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The top five cities have an average rate of housing units that were owner-occupied in 2022 of 70.32%.
October 7 -
Over 4 million residents in the region, both coastal and inland, face dangers similar to residents in Hurricane-weary Florida, Louisiana and Texas.
October 4 -
Most of the investment community overall showed more favorable sentiment toward one presidential candidate than the other, but a subset of it begs to differ.
October 4 -
The administration wants to implement a 36 hour window of time for companies to report a cyber incident to the agency.
October 4 -
National issues such as the economy are prominent. But so are local concerns like a $10,000 limit on deductions for state and local taxes and high housing costs.
October 4 -
The Federal Reserve and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau moderately increased the minimum prices at which the Truth in Lending Act applies to loans and leases.
October 4 -
The incidence of at least four flood insurance payouts totaling $20,000-plus, or at least two totaling more than the building's market value, is growing.
October 4 -
Stronger than expected numbers for overall U.S. employment additions have diminished lender hopes for steeper rate drops, and industry hiring has been tepid.
October 4 -
Companies announced new product rollouts and capital raises last month, but some are also facing lawsuits as the industry encounters heightened attention to the lack of consumer protections.
October 4 -
Chief capital markets officer William Chang is stepping down "to explore new opportunities within the mortgage banking sector."
October 3 -
Franklin Credit Management Corp. agreed to pay $300,000 to Massachusetts and not sell its portfolio of state loans to a different servicer.
October 3 -
Buyers aren't necessarily responding to greater inventory and lower mortgage rates.
October 3 -
The conforming 30-year fixed rate mortgage rose to 6.12% on Oct. 3.
October 3 -
writes the Senior Economist for LendingTree
October 3
LendingTree -
The Federal Reserve issued two enforcement actions, one against a bank in Montana, the other against a former information technology employee in Wyoming.
October 3 -
The perpetrator faces up to 150 years in prison, with sentencing scheduled for December.
October 3 -
The order by the judge, who had previously dismissed part of the original loan modification-related claims, shortens the legal process for allegations that remain.
October 3 -
The Bay Area lender said an unauthorized party was in its servers for over five weeks this spring.
October 3 -
A federal judge denied class certification to investors who blame stock losses on misleading statements by executives.
October 3 -
Former employees are still seeking back pay from the non-QM lender's abrupt shutdown in July 2022.
October 3






















