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Tag Archives: JPMorgan Chase

Treasury Withholds Making Home Affordable Incentives From Two

Treasury has released the results of its second-quarter assessment of servicers participating in the Making Home Affordable program. Officials say they will continue to withhold program incentives owed to Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase. The two were determined to need ""substantial improvement"" in key areas including borrower evaluations. BofA and JPMorgan received the same score last quarter, as did Wells Fargo, but Wells has now elevated its grade to needing ""moderate improvement.""

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Chase Donates $1M to Cover Down Payments on Vacant Detroit Homes

The JPMorgan Chase Foundation is making a $1 million grant to help about 70 police officers and city employees move back to Detroit over the next two years. Mayor Dave Bing has launched several initiatives to strengthen Detroit's communities by bringing law enforcement and city employees into the areas where they work. Qualifying buyers will receive money for a down payment on vacant homes in select neighborhoods as part of the mayor's initiatives.

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New Jersey Judge OKs Five Major Servicers to Resume Foreclosures

A New Jersey judge has given the green light for five of six major mortgage servicers to resume uncontested foreclosures in the state after a formal review of their procedures demonstrated the ""reliability of their processes."" Bank of America, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and OneWest Bank have been granted permission to restart foreclosures. Ally's GMAC Mortgage is awaiting the court's decision. Since the beginning of 2011, just over 6,000 foreclosures have surfaced in the state courts, compared to 35,000 filings at this time last year.

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HAFA Gains Steam with Completed Transactions up 55% in June

Servicers completed 2,213 pre-foreclosure short sales and deeds-in-lieu (DIL) under the government's Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) program during the month of June. Treasury's latest report shows the program is beginning to pick up steam. The number of completed HAFA transactions climbed 55 percent compared to the 1,428 transactions completed in May. That follows a 70 percent jump in finalized HAFA deals between the months of March and April.

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Major Lenders Offering Perks on Short Sales

The nation's leading mortgage lenders are extending extras for short sale transactions employed as an alternative to foreclosure - both in the form of monetary incentives for borrowers and streamlined procedures for real estate agents. Wells Fargo has increased its financial relocation assistance to as much as $20,000 in states where the foreclosure process is lengthening. Bank of America is now allowing agents to submit a new backup offer for a short sale property if the original buyer has walked away.

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Chase Opens Homeownership Center Near Fort Hood Military Base

Chase has opened its newest Homeownership Center near the U.S. military base in Fort Hood, Texas, to provide one-on-one help for homeowners struggling with their mortgage payments. It is Chase's first Homeownership Center near a military base. The bank plans to open five other centers this year near military bases in Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Washington state.

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Top Lenders’ Early Earnings Point to Continuing Mortgage Losses

JPMorgan Chase kicked off the banking sector's second-quarter earnings season with a $5.4 billion profit. It was followed by Citigroup's announcement that it pulled in net income of $3.3 billion. Both beat market expectations, however, neither lender escaped mortgage-related losses - a trait that is likely to show up on balance sheets throughout the industry as banks continue to grapple with delinquencies and additional costs tied to foreclosure reviews and litigation.

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Washington Mutual Reaches $208.5 Million Settlement

Washington Mutual Inc.'s former executives, underwriters, and auditor reached a $208.5 million settlement in a class-action lawsuit by investors. The Seattle-based institution was the largest U.S. bank to fail, and this settlement is one of the largest resulting from the financial crisis. The class-action suit combined more than 20 cases in which investors claimed the bank misrepresented its financial condition when its loans began to fail after careless underwriting and inflated appraisals.

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JPMorgan Settles SEC Mortgage Securities Case for $154M

The Securities and Exchange Commission said Tuesday that JPMorgan Chase has agreed to pay $153.6 million to settle charges that it misled investors in a complex mortgage securities transaction just as the housing market was starting to plummet. JPMorgan noted in a statement that its securities affiliate named in the SEC complaint ultimately lost nearly $900 million in connection with the deal. The SEC, though, says the company failed to disclose that the hedge fund involved in structuring the deal stood to profit if the assets defaulted.

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JPMorgan Discharges Exec Overseeing Mortgage Business

JPMorgan Chase has dismissed David Lowman, who ran the bank's mortgage operations. Lowman joined JPMorgan in 2006 from Citigroup as chief executive officer of the bank's Global Mortgage division. He was promoted just three months later to chief executive officer of Chase Home Lending, where he was responsible for home equity and default, as well as all of Chase's consumer real estate business. He came under fire soon after evidence surfaced of flawed foreclosure paperwork and illegal seizures of servicemembers' homes.

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