Technology

  • When the Information Solutions Group of First American Corp. becomes a separately traded public company, it will take the name CoreLogic and trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol CLGX. The spin-off is targeted for June 1. The title company will be part of First American Financial Group, which will retain the FAF ticker symbol. The new CoreLogic will encompass more than 20 different business lines, making it larger and more diverse than the entity currently known as First American CoreLogic. Meanwhile, two sets of First American bondholders have approved debt tender offers and consent solicitations. The approvals by those who hold the 5.7% senior notes due 2014 and the 8.5% capital securities due 2012 expressly affirm the spin-off transaction. A third solicitation for the holders of the 7.55% senior debentures due 2028 remains in progress, with 43% tendered so far.

    April 29
  • Mortgage broker usage in Canada has remained stable during the past year, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.'s annual online consumer survey. The use of mortgage brokers by first-time buyers remains at about 45% and approximately one-third of repeat buyers continue to use brokers. Use of brokers to refinance remains stable at roughly 23%, where it has been since 2006. The survey also shows Canadians' confidence that homeownership is a good long-term investment has remained stable to slightly higher, with 92% agreeing with this statement in 2010 compared to 90% in 2009. The online survey polled more than 2,500 active mortgage borrowers.

    April 27
  • Lender Processing Services, a third-party service provider to the mortgage industry, earned $76.7 million in the first quarter, compared to $60.6 million in the same period a year ago. LPS reported consolidated revenue of $592.4 million for the first quarter of 2010, an increase of 11.8%, compared to the first quarter of 2009. "LPS is off to a strong start in 2010 despite difficult market conditions and a challenging broader macro-economic environment," said Lee A. Kennedy, executive chairman of the company. "Our loan facilitation business posted record growth in a sluggish year-over-year origination market as we continued to gain market share." He noted that the firm's default services division posted strong gains as well.

    April 26
  • First American CoreLogic, a provider of advanced property and ownership information, analytics and services, is partnering with The Prieston Group to offer a comprehensive fraud prevention and insurance solution to mortgage lenders. The solution combines First American CoreLogic's pattern-recognition fraud tool with TPG's risk management services, indemnity programs and training. Through this partnership, TPG will help lenders establish business rules and guidelines and employ the First American CoreLogic LoanSafe Fraud Manager tool to enforce those policies in the lender's daily operations. Lenders who use this joint solution will be insured against fraud losses by Lloyd's of London, which has a special relationship with TPG. The anti-fraud tool integrates patented pattern-recognition technology with a national property and fraud database. Tim Grace, senior vice president of fraud solutions at First American CoreLogic, said fraud is a $13 billion problem for the lending and investor communities. "This partnership will help lenders focus on best practices, products and processes and provide enterprise- and loan-level metrics to measure results. Our new joint effort will improve loan quality and rebuild confidence levels among lenders and investors," added Arthur Prieston, TPG's chairman.

    April 21
  • Technology provider ISGN Corp. is partnering with EquityRock, a company with experience in residential real estate equity sharing, to create RESET, a loss mitigation solution for lenders. The product's creators say they can help lenders reduce losses from properties in imminent danger of foreclosure, while also keeping the borrower in the property. RESET (Real Estate Shared Equity Transaction) gives a borrower who is qualified for a loan modification a principal reduction in exchange for a share in equity with their lender. With RESET, in addition to modifying or refinancing the borrower's mortgage, the lender writes down the borrower's principal balance so that the borrower no longer owes more than the property is worth, ensuring they have equity in their property, says ISGN. As part of the transaction, the lender will gain a stake in any future appreciation should the property be sold or refinanced. When the transaction is complete, the borrower gets to stay in the home and keeps a monetary stake in the property. A key feature of RESET is a fair, debt-for-equity exchange that benefits both the lender and the homeowner. The service can be used by lenders and investors, as well as by housing finance agencies in support of the Treasury Department's Help for the Hardest-Hit Housing Markets (4HM) program. An estimated 3.7 million homeowners across the five states targeted by 4HM have negative equity with loan to value ratios that exceed 125%.

