Titanium Holdings, Inc. said Thursday morning that it had selected a headquarters location in Fort Mill, SC that will accommodate the firm’s growth as loss mitigation needs as servicers nationwide continue to fuel demand for the in-person counseling that the company’s primary subsidiary specializes in. Company officials said they expect the move to South Carolina to bring 300 jobs to the state — worth noting, given the retracement in employment in most other industry sectors. Titanium Holdings will occupy 42,000 square feet in the office tower of the Edgewater Office Park, the company said in a press statement. “Titanium arrives at an important time,” Rep. John Spratt (D-SC) said. “Over the last decade, the job landscape in the Southeast has changed dramatically. We have seen textiles, apparel, furniture and other traditional industries all but wither away because of low-wage imports.” “We are excited about this announcement and what it will mean to our community,” said Rudy Carter, chairman of the Lancaster County council, which includes the city of Fort Mill. “The investment and creation of 300 good paying jobs is welcome in this period of economic downturn and continues our success in attracting good paying jobs in the customer service, call center and back office markets.” “The in-person home retention counseling that Titanium Solutions provides is a vital service in today’s economic market,” Patrick Carey, CEO of Titanium Holdings and Titanium Solutions, added. “This new location will allow us to continue supporting our clients and partners, and expand our services and product offerings.” For more information, visit http://www.titaniuminc.com. Write to Paul Jackson at [email protected].
Loss Mit Firm Titanium Holdings Selects South Carolina for Headquarters
December 4, 2008, 10:29am
Paul Jackson is the former publisher and CEO at HousingWire.see full bio
Most Popular Articles
The hidden cost of leverage: Why today’s real estate investors need to be more conservative than ever
In today’s high-cost market, excessive leverage can quickly turn a profitable property into a financial liability. Investors must prioritize conservative underwriting and consistent cash flow over extracting maximum equity.
Jun 30, 2026
-
Introducing the 2026 Women of Influence
Jul 01, 2026 -
GSEs release historical FICO 10T data, expand VantageScore 4.0 file
Jul 01, 2026 -
Berkshire’s Clayton adds McGuinn Homes to Mungo as scale race widens
Jul 01, 2026 -
Compass International Holdings rolls out Home Platform across brokerage brands
Jul 02, 2026 -
Two Harbors investors approve deal with CCM at $12 per share
Jul 02, 2026
Latest Articles
Better mortgage spreads are still keeping home sales positive
Mortgage spreads improved to 2.01%, keeping rates near 6.60% as total pending sales rose to 422,120 vs 396,652 last year.
-
Reffkin takes the stand, MRED CEO says Zillow threatened litigation over listing policy dispute
-
Government-backed modular housing trend arrives in Cleveland
-
Will the ROAD Act change what pencils for multifamily rentals?
-
First MLS names Jenni Bonura chief growth officer
-
RealTrends Verified The Craig Tann Group continues decade of growth
Paul Jackson is the former publisher and CEO at HousingWire.see full bio