• Home
  • Small-Business Marketing Statistics and Trends
  • What Is Mobile Banking?
  • How Student Loans Affect Credit Score?
  • Refinancing an Inherited House
  • How to Build a Kitchen?

Hanover Mortgages

The Refined Mortgage Lending Company & Home Loan Lenders

Michael Strauss

Apache is functioning normally

July 29, 2023 by Brett Tams

On Thursday, attorneys for the former employees, Sprout’s affiliated company Recovco Mortgage Management and Michael Strauss, an industry veteran who founded the lender, requested that the court to continue its review of the settlement. 

“The bankruptcy proceeding was commenced only against Sprout, so consistent with the approach adopted by some cases under similar circumstances as those presented here, the parties request that the automatic stay only applies to the action against Sprout, not Recovco or Strauss,” an attorney for the former employees wrote in court filings. 

In addition, the parties requested that the judge allow the distribution of funds currently escrowed under the settlement reached before the involuntary bankruptcy petition. They claim that the escrowed funds are not the property of Sprout’s estate for bankruptcy. 

According to the document, Sprout has “nearly fully complied with the terms of the class settlement agreement, but for the last $300,000 payment.”

The document states that Recovco and Strauss are not admitting any liability but believe that under the circumstances present, it is in the interest of all parties for the settlement process to continue. 

Scott Simpson, one of the attorneys for the former employees at Menken Simpson & Rozger LLP, said he had no comment.

“Our clients still have no comment,” Marc Wenger, an attorney for the defendants Sprout, Recovco and Strauss at Jackson Lewis P.C., said.

Also due to the involuntary bankruptcy petition, Sprout’s attorneys moved to adjourn “without date” a pending motion and a hearing scheduled for August 3 on a lawsuit filed by Merchants Bank of Indiana.

Sprout’s lawyers mentioned in court filings Section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code, which gives debtor protection from creditors, among other things, from “the commencement or continuation of any judicial, administrative, or other action or proceeding” that was or could have been commenced before the bankruptcy court case.

Merchants Bank of Indiana claims in its lawsuit that it purchased a mortgage loan from Sprout, and the underlying borrowers subsequently tendered a full payoff of the mortgage loan to Sprout. Still, the company failed to remit it to Merchants as the parties’ written agreement required. The total value was $1.2 million.  

A representative for Merchants said the company had no comment. 

Long Island-based Sprout informed hundreds of workers and business partners it was closing its doors on July 6, 2022, when a sharp rise in rates saddled the company with loans it could not sell to investors in the secondary market at par. 

Ex-employees alleged the company did not pay their last paychecks and severance package. The company also canceled health insurance coverage retroactively to May 1, resulting in several lawsuits against the lender. The lender is also the target of lawsuits from former business partners. 

Strauss is reportedly trying to sell a property at 610 Park Avenue in New York for $19.9 million and has started a new mortgage company. But Strauss and his new company, Smart Rate Mortgage, appealed in April a decision from an Illinois regulator to suspend their licenses to operate in the state. Meanwhile, the licenses remain active.  

Source: housingwire.com

Posted in: Mortgage, Refinance Tagged: 2, 2022, action, active, All, automatic, Bank, bankruptcy, before, borrowers, business, closing, company, court, creditors, decision, doors, estate, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, funds, health, Health Insurance, hwmember, Illinois, in, indiana, industry, Insurance, insurance coverage, interest, investors, lawsuit, Lawsuits, lawyers, Legal, liability, loan, Loans, long island, MARC, market, Michael Strauss, Mortgage, Mortgage and Housing Layoffs, mortgage loan, Move, new, new york, non-QM, ny, or, Origination, Other, park, parties, Politics & Money, present, property, protect, protection, rate, Rates, Review, rise, Secondary, secondary market, Sell, settlement, smart, Sprout Mortgage, states, target, under, value, wages, workers

Apache is functioning normally

June 8, 2023 by Brett Tams

Four lawsuits filed in New York and California are part of the settlement, which names Sprout, its affiliated company Recovco Mortgage Management LLC, and former top executives, including its founder Michael Strauss, as defendants. 

Defunct Long Island-based Sprout, led by industry veteran Strauss, informed hundreds of workers it was closing its doors on July 6 after a sharp rise in mortgage rates saddled the company with loans it was unable to sell to investors in the secondary market at par. 

HousingWire previously reported that ex-employees alleged the company did not pay the former employees’ last paychecks and severance package. The company also canceled health insurance coverage retroactively to May 1, resulting in several lawsuits against the lender.

