Housing News Podcast: HousingWire’s Ben Lane talks Plaid/Visa deal and the fintech consolidation wave

January 15, 2020 The Housing News Podcast is a weekly wrap of the top news stories by HousingWire CEO Clayton Collins. Each week, HousingWire interviews financial services experts who can help make sense of the latest headlines, sponsored by our partners at Arch MI. This week, Ben Lane, the managing editor of HousingWire, discusses Visa’s announced acquisition of technology platform and 2019 HW Tech100 winner Plaid. The agreement, which represents a total purchase consideration of $5.3 billion, enables Visa to deliver more value for developers, financial institutions and consumers, according to the company. Here’s more detail on the topic of discussion this week: Last year, Plaid secured investments from Visa and Mastercard. It turns out that Visa’s… Read More

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Housing News Podcast: Finance of America Mortgage’s Bill Dallas on innovation and housing supply

Housing News – Season 2 in 2020 The Housing News podcast explores the most important topics happening in the mortgage, real estate and fintech. Each week a new mortgage or real estate executive joins the show to add perspective to the top stories crossing HousingWire’s news desk. Hosted by Clayton Collins and produced by Alcynna Lloyd. The Housing News Podcast is a weekly wrap of the top news stories by HousingWire CEO Clayton Collins. January 10, 2020 The Housing News Podcast is a weekly wrap of the top news stories by HousingWire CEO Clayton Collins. Each week, HousingWire interviews financial services experts who can help make sense of the latest… Read More

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Study Links Legalized Marijuana to Strong Housing Markets

April 12, 2019Phil Hall Cities where marijuana has been legalized enjoy more vibrant housing markets versus localities where marijuana is still illegal, according to a study from Clever Real Estate. The new study determined that between 2014 and 2019, cities that allowed retail marijuana dispensaries to operate saw local home values increase $22,888 more than those where marijuana remains illegal. From 2017 to 2019, cities that legalized recreational marijuana usage saw home values increase $6,337 more than those where marijuana is illegal. The report highlighted the examples Colorado and Washington, the first states to legalize cannabis for recreational use. According to the study, since opening their first dispensaries in 2014. Colorado home values… Read More

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Lender Initiatives to Recruit and Retain a More Diverse Workforce

April 8, 2019Brooke Mulder I would like to start this article by saying that I love the mortgage industry. I’ve been working for financial institutions since business school, which eventually led me into the mortgage space specifically. I’ve worked as a Loan Officer, a Sales Manager for a team of 15 LOs, a Business Analyst, a Call Center Director and an Executive. It’s an exciting, fast-paced, ever-changing industry. I love the camaraderie many of us feel when we see the same faces again and again at conferences. I love that for an industry that employs some 350,000 people, it can seem like such a small world. Everybody seems to be… Read More

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Foreign Buyers Spent $8.7B in South Florida Housing Purchases

Foreign buyers purchased $8.7 billion in South Florida residential properties in 2018, but from $7.1 billion in 2017, according to data from the Miami Association of Realtors and the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Foreign buyers purchased 14,300 properties in this market last year, down from 15,300 one year earlier. South Florida was responsible for nearly 9.5 percent of all U.S. international home sales last year. Foreign buyers spent a median price of $373,000 for residential properties in 2018, while about five percent of South Florida foreign buyers purchased local homes without even visiting the state. Within this market, nearly 51 percent of all South Florida international home sales occurred in Miami-Dade… Read More

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*OPINION* Are Wells Fargo, PNC probes a setback for affordable housing?

By Andy Peters Published September 19 2018, 5:02pm EDT  National Mortgage News The U.S. suffers from a staggering lack of apartments and homes that low-income consumers can afford. The National Low Income Housing Coalition puts the shortage of affordable units nationwide at 7.2 million, and many industry participants believe that the single-best way to tackle the problem is to expand the low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC), a federal tax credit used to encourage development of more affordable housing. Bipartisan legislation is under consideration in Congress to do just that. That’s why the news that PNC Financial Services Group, Wells Fargo and other unnamed banks are being probed for allegedly colluding with developers to win… Read More

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