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Technology provider Lender Processing Services, Inc. plans to give servicers more REO management options through its acquisition of the Chicago-based auction company, Rising Tide Auctions. The move will allow LPS, located in Jacksonville, Fla., to help servicers minimize REO timelines and reduce costs through its new component called LPS Auction Solutions. Buyers and investors will now have the ability to purchase individual or multiple bank-owned properties directly from the nation's leading REO disposition service provider. Servicers working with LPS Auction Solutions will benefit from the company's ability to manage all aspects of the auction process from beginning to end, including data collection, property due diligence, open house showings and the auction event, said Chad Neel, president of LPS Asset Management and Field Services. To help ensure timely REO dispositions, LPS utilizes a broker outreach program to encourage broker participation in the auction events. Web-based technology is used to communicate property details to potential buyers, enables the initiation of pre-emptive sales and allows simultaneous online bidding. Reporting functionality keeps servicers informed by providing access to sales metrics, auction day selling data and post-auction escrow information.
November 2 -
Wolters Kluwer Financial Services, Minneapolis has expanded its loss mitigation offering to include state and federal lending compliance consulting services that help servicers avoid discriminatory lending practices when modifying loans. Servicers can use it to ensure they meet all Home Affordable Modification Program fair lending guidelines recently issued by the Treasury Department, according to the company. WKFS said its compliance consultants are available to evaluate existing loan modification policies and procedures and help servicers address fair lending risks, review a sample of completed loan modifications the servicer has completed and denied, and conduct a statistical analysis of all completed modifications to identify modification criteria that might lead the servicer to violate fair lending laws. While modifying loans at risk of default as quickly as possible, servicers also need to make sure everyone is treated fairly and equally in the process, said WKFS senior consultant and statistician Don Morrow. Moreover, regulators are expected to "intensify their scrutiny of servicers' fair lending compliance," he said.
October 29 -
SoundBite Communications, Inc., Bedford, MA, is offering a solution for mortgage servicers participating in the government's Home Affordable Modification Program. The company said its product, the 'SoundBite Making Homes Affordable Accelerator' focuses on four stages in the loan modification process: qualification, processing, trial period and underwriting. The goal is to help mortgage servicers increase the number of modifications started and completed, as well as help improve borrower experience, said Matt Edmunds, vice president of financial services and collections at SoundBite. Multiple channels allow users to collect missing documents, verify information, and send automated reminders about trial modification payments. Proactive communication with qualified borrowers helps lower operating costs by minimizing the need for inbound calls.
October 23 -
UnitedTech Lender Services of California has purchased the assets of LandAmerica OneStop, which includes the company's default services division and a related technology platform called "BackInTheBlack" for an undisclosed sum. The sale comes about a year after LandAmerica Financial Group, the title insurance parent of OneStop, filed for bankruptcy protection in Virginia. Tim Walsh, president of UTLS, said the acquisition would help the company offer integrated default and technology servicing solutions to mortgage bankers. The former LandAmerica business units will be remarketed as UTLS Default Services and UTLS BackInTheBlack.
October 21 -
Kroll Factual Data has released an Independent Verification Solution, which helps lenders comply with the proposed FHA credit policy changes announced on Sept. 18, 2009. Under the proposed guidelines, mortgage brokers will no longer receive independent FHA approval for origination eligibility, but will instead be required to originate through an FHA approved lender. Since FHA approved lenders will carry the liability for broker-originated loans, they need to bolster their verification process to support the additional volume that will come from the correspondent channel, said Loveland, Colo.-based Kroll Factual Data in a prepared statement. Adding to this new strain on scarce underwriting and quality control resources is a new rule for FHA streamlined refinances which requires lender certification of the borrower's capacity to pay at the time of application. Kroll Factual Data will deliver capacity-to-pay verifications. According to Kroll Factual Data, the detailed billing and reporting that is included with the service increases traceability and transparency for Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act compliance. To give lenders an extra measure of protection against the risk of errors, Kroll Factual Data's verifications are backed by representations and warrantees of accuracy. Lenders can customize the solution to include additional types of verifications and risk assessment analytics as required for their specific risk management program.