In the request for the settlement approval, the plaintiff’s attorneys said they do not “believe Defendants even have a defense to the allegation that the Company failed to pay its employees for several weeks of work performed once the corporate entities shut down.”

To justify the settlement, the attorneys wrote, “Our primary concern has been the limited assets left in the accounts of the Corporate Defendants (Sprout and Recovco) and our ability to collect on a judgment against the primary individual defendant, Michael Strauss.”

The negotiations started seven months ago and included two mediations, in-person and virtual meetings and dozens of phone conferences. 

In October 2022, plaintiffs demanded about $20 million in unpaid wages, liquidated damages, and damages under the federal WARN and COBRA notice violations. In turn, the company responded that it would not have the financial ability to “pay an eight-figure judgment and that the collection risk against Strauss was high.”

“We learned many potentially valuable assets were, in fact, encumbered or no longer in Defendant Strauss’ possession. This information helped us to offer principled advice to our clients regarding settlement decision making,” plaintiffs’ attorneys wrote in court filings. 

Strauss is reportedly trying to sell a property at 610 Park Avenue in New York for $22.5 million and has started a new mortgage company. However, he is facing some resistance. Strauss and his company, Smart Rate Mortgage, appealed in April a decision from an Illinois regulator to suspend their licenses to operate in the state. Meanwhile, the licenses remain active.  

Scott Simpson, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs at Menken Simpson & Rozger LLP, said in an email to HousingWire that the timeline for former employees to receive compensation will depend on when the court rules on the motion and any further dates set by the court.  

“If the court approves the settlement, a settlement administrator will send checks out to eligible class members,” Simpson said. 

“Our clients have no comment at this time,” Marc Wenger, an attorney for the defendants at Jackson Lewis P.C., said.

Source: housingwire.com

Posted in: Mortgage, Refinance Tagged: 2022, About, active, advice, assets, california, closing, company, Compensation, Conferences, court, decision, doors, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, health, Health Insurance, hwmember, Illinois, in, industry, Insurance, insurance coverage, investors, Lawsuits, learned, Legal, LLC, Loans, long island, making, MARC, market, Michael Strauss, Mortgage, Mortgage Rates, negotiations, new, new york, non-QM, offer, or, Origination, park, Politics & Money, property, rate, Rates, rise, risk, Secondary, secondary market, Sell, settlement, shut down, smart, Sprout Mortgage, time, timeline, under, virtual, wages, will, work, workers

Apache is functioning normally

June 5, 2023 by Brett Tams

Non-QM lender First Guaranty Mortgage Corp. (FGMC) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection at the end of June — leaving four warehouse lenders on the hook for more than $415 million.

Sprout Mortgage imploded in early July, leaving its employees out in the cold. The lender so suddenly shuttered its doors it failed to file advanced notice of the layoffs, as required under federal law. It has since been sued by its former employees.

Just weeks later, a leaked text message from Flagstar Bank provided an inside look at how dire the current climate is for many non-QM lenders. The bank calls out 16 non-QM lenders in the text message, indicating it is ramping up scrutiny of its loan reviews, prior to advancing warehouse funding.

The examples, all within about a month, illustrate a non-QM lending world in disarray, turned upside down in recent months as originators battle an unassailable force over which they have no control: fast-rising interest rates. It’s an ongoing battle, which already has been lost by at least two lenders, FGMC and Sprout. 

And others in the sector, warehouse lenders included, must now navigate the fallout, heed the warning signs and take action to avoid a similar fate. One executive said “it would be naïve” to think Sprout and FGMC will be the only casualties, given the current environment. In time, he said, they may well end up being “more of a trend than outliers.”

The Flagstar text message leaked to the media in mid-July confirmed, going forward, funding advances for non-QM mortgages will require advance approval by the lender’s warehouse lending arm. The bank also indicates it may adjust “haircuts” — the percentage of the loan the originator must fund itself to ensure it has skin in the game. 

Thomas Yoon, president and CEO of Excelerate Capital, a full-service non-QM lender, said the move essentially means Flagstar now will “monitor every loan because they don’t want [to fund loans] that will be hard to sell in the open market, and then they’re stuck with that loan.” 

“So, they are going to babysit now,” Yoon said, adding that from a business standpoint, it will slow down the loan originators’ processes. “Someone at Flagstar has to physically look at the deal and make sure it aligns with what they want before they’re able to fund, and that’s going to cause delays.”

