Sunday, May 29, 2011

Real: Clearer mortgage disclosure forms proposed | ScrippsNews

The new consumer finance regulator has proposed simplified mortgage disclosure forms, aiming to ensure that borrowers receive clear and easy-to-understand information about home loans when they apply for credit.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau released two alternative mortgage disclosure forms, each taking only the front and back of a sheet of paper. The forms would combine and replace the current two-page Truth in Lending Act disclosure and the three-page good faith estimate required under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, or RESPA. The bureau, created by last year's Dodd-Frank financial reform law, will test the prototypes and incorporate feedback through September. It's calling the effort the "Know Before You Owe" project.

"A home loan is the biggest financial commitment most Americans will make in a lifetime," says Elizabeth Warren, who runs the bureau. "With a clear, simple form, consumers can better answer two basic questions: Can I afford this mortgage? And, can I get a better deal somewhere else? That's good for American families and the markets they depend on."

The prototypes emphasize the monthly loan payment, interest rate, potential cautions and other loan features.

Under Dodd-Frank, the bureau must propose new rules for simplified mortgage forms before July 2012. Staff started drafting the prototypes "quickly out of the gate" in consultation with federal regulators who have been working on streamlining the forms for years, Warren says.

The agency expects five rounds of evaluation and revision, with consumer testing in five cities and input from the industry, before the forms are finalized this fall. Then, the bureau will publish proposed regulations and a draft model form to solicit more comment and run quantitative tests before the rules are final.

Financial industry executives praise the move. "We think it's a great step," says Scott Talbott, senior vice president for government affairs at the Financial Services Roundtable. "If everybody fully understands the product ... both the consumer and the lender win."

The Mortgage Bankers Association's more guarded response notes that the industry spent significant money 18 months ago on RESPA changes -- costs borne by consumers.

"Making mortgages easier to understand for prospective borrowers has been a long-term priority for the mortgage industry and we are pleased to see the initial prototypes take a step in that direction," MBA President David H. Stevens said in a statement, noting the challenge of "trying to strike the right balance between simplification and providing as much information as possible to help borrowers make the most informed choices."

Alex J. Pollock, a resident fellow at American Enterprise Institute who proposed a one-page form in 2007, notes the average mortgage closing form is 80 to 85 pages, which could be boiled down. He says the proposed forms don't include the ratio of debt to income, a key factor in whether individuals can afford a loan.

"The real object of this is not to give someone a piece of paper that they passively consume but to get them to actively think about the borrowing commitment," Pollock says.

Even as Warren prepares the new consumer bureau to assume regulatory power July 21, Wall Street lobbyists and their Republican allies in Congress seek to curb the bureau's power. Pending House legislation would replace the director position with a five-member bipartisan commission and make it easer for other regulators to overturn CFPB rules. President Barack Obama is expected to appoint Warren as director during an upcoming congressional recess, given that 44 Republican senators have pledged to block any director nomination.

"This is all part of a unified campaign to weaken and delegitimize the agency," says David Arkush, director of Public Citizen's Congress Watch division, which supports the bureau and Warren as director. "If you had some basic consumer protections in the financial services arena, there's a really good chance the housing bubble wouldn't have gotten as large as it got and you wouldn't have had so many predatory lending and mortgage abuses."

x x x x

With interest rates on U.S. Treasuries continuing to fall and a new study showing continuing declines in home prices nationally, mortgage rates edged slightly lower this week.

The benchmark fixed-rate 30-year mortgage dipped by 2 basis points, averaging 4.75 percent in the latest Bankrate weekly survey. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage point.

Another popular home loan product, the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage, made an identical decline, falling 2 basis points to an average of 3.93 percent. With 30-year jumbo mortgages, or generally those for more than $417,000, the average rate was 5.21 percent, off by a single basis point.

With adjustable-rate mortgages, the 5/1 ARM was 3.45 percent, off 3 basis points.

(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service. Reach Katherine Reynolds Lewis at editors(at)bankrate.com.)