October 19 -
Specialty servicer Wingspan Portfolio Advisors in Carrollton, Texas, is partnering with National Claims Filing LLC, Irvine, Calif., to automate the handling of claims audits and compliant filings with bankruptcy courts across the country. With bankruptcies rising quickly, the company says lenders and servicers need accuracy in filing the necessary "proof of claim" forms and exhibits in order to protect their rights when borrowers seek bankruptcy protection. Proof of claims are the basic forms used in bankruptcy proceedings that establish the validity of a lender's "standing" in the eyes of the court. Without an accurate and approved POC, a lender's access to proceeds from the sale of their mortgaged property can be denied or delayed, despite the lender's possession of documents signed at the time the loan was originated. National Claims Filing provides an automated POC preparation and risk management system. The system is designed to prepare the POC, attach all supporting documentation, and file the claim with the correct court in accordance with that court's specific filing conventions. Thus far in 2009, Chapter 13 filings rose 10.9% over 2008 levels, while Chapter 7 filings rose by 46.3%. These increases indicate that over two million borrowers will have declared bankruptcy in 2009, potentially representing over $400 billion in mortgage balances, said Wingspan CEO Steve Horne. Prior to this partnership, proofs were mostly done manually at Wingspan, which has 14 clients and specialty services over 7,000 loans at present.
October 14 -
In the latest step in its "green" initiative, Credit Plus Inc., Salisbury, Md., will allow supporting documents for corrections of inaccuracies on credit files to be directly uploaded into its system. In the past, explained Greg Holmes, national director of sales and marketing, this had been more of a manual process, with the documentation faxed or e-mailed in. Now, Credit Plus operates more efficiently, with all the information on one screen. The green initiative started three or four years ago at Credit Plus with e-fax. In June 2008, customers started receiving a one-page invoice with a link to a secure website to review account details. This initiative alone, Credit Plus said, saves 30 reams of paper a month. Mr. Holmes, interviewed at the MBA convention in San Diego, said the company would be rolling out in the next year a new technology that will contribute to a paperless disclosure delivery environment.
October 13 -
eLynx, Cincinnati, has launched an electronic closing network (eCN) service that lenders can integrate into their closing process to increase loan quality and provide more control in order to meet the government's new demands for more accurate closings. The launch, which came at the annual MBA show, is designed to help lenders ensure that borrowers and settlement agents have a better experience at the closing table. The technology firm said a top five U.S. lender/servicer is now using the eCN but did not name the company.
October 12 -
Global DMS, Lansdale, Pa., has unveiled a new technology tool that allows lenders to transfer and receive Home Valuation Code of Conduct compliant appraisals. Announced at the Mortgage Bankers Association convention in San Diego, the tool, AppraisalTransfer.com, is an online portal that hopes to solve the "portability issue" of appraisals, said Global DMS chief operations officer Matt McHale. While it is permissible to transfer appraisals, lenders are reluctant to do so, he said. Even if there is portability it is usually just a transfer between users of the same appraisal management company. With AppraisalTransfer.com the goal, said Mr. McHale, is to allow any lender to have access to the appraisal. (There is no charge to the lender.)
October 12 -
Pointing to a significant rise in income fraud, Rapid Reporting has launched AccountChek, an electronic verification of deposit service that helps lenders, brokers and servicers detect financial account misrepresentations. Unveiled at the MBA show, AccountChek leverages direct access to more than 10,000 financial institutions, including insurance and investment firms, to confirm the accuracy of borrower-provided account information. The company says AccountChek automatically analyzes each account for suspicious activities that could indicate potential mortgage fraud.
October 12 -
The MBA put out a 'request for proposal' to build a national fraud database only to later shelve the idea, but MERSCORP Inc. and Interthinx have moved ahead, deciding the issue is too important to ignore. At the Mortgage Bankers Association's annual convention the pair launched a national fraud prevention database that will allow lenders to seek, identify, and share suspected fraudulent activity on loan applications from the point of origination. The companies said MERS FraudALERT will help identify and prevent fraud through the sharing and reporting of key data among the more than 62 million loans currently registered on the MERS system. Lenders can submit loan application data and incident reports with suspected or confirmed fraudulent activity to a centralized database. The system will then notify other lenders who have connections to the loans, alerting them of possible problems.
October 12 -
Freddie Mac will now accept MISMO Version 3.0 standards around appraisal and loan delivery, joining Fannie Mae, which it said it would earlier this year. Specifically, Freddie has started the planning process for adopting MISMO Version 3.0 for loan delivery. Freddie said it is "exploring a fourth-quarter 2010 implementation date and will communicate additional details about our plans in the near future." The GSE called the migration to an industry-wide data standard "key to supporting a more consistent and efficient mortgage lending process, including streamlining the exchange of loan data among all industry participants." During the transition process Freddie will continue to support the current loan delivery format to provide lenders with time to adopt the new standard. MISMO Version 3.0 is schema-based and offers greater transparency and visibility in every aspect of a given loan.
October 8 -
Griff Straw, a veteran of 30 years in the mortgage banking industry, has joined appraisal management company Solidifi U.S., Chicago, as the company's president. Most recently he was a regional vice president for United Guaranty and prior to joining that company worked for Freddie Mac where he held management roles on several technology-related initiatives. In his new job, Mr. Straw will lead Solidifi as it looks to expand on its valuation services offerings in this country. Solidifi U.S.'s parent company is headquartered in Toronto and has been in business since 2004; in October 2008 it entered the U.S. market.