Flagstar spokesperson Susan Cherry-Bergesen verified the authenticity of the text message when contacted by HousingWire and confirmed its content: The bank is adjusting its loan-review process. The leaked message included a list of 16 non-QM lenders that would be affected by the changes, according to published reports.

“We were at a meeting with one of our warehouse providers [recently] and … they asked a smart question: “Is Acra Lending on that list?” recalled Keith Lind, CEO of Acra Lending, a leading non-QM lender. “Of course we’re not. 

“…If lenders didn’t take rates up fast enough, or they didn’t liquidate their positions fast enough, there’s going to be warehouse facilities where the loans [made to lenders] are worth less than the equity [skin in the game] that the originator posted. That’s probably a little more common than people think.”

Lind said many lenders are now trying to digest a plethora of lower-rate loans, essentially “orphaned by the market.” During the height of the refi boom and earlier this year, scores of loans were originated at interest rates much lower than current market rates, which have risen dramatically in recent months. 

As a result, there exists a mismatch between those legacy lower-rate mortgages and the new higher-rate loans. That’s the case even though the lower-rate loans are widely considered to be well-underwritten, quality loans. As of mid-July, according to Freddie Mac’s purchase mortgage-market survey, the 30-year fixed mortgage stood at 5.54%, compared with 3.22% as of the first week of January 2022 and 2.88% in July 2021.

The market’s interest rate woes contributed to non-QM lender FGMC’s downfall. FGMC and its affiliate, Maverick II Holdings LLC, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection June 30, leaving four of the country’s major warehouse lenders with claims totaling $418 million, according to court filings.

Those warehouse lenders are Customers Bank, Flagstar Bank, JVB Financial Group and Texas Capital Bank. 

Another non-QM lender also was swept up in the “orphaned” loan market. Sprout Mortgage on July 6 closed its doors suddenly, leaving hundreds of employees without jobs and paychecks. Real estate agents and their clients also received no advance warning and multiple deals fell through as a result, sources told HousingWire. The lender also did not file a WARN Act notice — required of any employer of more than 100 that has a mass layoff at one location involving more than 50 employees.

“The New York State Department of Labor has not received a WARN notice from Sprout Mortgage,” states an email from the department sent in response to a HousingWire inquiry. “We do not comment (confirm nor deny) on potential or pending investigations.”

The failure to provide proper notice of the layoffs prompted a class-action lawsuit by former Sprout employees. The litigation — lodged in early July in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York — seeks to recover wages due the workers.

The current interest-rate spread pressure-cooker tends to be even more acute in the non-QM sector, compared with the prime-mortgage market, according to John Toohig, managing director of whole loan trading at Raymond James in Memphis.

“[There’s] a lot of underwater coupons due to rapidly rising rates,” Toohig said. “The problem with non-QM is that most banks won’t be the liquidity source for those loans in whole-loan form [purchasing] vs. the aggregators putting them into RMBS [private label securitization deals] — which doesn’t work right now [either].

“So, I wouldn’t be surprised that there is some pain coming at the warehouse-line level [revolving lines of credit used to fund mortgage originations] as loans start to age. The good news for prime jumbo [is] banks want to own those loans and balance-sheet them. The same cannot necessarily be said for non-QM.” 

Non-QM mortgages include loans that cannot command a government, or “agency,” stamp through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. The pool of non-QM borrowers includes real estate investors, property flippers, foreign nationals, business owners, gig workers and the self-employed, as well as a smaller group of homebuyers facing credit challenges, such as past bankruptcies. 

Because non-QM, or non-prime, mortgages are deemed riskier than prime loans, in a normal market they generally command an interest rate about 150 basis points above conforming rates, according to Excelerate’s Yoon.

Excelerate and Acra each raised rates rapidly starting early in the first quarter of this year to stay ahead of the fast-rising interest rate curve, according to Yoon and Lind. The rapid surge in rates in the market is being fueled, in part, by the Federal Reserve’s ongoing benchmark rate bumps, intended to battle inflation. The consequence of failing to anticipate the velocity of rate increases could result in a lender getting stuck with millions of dollars in underwater loans — mortgages that are well-underwritten but valued under par, the lending executives said. 

In other words, these lower-rate — now “scratch and dent” — loans are at a competitive disadvantage in terms of pricing in securitization and loan-trading liquidity channels because they are worth less than the newer crop of higher-rate mortgages. Lind put it this way: “These aren’t bad loans, just bad prices.”