REAL ESTATE WATCHMust credit bankrate.com

Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group

The MERS Morass, Part III

Our most recent blog entry in our series on MERS discussed the decision of the bankruptcy court for the Eastern District of New York in In re Agard.  A mere one day after Agard was decided, however, the bankruptcy court for the District of Kansas came to the opposite conclusion as to MERS’s status as agent.  In In re Martinez, the debtor filed an adversary proceeding seeking a determination of secured status as to MERS and the purported lender of her home mortgage loan.  In seeking such determination, the debtor sought to strip the mortgage from the property such that it would no longer encumber the property because, the debtor argued, she owed no debt to MERS.  The court found that the debtor’s objection to the secured proof of claim filed by the purported lender was also ripe for decision because the debtor argued that, as the lender did not hold the mortgage intended to secure the note, the lender’s obligation (and, thus, claim) was in fact unsecured.    

As in Agard, there had been a state court foreclosure judgment against the debtor, but here that judgment had been dismissed by an appellate court, which found that no evidence existed in the record before it that gave MERS standing to foreclose.  The appellate court held that because MERS did not hold the note, the debtor’s failure to pay it did not result in pecuniary injury to MERS.  Importantly, the appellate court had not made a finding as to the standing of the lender, which had been joined in the action as a third party defendant, and made no findings about whether the lender was the holder of the note.  Unlike in Agard, however, the bankruptcy court refused to apply res judicata to the state appellate court decision, holding that, because in that action the debtor had insisted MERS was the lender’s agent but in this action challenged its status as such, MERS could not be bound by an earlier decision in which it did not have a full and fair opportunity to litigate the claim.  

In Martinez, the debtor argued that the lender’s claim was unsecured because the note was split from the mortgage by the naming of MERS as the lender’s “nominee” on the mortgage.  The court stated that the central issue of the case, therefore, was what effect, if any, such granting of the mortgage to MERS had on the lender’s right to enforce the terms of the note. 

After addressing the res judicata issue by examining applicable Kansas case law, the court considered the merits of the case, noting that under the Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages), the transfer of an obligation secured by a mortgage also transfers the mortgage unless the parties to the transfer agree otherwise.  A mortgage may only be enforced by, or on behalf of, a person entitled to enforce the note, which the comments to the Restatement recognize may be an agent or trustee with responsibility to enforce the mortgage at the mortgagee’s direction.  Such relationship may arise from the terms of the assignment, a separate agreement, or other circumstances, and, the comments reflect, courts “should be vigorous in seeking to find such a relationship” to prevent a windfall to the mortgagor and frustration of the noteholder’s expectation of security. 

Thus, contrary to the debtor’s position that the mortgage and note were split ab initio, MERS and the lender argued that the mortgage and the note were never split because MERS was the lender’s agent and, even under the law set forth in the Restatement, the mortgage still effectively secured the note.  This argument had been made in, and accepted by, the bankruptcy court for the Western District of Missouri in In re Tucker, and the Martinez court adopted the analysis and holding from that case as being consistent with the Restatement.  In particular, the Martinez court found that the under the Restatement, assignment of the note to one entity and assignment of the mortgage to another entity renders the mortgage unenforceable and the note unsecured absent an agency relationship between the holder of the note and the holder of the mortgage. 

The Martinez court, like the Agard court, stated, therefore, that whether the lender and MERS were able to enforce the note and mortgage hinged on their relationship.  If an agency relationship existed, the lender, as principal, could direct MERS to assign the mortgage to it so that the mortgage would be united with the note and enable the lender to commence foreclosure proceedings, or the lender could assign the note to MERS, thus uniting it with the mortgage and enabling MERS to commence foreclosure proceedings on the lender’s behalf.  The court noted that although the Kansas Supreme Court had addressed the relationship between MERS and its members in another cases (likening MERS to a “straw man”), the Kansas Supreme Court had not specifically held that no agency relationship existed.

In direct contrast to the conclusion reached by the Agard court, the Martinez court held that, under Kansas law, an agency relationship did exist between MERS and the lender.  The court noted, and relied on the fact, that the Western District of Missouri bankruptcy court had found an agency relationship existed between MERS and the lender under Missouri law in Tucker.  Looking at language in the Martinez mortgage appointing MERS as nominee for the lender and its successors and assigns, which was identical to such language in the Agard mortgage, as well as at language of the MERS agreements, the Martinez court found that sufficient undisputed evidence existed to establish that MERS was acting as an agent for the lender.    

