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Mortgage Banking magazine's 1997-1998 Internet Mortgage Industry Survey - Includes related articles - Internet Lending - Direct Consumer Marketing - Cover Story
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Business Editors
MIAMI LAKES, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 28, 2003
Company Gains on Industry; Sees 20% Increase over Last Year and
Runs 10% Ahea...
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BOSTON -- Summit Mortgage LLC, a premier, private Boston-based mortgage banking firm, announced today that it was the only New England real estate fir...
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... institutions with huge positions in mortgage-backed bonds faced bankruptcy, a prospect that thr... was designed to prevent a recurrence of banking crisis, avoid future bailouts, and protect consume... also thought he was a Muslim; Time Magazine/Abt SRBI Poll: Religion, August 16-17, 2010, avail...
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BOSTON -- For the second year in a row, Summit Mortgage LLC, a premier, private Boston-based mortgage banking firm, has gained the distinction of bein...
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...IT'S YOUR MORTGAGE. KEEP IT HERE. CAMPAIGN. OVERVIEW. In 2003 Piedmon... retrofitted its system to include online banking before the 2003 campaign was released. The "Cul de...," according to Mortgage Banking magazine. LendingTree, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, ...
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Illustration
... Excerpts from current magazine zine.com print version of Mortgage Banking, editor...
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You may recall that, a year ago, the newspapers were filled with startling information as large institution after large institution reported severe financial news and, in some cases, closed their doors.
Mortgages were identified as the main culprit, and Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae virtually were taken over by the federal government because they could no longer function in their roles without large bushels of fresh new money.
... by Sue Allon, published by Mortgage Banking magazine. Things got worse before they got better ...
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... automation solutions for the residential mortgage industry, today announced that Jonathan Corr has b...In 2007, he was named to the Mortgage Banking magazine list of IT All-Stars for his contribution...
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Banks operating in Vermont continue to show few negative effects from the subprime lending crisis that has destabilized credit markets in other parts of the country. Thomas Candon, the state's deputy commissioner for banking, says that's largely because lenders steered clear of "the more exotic mortgage instruments" that have made home purchases possible for millions of Americans with poor credit histories. Worsening economic conditions, however, have made it increasingly difficult for many of these subprime borrowers to make good on their high-interest loans, leading to a spate of home foreclosures in several states.