Creditors of Taylor Bean & Whitaker are seeking permission from a bankruptcy judge for authority to sue former company insiders, including president Lee Farkas, who founded the company and made it into a top 10 ranked lender. According to a report on Dow Jones, the committee representing Taylor Bean's unsecured creditors in the bankruptcy case wants to sue Farkas and other insiders for money the company loaned them that allegedly hasn't been paid back. The creditors committee said in court filings this week that TBW's lawyers have "conflicts or other concerns that make it unable or unwilling" to pursue the suits, but the committee said the company is backing its efforts. The committee is also planning to go after Bank of America for money the bank allegedly held back after selling securities backed by TBW mortgages. Pursuit of claims against the bank's insiders could well represent the unsecured creditors' best shot at seeing a significant recovery in the bankruptcy case. Judge Jerry Funk of the Bankruptcy Court in Jacksonville, Fla., has scheduled a Feb. 19 hearing to consider the committee's request. TBW filed for bankruptcy protection last summer after trying to buy a controlling stake in its chief warehouse provider, Colonial Bank. Colonial failed shortly thereafter.
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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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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.
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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.
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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.
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More than three-quarters of brokers are using popular AI platforms, but application of lender-specific software lags considerably, according to AD Mortgage.
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