Further, the court found that the agreement between MERS and the lender was sufficient to create an express agency relationship, but even if not, their actions were sufficient to establish an implied agency.  The court found an agency relationship notwithstanding that the parties did not use the word “agent” and used the word “nominee” instead, which the court found to have a “nearly identical legal definition[]” as “agent” even though the Black’s definition of “nominee” states that it is one who is designated to act for another, “usu[ally] in a very limited way.”  Notably, the Agard court used the Black’s definition of “nominee,” among other sources (including the Kansas Supreme Court, whose decision the Martinez court distinguished for other reasons), to differentiate a “nominee” from an “agent.”  The Martinez court observed, however, that under Kansas law an agency relationship could be created even if the principal specifically denied that the agent was in fact such. 

The Martinez court did not address whether, under Kansas law, a separate standard existed for creation of an agency relationship when the principal sought to authorize the agent to convey an interest in real property.  The Agard court addressed this question, though, and found that, because MERS’s members purported to convey to MERS interests in real property, the agency relationship had to be committed to writing under New York law.  Unlike the Martinez court, the Agard court refused to “cobble together” the various documents at issue so as to draw an inference that an agency relationship existed.  Based on the Martinez court’s finding that the actions of MERS and the lender were sufficient to establish an implied agency, it is not clear from the decision whether, under Kansas law, such “cobbling” would even be necessary so as to establish an agency relationship committed to writing in the real property conveyance context.      

The court therefore denied summary judgment to the debtor on its motion to determine the secured status of the lender and overruled the debtor’s objection to the lender’s proof of claim, finding that because MERS held the mortgage as agent for the lender, the note and mortgage were never split and remained enforceable.  MERS was required to act on behalf of and at the direction of the lender, thus eliminating the concerns raised in the Restatement as to the enforceability of the note.  The court held that the lender’s interest was secured and that it had the right to enforce the mortgage through its agent, MERS, or on its own (by directing its agent to assign the mortgage to it).  The court accordingly entered summary judgment in favor of MERS and the lender.

The debtor subsequently filed a motion for reconsideration or to alter or amend judgment on the basis that the purported lender had sold its beneficial interest in the note to another MERS member prior to bankruptcy and that the purported lender was in fact merely the servicer which no longer had any beneficial interest in the note.  The servicer, which had also occupied that role throughout the bankruptcy case, retained possession of the note.  The debtor sought discovery to determine to whom the note was ultimately sold, including whether the other MERS member who purchased the note prepetition had packaged it into a securitization trust. 

In its ensuing decision, the court found, however, that the result of the case would not change.  MERS still held the mortgage as agent, and pursuant to the MERS agreements, it could take instructions from either the note holder or the servicer, and the servicer here (which had been the purported lender) was both.  The court revised its initial opinion accordingly as well as to reflect that MERS held the mortgage as an agent but not as agent for the servicer qua original purported lender.  The court did not state for whom MERS held the mortgage as agent in light of this clarification but merely that, pursuant to the MERS agreements, it could take instruction from the note holder or servicer.  Interestingly, though, in a footnote, the court noted that in seeking discovery, the debtor sought to raise a theory, detailed in the Tucker case, which questioned whether downstream purchasers of the note from the original lender, the purchaser, and all subsequent assignees of the note were MERS members such that there was no gap in the chain of title.  The court, however, ruled that it was too late for the debtor to raise this theory because she knew of it when she moved of summary judgment and elected not to raise it at that time.    

The contrary results in Agard and Martinez point out the weaknesses in each case and raise questions as to the future viability of MERS.  Why did the Agard court fail to consider the Restatement and be “vigorous in seeking to find [an agency] relationship” between MERS and its members?  Conversely, was the Martinez court too cursory in analyzing the mortgage language, MERS agreements, and Kansas law to conclude that an express or implied agency relationship existed? 

Following the posting of the first part of this series, we received an email from the Honorable Margaret Mann of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of California, suggesting that the answer to whether MERS is the agent of the lender “may be somewhere in the middle.”  Judge Mann also pointed us to a recent decision she issued regarding MERS.  Before we ask some additional questions about MERS and its future, we will therefore discuss Judge Mann’s decision in In re Salazar in the next part of this series.

