Servicing
While mortgage servicing has taken on a much more important consumer-facing perspective since the pandemic, it had previously served as more of a talking point and rally cry within the industry – especially among mortgage brokers. Several years of debate and argument have taken place, especially since the 2017 BRAWL (Brokers Rallying Against Wholetail Lending) movement, in terms of who a customer “belongs to” – whether it’s the mortgage broker or the lender servicing the loan. Brokers garnered a sense of resentment towards lenders that would fund their customers’ loans via their wholesale division, only to later “flip” the customer into their own retail portfolio, essentially eliminating the broker from the equation.
Since then, a greater focus has been placed on lenders and servicers that retain servicing and keep their brokers connected to the end customer. A noteworthy first-mover in the push to support brokers in their long-term customer retention efforts was Homepoint’s Customer For Life program.
Latest Posts
Feds threaten $1 billion consent order fine to mortgage servicers
Feb 09, 2012If mortgage servicers fail to pay the agreed $25 billion in relief to states and borrowers as part of the foreclosure settlement, the firms could face…
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Mortgage servicers sign $26 billion foreclosure settlement
Feb 09, 2012 -
Democrats allege Fannie Mae killed principal reduction program in 2010
Feb 08, 2012 -
CoreLogic: Foreclosures drop 24% in 2011
Feb 08, 2012 -
Dallas-area squatter faces eviction from $300,000-plus home
Feb 07, 2012 -
Fannie Mae taking online offers for REO
Feb 07, 2012 -
Missouri AG indicts DocX and its former president in robo-signing probe
Feb 07, 2012 -
CoreLogic appoints new SVP of default services
Feb 07, 2012 -
Mortgage mods in 2011 down 40% from prior year
Feb 07, 2012 -
More than 40 states to sign foreclosure settlement
Feb 06, 2012 -
CoreLogic appoints new SVP of default services
Feb 06, 2012 -
Freddie Mac to increase short sale incentives
Feb 06, 2012