PHH up following earnings surprise NEW YORK - Mortgage company PHH Corp.'s stock rose Friday in the first day of trading after the company reported earnings that greatly exceeded the expectation of an analyst.read more...
Number of $1 million homes tops 1 million (Reg Req'd) For the first time, there are more than 1 million owner-occupied homes in the United States worth $1 million or more, according to a Census Bureau survey published late last
Saxon Mortgage lays off 140 locally (BizJournals) Saxon Mortgage Services Inc. is set to decrease its Tampa presence by 140 people as early as Thursday as its parent company continues to scale back its residential mortgage business.
MORTGAGE RATES WON'T STAY THIS LOW FOR LONG (New York Post) MORTGAGE RATES WON'T STAY THIS LOW FOR LONG August 7, 2005 -- Y OU'D better lock in a low mortgage rate while you still can. The Federal Reserve may finally
'Piggyback' Loans Allowed by Freddie Fed Mortgage Risks (Washington Post) For a glimpse of the risks that infected the mortgage business in recent years, consider a small slice of what happened at Freddie Mac, the giant home-loan investor chartered by
SA clearly is Virgin territory WHEN Virgin founder Sir Richard... WHEN Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson flew in to Johannesburg in late June and launched Virgin Money to considerable fanfare, he boldly told South African consumers they were being “fleeced”
Federal regulators says they’ve closed ANB Financial National Association banks after discovering ‘unsafe and unsound’ business practices there.
David Barr, a spokesman for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. says many customers served by the bank’s nine locations had accounts under $100,000, which will be fully insured by the government. Barr says customers can continue to write checks and draw money from ATMs through the weekend.
Barr says Pulaski Bank and Trust Co. agreed to assume control over ANB Financial’s bank locations, which will be open Monday. Read more
read more…
This entry was posted
on Friday, May 9th, 2008 at 4:18 am and is filed under Mortgages.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the comments RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Leave a Reply