Frivolous Mortgage Putback Claims May Hamper Proceedings
By Kyle Chezum Updated on 11/30/201011/30/2010
Investors demanding that banks buy back mortgages founded on faulty paperwork may be shooting themselves in the foot by exploiting paperwork errors. In the wake of the foreclosure fraud scandal, some investors have made putback demands over minor typographical errors, presumably expecting that a document with any kind of error is grounds for a refund.
This likely won’t turn out to be the case. As more and more demands are brought against banks, determining which claims are significant and which are frivolous will become that much harder and will slow the entire process down.
For full story, click here.
About The Author:
Kyle Chezum
My name is Kyle Chezum. I'm a Marketing Associate here at Lender411com. If you have any questions, feel free to contact me. Thanks!.
-
What You Need To Know About Escrow
View More
-
President Obama Initiates Lower FHA Mortgage Insurance Premiums
View More
-
What is Quantitative Easing?
View More
-
The 5 New Mortgage and Housing Trends for Summer 2013
View More
-
Fannie Mae profitability skyrockets
View More
-
Foreclosure protections for more soldiers after lawmakers draft bill
View More
-
FHFA: HARP success follows low mortgage rates, February refinance volume strong
View More
-
Use of Mortgage Interest Deduction Depends on Where You Live
View More
-
HUD will sell 40,000 distressed loans in 2013
View More
-
Mortgage Principal Reduction Could Save Taxpayers $2.8 Billion
View More
-
Mortgage Applications Regain Traction after Sluggishness, Rates Continue to Fall
View More
-
HARP 3.0 Discussions Reveal Little Hope for HARP Update
View More
-
Home Prices Rise in February According to LPS Data
View More
-
Balancing Act: House Committee Hears Opposing Viewpoints Over Mortgage Interest Rate Deduction
View More
-
Near Record Low Mortgage Rates Buoy Housing Recovery
View More
Related Articles
Featured Lenders
RBS Citizens
Clifton Park, NY