Mortgage servicers increased their loss mitigation efforts by 26% from February to March as 49,000 borrowers agreed to loan modifications or payment plans, according to the first Mortgage Metrics Report from the Office of Thrift Supervision. The new OTS report uses loan-level data to examine the loss mitigation activities of the five largest OTS-regulated thrifts and their affiliates: Washington Mutual, Countrywide Financial, IndyMac, Wachovia FSB, and Merrill Lynch. The data show that 71% of the loss mitigation actions involved loan modifications rather than payment plans. However, subprime borrowers are more likely to get a loan modification than prime borrowers. "Prime mortgages received the fewest loan modifications relative to new foreclosure actions," the OTS report says. The report also indicates that new foreclosures in the first quarter were driven mainly by prime and alternative-A loans, not subprime loans.
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Anthropic's head of banking told New York Banking Summit attendees that the future is agents that operate autonomously alongside employees.
June 19 -
The industry association said total multifamily mortgage debt alone increased by $23 billion, or 1% in Q1, representing a $2.32 trillion increase from Q4 2025.
June 18 -
Chair Travis Hill said SVB showed banks can't always sell securities fast enough to cover deposit outflows, but acknowledged the "stigma problem" with discount window borrowing remains unsolved.
June 18 -
The merger will bolster existing safeguards against AI threats, while providing a tool that should appeal to young homebuyers, leaders of the companies said.
June 18 -
At a conference in New York, Joseph Otting reflected on the difficult hiring decisions he made early in his tenure heading Flagstar Bank, which just two years ago was on the verge of collapse.
June 18 -
Economic uncertainty and higher rates in May contributed to the second decline in applications for new homes on an annual basis, reversing March gains
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