October 7 -
REOTrans, Los Angeles, is changing its name to Equator in order to facilitate the expansion of its technology solution, which automates and connects the residential default servicing industry. The transition is slated to take place at yearend, according to Chris Saitta, the company's CEO. "The company chose the name to represent its scope and purpose," he said. "The Equator is comprehensive yet precise and a point of change." The technology platform includes a configurable workstation, a marketplace, transactional web site, and a borrower self-service portal. Users of the system currently include 15,000 default vendors and 625,000 real estate agents to manage more than 150,000 transactions daily.
October 6 -
First American CoreLogic, Santa Ana, Calif., is offering current and potential clients a "2X mortgage fraud guarantee." The guarantee claims users will identify twice the level of potential fraud using First American CoreLogic's fraud detection technology than when using technology from any other fraud solutions vendor, or the trial period will be free. The guarantee states lenders will save twice as much in fraud losses and that the savings will be at least twice as much as the cost of the solution. First American CoreLogic will work with clients to develop either a production trial or retrospective testing program for measuring its patented pattern-recognition anti-fraud technology. If the fraud-detection technology doesn't identify a minimum of twice the loss savings over products from its competitors and deliver a 200% return on investment during the measurement time period, the cost of scoring the loans will not be charged.
October 2 -
Vital Financial has named long-time mortgage technologist Cy Brinn as a principal. Previously, he was the president of Metavante Lending Solutions. Going forward, using Mr. Brinn's market knowledge, Vital will find, analyze and structure private equity and venture capital investments in areas including mortgage technology. Mr. Brinn is also a finalist for the 2009 Mortgage Technology magazine Steve Fraser Visionary Award, which goes to a technology visionary and evangelizer. The award ceremony is scheduled for Oct. 11, at the annual convention of the Mortgage Bankers Association being held San Diego.
October 2 -
Nations REO Inc., a division of Foreclosure Management Co., located in Overland Park, Kan., has chosen to use DepotPoint Inc.'s TrackPoint platform to power its REO workflow and property management operations. The TrackPoint platform allows Nations REO to scale on demand, improve its operational efficiency and lower its total cost of managing properties for its clients, the company said. The REO application is one of a set of default management applications offered by DepotPoint. The applications are used for short sales, foreclosure and loan modification. Large mortgage lenders, servicers and private equity firms work with Nations REO to scale their businesses to dispose of the growing number of bank-owned foreclosure properties.
September 30 -
Mortgage technology vendor Fiserv Inc., has signed a definitive agreement to sell its Loan Fulfillment Solutions business to ISGN Solutions Inc., Bensalem, Pa., for an undisclosed sum. The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions and is expected to close within 30 days. Fiserv said it does not expect the transaction to have a material impact on its financial results. LFS provides financial institutions outsourced home equity loan fulfillment services, including broker price opinions, closing and settlement services, valuation services, flood and title certification, home retention and loan modification solutions, portfolio and vendor management solutions, and related services. Despite recent mortgage technology divestitures, Fiserv contends that it is still "committed to providing best-in-class lending solutions." On the other hand, ISGN continues to acquire added mortgage technology applications and services. ISGN specializes in mortgage lending technology and solutions, including fulfillment services, title and default management.
September 29 -
Wolters Kluwer Financial Services and LoanSifter have integrated to offer lenders the ability to customize disclosures. The new integration will enable users of LoanSifter's integrated 1003 mortgage application to generate standard and customized initial disclosure documents through Wolters Kluwer Financial Services' Disclosure Manager, and then electronically deliver them to borrowers for e-signature. The platform also gives financial institutions the option of completely and securely outsourcing the printing and mailing of paper disclosures when needed or requested by the borrower through Wolters Kluwer Financial Services' mail fulfillment center. Because Wolters Kluwer Financial Services' Disclosure Manager platform automatically generates compliance documentation for LoanSifter's lenders, they can eliminate the regulatory requirement burden associated with determining which documents are required for a specific transaction and jurisdiction.
September 28 -
Pricing and decisioning vendor Mortech Inc., Lincoln, Neb., has settled a lawsuit with online mortgage comparison site LendingTree. LendingTree filed a federal lawsuit against Mortech, seeking an injunction preventing the company from collaborating with Google on a competing service. In the lawsuit filed in Charlotte, N.C., LendingTree claimed Mortech had violated an exclusivity agreement by working with Google. Terms of the settlement were not disclosed, and both companies would not comment on the dispute resolution. A call to Google about the suit also had not been returned at deadline. Mortech Inc. has no connection to industry research firm MORTECH LLC, Guilford, Conn.
September 21