“I don’t think [Sprout and FGMC] are the only two lenders that are in a bind,” Lind said. “I’m sure there’s other originators that are in difficult situations, given this movement in rates and probably their inability to get liquidity or to sell loans fast enough.”

Yoon said the Sprout and FGMC failures are likely going “to be more of a trend than outliers.”

“A lot of lenders took on, or funded, these really low-coupon loans,” Yoon continued. “And they probably had them sitting in their gestation pipelines thinking that the things will get better, and they could sell them off. That day never came.

“What I’ve been told through warehouse lenders and Wall Street aggregators is that there’s several billion dollars’ worth of these [low-coupon] loans out there, still sitting on balance sheets. At some point, they [lenders] will have to pay the piper, right? It’s naive to assume we’re not going to see more casualties.”

***

Q&A

HousingWire contacted half a dozen non-QM lenders seeking interviews for this story, including Angel Oak Cos., Deephaven Mortgage, CarVal Investors, Verus Mortgage Capital, Acra Lending and Excelerate Capital. All the lenders, as well as the now-failed Sprout Mortgage, participated in a prior story on the same subject — the state of the non-QM market, which was published in April. 

This time around, only Acra and Excelerate agreed to participate. Representatives of the other lenders declined to comment or make executives available for an interview, with most saying the executives didn’t have time. The top executives at Acra and Excelerate, Lind and Yoon, respectively, each declined to comment on specific competitors in the non-QM market, but they did share their views on current market conditions and the challenges faced today by non-QM lenders in general.

Lind and Yoon stressed they are not predicting with certainty other non-QM lenders will fail, nor do they hope that will be the case. Both, however, predict due to the runup in rates, there will likely be painful losses incurred by some non-QM lenders, which will have to be dealt with somehow.

All non-QM lenders now face the same economic challenge — coping with the fallout from interest rates rising at a faster clip than the market has seen in decades. Following are comments from Acra’s Lind and Excelerate’s Yoon on a range of issues affecting the non-QM lending space.

Interest Rates

We saw the market [earlier in the year] and knew it would only get worse, at least in the short-run, and we put our rates above market at that time sharply. …We’re positioned really well to navigate the current market. That doesn’t mean it’ll be easy, but you know, we’re positioned better than most, so we feel fortunate about that. … When we raised our rates that significantly in the first quarter, it essentially blew up our pipeline in the short-run, but we felt like we needed to do that. …Going into October, November, December [of last year] and into January [2022], everyone was thinking, including us, that we’re going to have a banner 2022. Then the market changed on us overnight. There was only a handful of us that that made the move [to raise rates sharply], and they are positioned well going forward. — Thomas Yoon of Excelerate Capital

We’ve moved rates 18 times in 2022 [to date] — mostly up, with maybe one or two down. Listen, everyone’s got a different execution or [liquidity] outlet. I can just tell you that we’re breaking even or making a little bit of money in the first few quarters [of this year], and our rates are higher than others. I don’t know how some of these other people [lenders] have been able to do it. But if they have, then kudos to them. …You’ve probably heard this before: Don’t fight the Fed [the Federal Reserve]. The Fed is bigger than everyone. Well, guess what? So is the housing market, and you don’t fight the housing market. Everyone’s like, “Oh, I’m going to keep rates low because I need market share.” I think it’s always better to be prudent and pay attention to rates. It’s not a race [or sprint]. This is a marathon to be successful in this business. That’s the way we look at it. — Keith Lind of Acra Lending

Warehouse Lenders

The biggest problem in non-QM right now is the fear of liquidity, right? It’s whether they’re able to sell off their closed loans. If they don’t, then it becomes a burden and a debt. The biggest, I think, challenge that these non-QM platforms face — outside of what’s happening in the market — is will they maintain a stable relationship with their warehouse lines. …I expect lower limits in warehouse funding capabilities and more haircuts, so that they [warehouse lenders] feel that they’re protected. Oftentimes, warehouse divisions are a real profit-maker for banks, but we’re going through a cycle change, and originations have dropped 40-plus percent nationally. It means that everyone’s taken a hit. …Most warehouse lenders are banks and, of course, they’re feeling it too. — Yoon of Excelerate Capital

