company issued a statement saying it was taken by surprise by the complaint and expects to continue doing business. It added that it plans to "respond more completely once all allegations are reviewed." In a joint statement from the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, and the HUD Inspector General's office, the government says Lend America/Ideal "falsely certified" that borrowers met FHA underwriting requirements. Using the civil courts, the government is seeking injunctive relief from both the company and its chief business strategist Michael Ashley. According to figures compiled by National Mortgage News, Lend America ranks 18th nationwide in terms of GNMA MBS issuance. It services about $850 million in GNMA-backed products. Lend America recently stepped up plans for expansion into correspondent mortgage banking and wholesale that included FHA production.
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Foreclosure prevention actions supported homeowners, with loan modifications being the majority.
18m ago -
AnnieMac CEO Joe Panebianco has navigated a broad range of risks, from cash buyer competition to shifts in the market's loan product mix, with a unique leadership style.
4h ago -
A consumer was moving to certify a class of thousands of borrowers who paid the telephone mortgage payment fees to a subsidiary the servicer acquired.
4h ago -
JPMorganChase and Bank of America raised concerns about the proposed removal of risk-weighted assets from the denominator of the short-term wholesale funding component of the GSIB surcharge — changes backed by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
June 26 -
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., reportedly plans to send the recently passed housing bill to the White House on Monday, starting a 10-day clock for the president to sign the bill.
June 26 -
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.
June 26