    April 20
  • Equator, a provider of automated default servicing, REO and short sale technology in Los Angles, has hired John Vella to serve as its chief operating officer. Vella will be leading efforts to further expand the scope of the company's EQ Workstation, an online system that provides financial institutions with tools for managing default servicing and the EQ Marketplace, which acts as an ecommerce forum where these institutions connect with asset management vendors and real estate agents. Vella has more than 27 years in the mortgage industry. Previously, he worked as executive vice president of GMAC/Rescap, which is responsible for special servicing; president and chief executive officer of EMC Mortgage, a subsidiary of JPMorgan Chase; CEO of Household Automotive; chief administrative officer of Option One Mortgage and director at Freddie Mac and the FDIC.

    April 19
  • ServiceLink, provider of origination and default services based in Pittsburgh, Pa., and Fidelity National Financial's national lending platform are opening a new office in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. and are expanding an existing operation in Buffalo, NY to support their growing loss mitigation operations. Outfitted with ServiceLink's technology, both locations aim to provide loss mitigation services to ServiceLink's lending clients. The new office in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., opens today and will occupy over 19,000 square feet. The expanded Buffalo, NY, office will officially open on April 26 in a 15,000 square foot facility. "This expansion has doubled our loss mitigation capacity and allows ServiceLink to focus on assisting its clients in managing their troubled assets as the market continues to stress the capacity of lenders and servicers," said Jeff Coury, ServiceLink President and CEO. The company also has existing loss mitigation operations in Kansas and Virginia that provide outsource loss mitigation services including HAMP processing, HAFA, short sales, and deeds in lieu.

    April 16
  • The Federal Housing Administration will begin accepting electronic signatures on third party documents originated and signed outside of the lender's control, such as real estate contracts. A Mortgagee Letter detailing FHA's new streamlined process is posted on the HUD website. "This is just the beginning of FHA's commitment to use more electronic documents in our loan approval process," said FHA commissioner David Stevens. "Over time, we will be expanding the number and types of documents with electronic signatures which will be acceptable to FHA." The FHA expects lenders to employ the same level of care and due diligence with electronically signed documents as for paper documents with "wet" or ink signatures. Lenders are reminded that the electronic signature and date should be clearly visible in the document and that electronic documents will be subject to the same document retention requirements as paper documents.

    April 12
  • Wells Fargo is the newest lender to implement First American CoreLogic's LoanSafe Fraud Manager in order to minimize loss from fraud and increase operational efficiency, according to First American Core Logic, Santa Ana, Calif. In addition to Wells Fargo, the technology tool is now in active evaluation with 10 other lenders, signaling significant market momentum for the solution and continued lender focus on solving the mortgage fraud problem. First American CoreLogic fraud scientists have created patented fraud models that assign each loan a fraud risk score spanning from one (lowest risk) to 999 (highest risk). By using these scores, lenders can realize revenue increases through quicker and more efficient underwriting and increase revenue by reducing default and foreclosure-related losses associated with fraud. The solution now also offers improved reporting with more loan information categories displayed and alerts grouped by likely fraud types. Additionally, this new fraud detection solution offers more input fields for greater functionality and tracking. The First American CoreLogic 2X guarantee promises that lenders will save twice as much in fraud losses as they did prior to using LoanSafe Fraud Manager and the savings will be at least twice as much as the cost of the solution.

    April 6
  • Lender Processing Services says it has corrected the way it processes assignments of mortgages in foreclosure cases, which has drawn the attention of class action attorneys and a U.S. Attorney in Florida. The Jacksonville, Fla., company said an internal review of its Docx LLC subsidiary "identified a business process that caused an error in notarization of certain documents, some of which were used in foreclosure proceedings in various jurisdictions around the country." The U.S. attorney's office for the middle district of Florida is conducting an inquiry of the matter. LPS is "fully cooperating" with the U.S. Attorney, a spokeswoman said. In February, a class action lawsuit filed against Deutsche Bank (National Trust Bank) and U.S. Bank N.A., LPS and Docx alleged that the practice of creating assignments months and years after the actual date of the transfer from one owner to another is unlawful. The plaintiff's attorneys have dropped the lawsuit. However, the lawsuit pointed out that LPS and Docx assists Deutsche Bank (National Trust Bank) and U.S. Bank N.A., in filing foreclosure actions. LPS also has responded to an inquiry by the Clerk of the Court of Fulton County, Georgia. "LPS has since completed its remedial efforts with respect to all of the affected documents and believes the Clerk of Court has completed its review and closed the matter," LPS said.

    April 6