Regional banks [who are warehouse lenders] have a lot more exposure now and could be holding loans that are underwater. I’ve heard some of them are comfortable with the risk, and they’ll just wind down these positions over time. It’s still a good return for the bank. Others are looking for exit strategies. … Some of these regional warehouse lenders may ultimately do a full turbo feature where they collect all interest and principal, and the originator gets nothing. It’s going to be harder for the little guy [smaller originators] to come back because warehouse providers, as well as people that are lending money [generally], are going to demand more capital. — Lind of Acra Lending

Raising Capital

If you’re a [non-QM] executive and have a $300 million negative on the balance sheet [due to underwater loans], any company that’s going to provide capital is going to question whether [the leadership of the lender] knows how to run a mortgage-banking platform in this marketplace. …It’s not like they will be using that capital to build technology or to hire more great talent or [launch] a new system. To be clear, it’s to make themselves whole, right? That’s a tough, tough sell in today’s market. — Yoon of Excelerate Capital

You don’t throw good money after bad, right? — Lind of Acra Lending

Market Share

We took flack for raising our rates and recalibrating ourselves. A lot of our competition, for example, kept their rates really low and kept them low for all of the first quarter. They took on a massive risk, and their logic was that the market will turn for the better … and they’ll be able to sell these [loans] off at a profit, instead of just breakeven. They looked at it as an opportunity to gain market share. Everyone that did that, you know, they were wrong. — Yoon of Excelerate Capital

The originators that have made it through the first two quarters in [good] financial shape absolutely I would expect all of us to gain market share. There are going to be [originators] that go out of business, as we’ve seen, and they’re probably not the last, and then others are probably going to struggle. — Lind of Acra Lending

Survival Strategies

Our liquidity channels are still really viable. We have strong relationships with our aggregators and outlets. We’re very fortunate, but we also recognize how volatile [this market] is. We have to be nimble. So, we have a plan A, but we also have plan B and C ready, just in case. …The market is moving so quickly, so we’re shooting higher [on rates] than we normally would to make sure that the collateral bought is worth something when they securitize it — [a process that can take months]. The dramatic move [in rates] that we saw in the first quarter and second quarter, I don’t think it’s going to be that exaggerated [going forward], but we’re constantly chasing the bogey here, so to speak. — Yoon of Excelerate Capital

There are three aspects that we focus on. First of all, we focus on rates. And I told you, we’ve moved rates 18 times since January 3. We were at a 4.5% coupon, and now we’re low 8% [range] in terms of where our portfolio is. …Two is liquidity. If you don’t have strong liquidity, and you’re not getting off loan sales fast enough and at the [right] prices, that’s going to be difficult. So, rates, liquidity and then lastly operational expenses. Are you managing your expenses? We took our headcount from 450 down to 350. We did that two months ago. And we’re still looking at that, to make sure that that we are managing expenses and salaries. We’ve not only reduced headcount, but we’ve made adjustments to salaries. — Lind of Acra Lending

Downturn Duration

We’re going to go into a recession — if we’re not already in it right now. I hope that it’s a mild recession. We’re prepping as if this is going to be a 12- to 24-month downcycle for us as an industry. If it [ends] earlier, we look at that as very fortunate. But we anticipate that this year and the bulk of next year is going to be trying times for us. We’re taking a very conservative approach. — Yoon of Excelerate Capital

I’m going to take the view that until we have a better understanding of where we are with inflation and taming it, that this market is going to be choppy. And when the overall market has a more comfortable understanding of where inflation is, and that it’s under control, I would think that things will fall back into order. …There’s still a lot of tailwinds in the housing market, however. We’re short [some] 5 million homes [in the housing market], and I think from an investor perspective, depending on the price and the homes picked, there’s good cash flow every month. I think that’s why you’re seeing more and more people, as far as mom-and-pops [small landlords, who are non-QM borrowers] getting into the housing market as opposed to the equity market moving forward. I like the tailwinds in housing, for sure. — Lind of Acra Lending

