Apple co-founder Steve Jobs revolutionized the computer, phone and music industries. But mortgage banking? Okay, so Apple (from what we know) has no designs on mortgage banking, but it's interesting to think about it because the inventor of the iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad and other gadgets is sitting on roughly $100 billion of cash and securities. Heck, if it wanted to, Apple could plug the hole in either Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. (But not both.) Meanwhile, Apple's competitor (sort of) IBM continues to make inroads in mortgage banking through its Seterus specialty servicing division. It could have $100 billion of MSR assignments by yearend 2012, or so it hopes. Seterus, of course, doesn't talk to the press about its plans. Or anything else, for that matter.
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New jobs in health care largely drove the gains, while the federal workforce and finance continued to shrink.
April 3 -
Finance of America has not disclosed any incident, but a consumer filed an immediate lawsuit over a lone report of a ransomware gang's recent hack.
April 3 -
United Wholesale Mortgage lost ground to RKT in one category but held onto a healthy lead in another, an analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data shows.
April 3 -
HECM endorsements rose 16% in March to 2,117 loans, but monthly volumes remain near their slowest pace since last summer as proprietary reverse products quietly steal market share.
April 2 -
Which parties are responsible for the surge persisted as a source of debate as community lenders released updated survey data reflecting their average expense.
April 2 -
The 30-year fixed rate climbed to 6.46% this week, its highest mark since September, as mortgage applications fell 10.4% and sellers outnumber buyers by a record 46%.
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