The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight has filed charges against three former Fannie Mae executives, including Franklin Raines, for manipulating earnings to maximize bonuses and for leading the mortgage giant into a $6.3 billion accounting scandal.Along with a notice of charges, OFHEO is seeking $100 million in civil money penalties and disgorgement of $115 million in 1998-2003 bonuses paid to Mr. Raines, a former chairman and chief executive officer; former chief financial officer Timothy Howard; and former comptroller Leanne Spencer. "The notice explains how they submitted six years of misleading and inaccurate accounting statements and inaccurate capital reports that enabled them to grow Fannie Mae in an unsafe and unsound manner," OFHEO Director James Lockhart said. "The misconduct cost the enterprise and shareholders many billions of dollars and damaged the public trust." An attorney representing Mr. Raines said the charges are "false" and called the OFHEO director a "fatally biased regulator."
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About 43% of Americans upgraded their homes last year, and 33% plan to remodel in the next year, according to a recent survey from Redfin.
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Sun Belt states saw a noticeable surge in liens filed last year, with Florida accounting for 17% of the national total, according to Benutech.
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CEO Tim Spence said folding in the acquired bank has gone to plan so far, but the biggest point of risk is still on the horizon.
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Surge, which claims to serve some of the nation's larger wholesale players, said the lender's behavior was reminiscent of its spat with Black Knight.
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Questions about the single-report option and whether VantageScore should be introduced before FICO 10T arose during a hearing on broader legislative proposals.
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SecurityNational Mortgage Co. alleges that the larger competitor facilitated the mass resignation of its staff from Glendale and Scottsdale offices.
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