444 B.R. 231 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 2011)
444 B.R. 192 (Bankr. D. Kan. 2011)
441 B.R. 638 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. 2010)
2011 WL 1519877 (Bankr. D. Kan. 2011)
2011 WL 1398478 (Bankr. S.D. Cal. 2011)

Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group

NY appellate court scrutinizes the MERS standing issue

From Housing Wire

A decision by New York's 2nd Appellate Division may not have a direct impact on the issue of when Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems has standing in foreclosure cases, but it contains persuasive language that could be a shot across the bow when it comes to jurisdiction relating to MERS.

In Aurora Loan Services v. Steven Weisblum, the appellate court overturned a lower court's decision to dismiss claims the Weisblum family made against Aurora. The appellate court concluded that Aurora's motion for summary judgment should have been denied and said Aurora failed to comply with the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law under the Home Equity Theft Prevention Act.

While the decision was not directly based on MERS, attorneys say language in the decision could impact later court rulings because it gives an appellate court's view on how MERS operated in this particular transaction.

"We have not seen that from a New York appellate court up to now," said Anthony Laura, an attorney with Patton Boggs. "I would caution, though, that it is commentary on MERS' standing. It is not the holding of the case."

On the MERS standing issue, which is not what the case was decided on, the Weisblums argued that Aurora did not have standing because it failed to provide evidence of MERS' authority to assign the first mortgage note tied to the home.

The court said "Aurora failed to provide a copy of the first note but submitted a copy of the original first mortgage and a series of assignments culminating in the purported assignment of the first note and mortgage to Aurora. The first mortgage was originally held by MERS, as nominee for Credit Suisse; the mortgage document recites that the lender on the first note is Credit Suisse, but there is nothing in this document to establish the authority of MERS to assign the first note."

The court goes on to say MERS later assigned the first mortgage with the underlying note and then made successive mortgage assignments.

"While, in some circumstances, the assignment of a note may effect the transfer of the mortgage as an inseparable incident of the debt, here the assignment instruments purport to do the opposite, without any evidence that MERS initially physically possessed the note or had the authority from the lender to assign it."

The case also outlined what is needed for a foreclosing party to have an equitable interest in a mortgage — namely the plaintiff has to be both "the holder or assignee of the subject mortgage, holder or assignee of the underlying note — either by physical delivery or a written assignment prior to the commencement of the action that led to the plaintiffs filing a complaint."

The court ruled Aurora failed to make this showing.

The case "is an effort to see problems with the MERS structure and how it has operated, so it has some level of importance," Laura said. "A couple of things that everyone needs to take away from this case: It is a clear signal from this appellate court that it is scrutinizing the MERS structure."

At the same time, the decision has no precedential value outside the New York appellate jurisdiction.

Write to Kerri Panchuk.

Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group

Thursday, May 19, 2011

New Loan Disclosure Forms Unveiled

In one of its first concrete actions meant to benefit consumers, the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has released two versions of a simplified mortgage disclosure form to be provided to borrowers.

The new form is intended to replace two documents currently provided to borrowers, the Truth in Lending Disclosure and the Good Faith estimate. Those forms, which are required by law, provide a borrower with specific information about the mortgage they are seeking, including the interest rate, monthly payment, loan fees and, in the case of an adjustable-rate mortgage, the maximum monthly payment the loan can reset to over time.

The present forms are two and three pages long, respectively, and present much of the same information. Both versions of the proposed form present most of the same information in a single document with more simplified language.

“The current forms can be complicated and difficult for consumers to use,” said Elizabeth Warren, acting head of the CFPB. “They are also redundant and can be costly for lenders to fill out. With a clear, simple form, consumers will be in a better position to answer two basic questions: Can I afford this mortgage and can I get a better deal somewhere else?”

The bureau is posting the two proposed versions of the form on its web site, under the project heading Know Before You Owe, to obtain feedback from consumers and the mortgage industry before committing to a final design.

The CFPB plans to conduct evaluations of the draft forms over the summer. The final form and accompanying rules for use are due to be released by July 2012 for public comment.

The new agency was directed to create a new mortgage disclosure form by last year’s Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which also created the CFPB itself.
Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Dodd-Frank Ranks as Highest Compliance Concern for Lenders in 2011

According to QuestSoft’s third annual compliance survey of lenders, the Dodd-Frank Act ranks as the greatest mortgage compliance concern in 2011. The series of laws passed last year replace the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) as the highest concern, which topped the list the previous two years.