Source: housingwire.com

Posted in: Mortgage, Mortgage Rates Tagged: 2, 2021, 2022, 30-year, 30-year fixed mortgage, About, Acra Lending, action, Advanced, age, agents, All, ARM, balance, balance sheet, Bank, Banking, bankruptcy, banks, before, borrowers, build, business, CEO, clear, climate, company, Competition, country, coupons, court, Credit, curve, Deals, Debt, decades, Deephaven Mortgage, doors, employer, environment, equity, estate, Excelerate Capital, expenses, Fall, Fannie Mae, Featured, fed, Federal Reserve, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, fixed, Flagstar, Flagstar Bank, Freddie Mac, fund, General, gig, good, government, great, Homebuyers, homes, Housing, Housing market, How To, in, industry, Inflation, interest, interest rate, interest rates, interview, Interviews, Investor, investors, jobs, john toohig, landlords, launch, Law, lawsuit, Layoffs, leadership, legacy, lenders, lending, lending money, liquidity, list, Litigation, LLC, loan, Loans, low, LOWER, Make, making, market, Media, memphis, Michael Strauss, money, More, Mortgage, mortgage market, Mortgage originations, Mortgage Rates, Mortgages, Move, Moving, new, new york, News, non-QM, non-QM lending, november, oak, oh, opportunity, or, Originations, Other, percent, plan, points, pool, portfolio, president, pressure, price, Prices, principal, PRIOR, property, protection, Purchase, Q&A, quality, race, Raise, rate, Rates, ready, Real Estate, Real Estate Agents, Real Estate Investors, Recession, Relationships, return, Review, Reviews, right, risk, RMBS, salaries, sales, second, Secondary, sector, Securitization, self-employed, Sell, sheets, short, smart, space, Sprout Mortgage, stable, states, story, Strategies, survey, Technology, texas, the balance, the fed, time, trading, trend, under, upside down, wages, wall, Wall Street, Warehouse Lending, will, work, workers, wrong

Michael Strauss, Smart Rate appeal license suspension in Illinois – HousingWire

April 7, 2023 by Brett Tams

Michael Strauss, Smart Rate appeal license suspension in Illinois  HousingWire

Posted in: Savings Account Tagged: 2, 2022, 2023, active, All, Banking, Broker, business, collecting, color, commission, company, data, decision, estate, experience, Finance, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Florida, fraud, health, Health Insurance, home, home loans, Illinois, industry, Insurance, insurance coverage, investment, investors, lawsuit, Lawsuits, Legal, liability, Loans, market, Michael Strauss, MLO license, More, Mortgage, Mortgage Broker, new, new york, park, property, rate, ready, Real Estate, Regulation, Residential, salaries, SEC, Secondary, secondary market, securities, Sell, smart, Sprout Mortgage, states, target, Tech, under, will, Zillow

Ex-Sprout CEO’s originator licenses suspended

February 12, 2023 by Brett Tams

An Illinois regulator suspended the originator licenses of former Sprout Mortgage CEO Michael Strauss and his new company after they failed to address concerns about his background. Strauss’ new business effort was halted Feb. 1 in an order by the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation’s Division of Banking, according to a notice posted … [Read more…]

Posted in: Refinance, Renting Tagged: 2, 2022, All, Bank, Banking, bankruptcy, before, business, CEO, commission, company, court, creditors, decision, estate, experience, Family, Finance, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Florida, home, Illinois, indiana, industry, Industry News, Inquiries, Law and legal issues, lawsuit, Lawsuits, lenders, lending, lists, LLC, loan, Loan officer, Loans, Media, Michael Strauss, missed payments, More, Mortgage, new, new york, News, NMLS, non-QM, Other, payments, principal, Purchase, quality, rate, Real Estate, Regulation, Regulation and compliance, resolutions, Review, securities, settlement, shutdown, smart, Sprout Mortgage, update, warehouse lender, workers

Regulator in Illinois suspends Michael Strauss, Smart Rate licenses

February 12, 2023 by Brett Tams

A regulator in Illinois has suspended the MLO license of Michael Strauss and the license for his mortgage company, Smart Rate Mortgage, essentially blocking the company from operating in the state.

Posted in: Business, Mortgage, Refinance Tagged: 2, 2022, 2023, All, Banking, banking regulator, bills, Broker, business, commission, company, estate, experience, Finance, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Florida, fraud, health, Health Insurance, Illinois, industry, Inquiries, Insurance, investors, Lawsuits, Loans, market, Medical, medical bills, Michael Strauss, MLO license, More, Mortgage, Mortgage and Housing Layoffs, mortgage lender, Mortgage Rates, Mortgages, new, new york, NMLS, non-Qualified Mortgage, Origination, Other, park, property, questions, rate, Rates, ready, Real Estate, Regulation, Relationships, Residential, Review, Rising mortgage rates, SEC, Secondary, secondary market, securities, Sell, settlement, smart, Sprout Mortgage, target

eMortgage, CRM, Cybersecurity, Analytics, Compliance Tools; More Correspondents Exiting, Lender and Investor Updates

February 10, 2023 by Brett Tams

“Where can you always find money? In the dictionary.” Plenty of lenders and finding the money to buy other companies while smaller ones are looking for the right buyer. Eat or be eaten seems to be the name of the game as lenders hungry for production are courting other lenders. Some just get out of the game entirely. (See lender and investor section below.) Cutting costs and being efficient continue to be of paramount importance regardless of plans for the future. Is the credit process cost effective and efficient? Yesterday I mentioned changes in the credit world and received, “Rob, when will companies learn that there are ‘too many snouts in the credit trough’? There’s Fair Isaac, the Bureaus, and the credit resellers. It is not a level playing field, and now, like the old days of having different gfees for different lenders, lenders are slotted into ‘tiers’. In the next few years, we’ll be moving from a tri-merge environment to a bi-merge environment. Regardless of what comes our way, the overall construct of this portion of our business is shaky.” Editor’s note: “Shaky” is not good in this environment. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is sponsored by SimpleNexus, an nCino company and homeownership platform unites the people, systems, and stages of the mortgage process into one seamless, end-to-end solution that spans engagement, origination, closing, and business intelligence. I go on today’s podcast to talk with Robbie about the industry ramping up mortgage travels and how mortgage market cycles have historically played out.)

Posted in: Refinance, Renting Tagged: 2, 2023, acquisition, acquisitions, active, affordable, All, AMC, android, app, apple, Applications, Apps, ARM, ARMs, artificial intelligence, author, automation, balance, balance sheet, Bank, bank of america, bankruptcy, banks, basics, before, black, Black Knight, Blog, Broker, build, builder, building, Built, business, Buy, buyer, buyers, Buying, Career, Careers, CFPB, closing, Commentary, company, Compliance, Connecticut, correspondent, correspondent channel, Correspondent lending, cost, couple, coupons, Credit, CRM, Customer Experience, cutting costs, cybersecurity, data, decades, decision, Delinquencies, Digital mortgage, down payment, Economy, efficient, engagement, environment, equity, evergreen, expectations, expensive, experience, experts, facebook, Family, fed, Federal Reserve, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Forecast, forecasting, foreclosure, fraud, fun, fund, future, good, Google, government, Grow, guide, Guild, home, home buyers, home buying, Home Ownership, home purchase, homeownership, house, How To, Illinois, impact, indiana, industry, Inflation, interest, interest rates, inventories, Investor news, investors, iOS, iPhone, journey, labor market, launch, Learn, legacy, lenders, lending, Life, Live, loan, Loan officer, Loans, locks, Loss mitigation, low, LOWER, maine, Make, making, market, markets, Massachusetts, MBA, MBS, Media, meta, Michael Strauss, Michigan, mobile, Mobile App, modern, money, More, Mortgage, mortgage applications, mortgage lending, mortgage market, Mortgage News, Mortgage Rates, mortgage servicing, Mortgages, Move, Moving, multiply, needs, new, New Jersey, new york, News, offers, Operations, Opinion, opportunity, Original, Origination, Other, ownership, pandemic, payments, percent, place, podcast, points, portfolio, president, Prices, products, property, protect, Purchase, quality, questions, Rates, reach, ready, Regulation, Regulatory, Residential, right, ROI, rumor, sales, seasonal, security, seeds, Servicing, Servicing Solutions, shares, simple, single, social, Social Media, Software, southwest, space, spirit, spreadsheets, Spring, Strategies, suite, summer, survey, target, Technology, the fed, time, title, tools, trading, Treasury, Twitter, u.s. bank, unique, updates, volatility, volume, wells fargo, white, will, Wisconsin, work, working

Did Michael Strauss, accused of fraud, just start a new mortgage company?

January 22, 2023 by Brett Tams

After abruptly shutting down Sprout Mortgage and being accused of fraud, Strauss and his wife are linked to a new mortgage entity, Smart Rate Mortgage, LLC.

Posted in: Mortgage, Refinance Tagged: 2022, action, Bank, bank statement, bankruptcy, Benefits, bills, business, california, CEO, company, expense, FHA, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Florida, fraud, fund, health, Health Insurance, home, Illinois, industry, Insurance, investment, investors, Lawsuits, Legal, lending, LLC, loan, Loan officer, Loan origination, Loans, market, Medical, medical bills, Michael Strauss, Michigan Mortgage Lenders Association, money, More, Mortgage, Mortgage Rates, mortgage registration, Mortgages, new, new york, New York NY, NMLS, non-QM, offers, Origination, Other, Politics & Money, protection, Purchase, rate, Rates, SEC, Secondary, secondary market, securities, Sell, settlement, smart, Sprout Mortgage, under, volume, will