The survey polled 405 lenders on their level of concern for regulatory changes affecting the mortgage industry in 2011. Seventy percent of lenders responded to the implementation of new regulations under the Dodd-Frank Act as the most significant compliance concern. Rounding out the top three identified concerns were RESPA fee tolerance rules (50 percent cited major concern) and other RESPA issues (46 percent cited major concern).

“It was no surprise to see Dodd-Frank changes as the highest ranking compliance concern among lenders, since the changes will significantly impact lenders of all sizes and the associated rules are being announced right now,” said Leonard Ryan, president of QuestSoft. “It is also interesting to see that even a year after the RESPA’s major overhaul; lenders are still concerned with how to comply with fee tolerance rules and other RESPA-related loan disclosure issues.”

Loan officer compensation, which officially became active in April, and SAFE Act changes, both tied as the fourth highest concern, with 40 percent of lenders citing these regulations as a major concern. Though loan officer compensation received fewer medium concern percentage points, it placed fourth due to more survey participants indicating they were subject to the ruling.

Surprisingly, concern for the multi-state exams that many lenders will face this year remained at the bottom of the list for the second consecutive year; with only 19 percent of respondents citing them as a major concern.

“Although multi-state exams are not required for all lenders, more than half of QuestSoft’s clients will be mandated to partake in state-level exams and be required to export exact loan information on all originated loan files to the agency conducting the exam,” Ryan said. “It does appear that lenders are continuing to place their focus on the most immediate changes based on nationally published deadlines. Unfortunately for them, many state examiners are beginning to request the data for exams and giving lenders only a few days to comply. Therefore, lenders should prepare now to adhere to these long-term compliance protocols.”

QuestSoft provides lenders with multiple software tools to handle federal, state and local lending regulations. Compliance EAGLE is an automated compliance review tool that evaluates a loan file for fulfillment with the full range of mortgage lending regulations, including RESPA, Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA), Truth in Lending Act (TILA), Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), flood determination requirements and other consumer and predatory lending laws in seconds. Other products offered include HMDA RELIEF and CRA RELIEF, which provide lenders, banks and credit unions specially designed tools to ease the collection, analysis and reporting of HMDA and CRA data.

AVAILABLE SIDEBAR TABLE:

In a survey of 405 lenders, the level of concern cited for compliance issues in 2011:

             
    High Concern   Medium Concern   Low Concern
Dodd/Frank Changes   70%   22%   6%
RESPA Fee Tolerances   50%   36%   11%
Other RESPA Issues   46%   39%   12%
Loan Officer Compensation Rules   40%   24%   20%
SAFE Act- Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System   40%   41%   17%
Increased Fair Lending Exam Scrutiny   36%   39%   19%
July 21, 2011 Launch of CFPB   36%   41%   16%
Increased CRA Exam Scrutiny   27%   35%   20%
State Consumer Lending Laws   25%   45%   23%
Fraud – Borrower Identity   25%   42%   31%
Risk Retention/ Qualified Mortgages   24%   42%   24%
Fraud – Income Verifications   24%   43%   30%
Fraud – Loan Flipping, Collateral   22%   39%   36%
Multi-State Exam Process (LEF)   19%   29%   24%
             

Totals may not add up to 100% due to rounding or responses of “Not Applicable”