Did Michael Strauss, accused of fraud, just start a new mortgage … – HousingWire

January 20, 2023 by Brett Tams

Did Michael Strauss, accused of fraud, just start a new mortgage …  HousingWire

Posted in: Savings Account Tagged: 2022, action, Bank, bank statement, bankruptcy, Benefits, bills, business, california, CEO, company, expense, FHA, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Florida, fraud, fund, Google, health, Health Insurance, home, Illinois, industry, Insurance, investment, investors, Lawsuits, Legal, lending, LLC, loan, Loan officer, Loan origination, Loans, market, Medical, medical bills, Michael Strauss, money, More, Mortgage, Mortgage Rates, Mortgages, new, new york, New York NY, non-QM, offers, Origination, Other, protection, Purchase, rate, Rates, SEC, Secondary, secondary market, securities, Sell, settlement, smart, Sprout Mortgage, under, volume, will

Loan America sues Sprout for allegedly failing to purchase loans

January 8, 2023 by Brett Tams

Loan America is accusing Sprout of fraud and deceit, promissory estoppel, negligence, unfair business practices, aiding and abetting, and civil conspiracy. 

Posted in: Mortgage, Refinance Tagged: 2022, All, Bank, before, business, california, company, Correspondent lender, Credit, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, fraud, health, Health Insurance, Insurance, insurance premiums, investors, Legal, legal disputes, lenders, lending, loan, Loans, Michael Strauss, More, Mortgage, mortgage loans, new, new york, non-QM, Operations, Origination, Other, party, Politics & Money, president, Purchase, Rates, Sell, selling, Sprout Mortgage, states, under, warehouse lender

Archives

  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • October 2020

Categories

  • Account Management
  • Airlines
  • Apartment Communities
  • Apartment Decorating
  • Apartment Hunting
  • Apartment Life
  • Apartment Safety
  • Auto
  • Auto Insurance
  • Auto Loans
  • Bank Accounts
  • Banking
  • Borrowing Money
  • Breaking News
  • Budgeting
  • Building Credit
  • Building Wealth
  • Business
  • Car Insurance
  • Car Loans
  • Careers
  • Cash Back
  • Celebrity Homes
  • Checking Account
  • Cleaning And Maintenance
  • College
  • Commercial Real Estate
  • Credit 101
  • Credit Card Guide
  • Credit Card News
  • Credit Cards
  • Credit Repair
  • Debt
  • DIY
  • Early Career
  • Education
  • Estate Planning
  • Extra Income
  • Family Finance
  • FHA Loans
  • Financial Advisor
  • Financial Clarity
  • Financial Freedom
  • Financial Planning
  • Financing A Home
  • Find An Apartment
  • Finishing Your Degree
  • First Time Home Buyers
  • Fix And Flip
  • Flood Insurance
  • Food Budgets
  • Frugal Living
  • Growing Wealth
  • Health Insurance
  • Home
  • Home Buying
  • Home Buying Tips
  • Home Decor
  • Home Design
  • Home Improvement
  • Home Loans
  • Home Loans Guide
  • Home Ownership
  • Home Repair
  • House Architecture
  • Identity Theft
  • Insurance
  • Investing
  • Investment Properties
  • Liefstyle
  • Life Hacks
  • Life Insurance
  • Loans
  • Luxury Homes
  • Making Money
  • Managing Debts
  • Market News
  • Minimalist LIfestyle
  • Money
  • Money Basics
  • Money Etiquette
  • Money Management
  • Money Tips
  • Mortgage
  • Mortgage News
  • Mortgage Rates
  • Mortgage Refinance
  • Mortgage Tips
  • Moving Guide
  • Paying Off Debts
  • Personal Finance
  • Personal Loans
  • Pets
  • Podcasts
  • Quick Cash
  • Real Estate
  • Real Estate News
  • Refinance
  • Renting
  • Retirement
  • Roommate Tips
  • Saving And Spending
  • Saving Energy
  • Savings Account
  • Side Gigs
  • Small Business
  • Spending Money Wisely
  • Starting A Business
  • Starting A Family
  • Student Finances
  • Student Loans
  • Taxes
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Unemployment
  • Unique Homes
  • VA Loans
  • Work From Home
hanovermortgages.com
Home | Contact | Site Map

Copyright © 2023 Hanover Mortgages.

Omega WordPress Theme by ThemeHall