 
Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group

The MERS Decision Story

Fallout from the Michigan Court of Appeals decision tossing out two foreclosures by MERS is sweeping the state of Michigan.  Had a call yesterday from someone whose closing was canceled at the last minute, because, MERS had done the foreclosure and quit claimed the property to the bank, which had agreed to sell the home to the caller.  My realtor wife advised me title companies across Michigan are backing out of deals and canceling closings.
Because, if a MERS foreclosure is in the chain of title, it is, as they say in the title business, "clouded."In my caller's case, MERS foreclosed, the homeowners left and bought a new house, the redemption period expired, the
bank sold the house. But, under the Michigan Court of Appeals decision, the former homeowner could sue to get the foreclosure sale set aside, putting the home back into his name.  And he would win. So, title companies, who issue insurance guaranteeing to the buyer, and the buyer's mortgage company, that the seller does indeed have good title to the property.  No title policy, no mortgage; no mortgage, no sale.
No telling how far back this can go, what if MERS foreclosed 3, 5, even ten years ago?
Not sure off the top of my head how long they have been around. I have been blogging about MERS for years.
As filing fees for real estate documents increased, the mortgage companies decided to skip paying those annoying fees every time they bought a mortgage.
They had to pay to have it recorded with the county register of deeds, to put the world on notice that there was a lien on the property.
So, the initial mortgage was recorded in the name of MERS, as "nominee".
Then, every time the mortgage was sold or assigned, nothing else was recorded with the county, just on MERS records.
So, MERS had no actual interest in the mortgages, could not collect any money due on them, and, that is why the court threw out the foreclosures last week.

Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group

Insurance News - 2010 Ends Four-Year Decline in Title Insurance Premiums, American Land Title Association Market Share Analysis Shows

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- The American Land Title Association (ALTA) reported that its 2010 Year-end and Fourth-Quarter Market Share Analysis is now final.

According to the analysis, the title insurance industry generated $9.61 billion in title insurance premiums in 2010, up 0.2 percent from 2009. Premiums were up 2.2 percent after changes in accounting principles were applied to 2009. During the fourth quarter of 2010, the industry reported $2.7 billion in title insurance premiums, up 7.6 percent from the same period in 2009.

“After four consecutive years of declining title insurance premiums written, 2010 showed a leveling off,” said Kurt Pfotenhauer, chief executive officer of ALTA. “Despite the difficult operating conditions, the industry remains in a very strong financial position.”

While title insurance premiums increased slightly, total operating income fell .6 percent for the fifth consecutive year. In addition, loss and loss adjustment expense increased 9 percent in 2010 compared to 2009, while operating expenses declined only .8 percent. This left an operating loss of over $206 million in 2010 compared to an operating loss of $134 million in 2009.

“The industry’s total assets remain at over $8.8 billion with cash and invested assets growing over year-end 2009 to almost $7.7 billion,” Pfotenhauer said. “While statutory reserves fell slightly as a result of claims settlements, reserves remain at over $4.9 billion.”

On a state-by-state basis, 29 states, plus the District of Columbia, showed fourth-quarter 2010 written premiums increasing over fourth-quarter 2009 and 21 states recording decreases. Six states were up over 30 percent, five between 20 and 30 percent and eight between 10 and 20 percent. Only two states were down over 20 percent, with the remaining 19 states down less than 10 percent. The six largest states all recorded increases, with Texas (No. 2) at plus 17.6 percent and New York (No. 4) up 21.2 percent.

For the full year, 29 states recorded decreases from 2009 levels, but 20 of those declined less than 10 percent and eight of the remaining were under by less than 20 percent. Of the 21 states and the District of Columbia showing year-over-year increases, 19 were up less than 10 percent, two were up less than 20 percent and the District of Columbia recorded an increase of 34.7 percent.

Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group

Fidelity National's 1Q profit soars on cost cuts - BusinessWeek

Title insurer Fidelity National Financial on Thursday said its first-quarter profit more than doubled on strong refinance activity in the quarter, topping Wall Street's expectations.

The majority of Fidelity National's business comes from its role as the nation's largest provider of title insurance, which guarantees to homebuyers that there aren't problems with a home's ownership history and that the seller is legally able to sell the property.

Its revenue in that segment edged up to $1.10 billion from $1.08 billion, as it closed 12 percent more orders than in the 2010 first quarter. That largely was the result of brisk refinance activity early in the quarter, the company said. Revenue in its specialty insurance business rose 8 percent to $96.1 million.

The company also said it laid off 600 employees during the period as part of its $50 million cost savings program.

For the three months ended March 31, Fidelity National said net income rose to $42.5 million, or 19 cents per share, from $16.5 million, or 7 cents per share, in the prior-year period.

Revenue slipped less than a percent to $1.208 billion from $1.213 billion in the previous year.

Analysts expected, on average, a profit of 11 cents per share on revenue of $1.206 billion, according to FactSet.

Shares closed down 28 cents at $14.90 on Thursday.


Title Insurance Industry Free Classifieds
New Jersey Title Insurance Linkedin Group