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Black Knight, Inc. is an American corporation that provides integrated technology, services, data and analytics to the mortgage lending, servicing and real estate industries, as well as the capital and secondary markets. Black Knight is also known for its monthly benchmark data reports: Mortgage Monitor, a month-end analysis of mortgage ...
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) is an American privately held corporation. [1] MERS is a separate and distinct corporation that serves as a nominee on mortgages after the turn of the century and is owned by holding company MERSCORP Holdings, Inc., which owns and operates an electronic registry known as the MERS system, which is designed to track servicing rights and ...
NVR, Inc. is an American company engaged in home construction headquartered in Reston, Virginia.It also operates a mortgage banking and title services business. The company primarily operates on the East Coast of the United States, but its operations encompass 14 states as well as Washington, D.C.
The effective date is when the first mortgage payment is due at the new servicer’s address. The new servicer must send their letter within 15 days following the effective date of the transfer.
Encompass Technologies is an American multinational enterprise resource planning software corporation, with headquarters in Fort Collins, Colorado. Encompass develops beverage distributing software for multiple distributors in the beverage industry.
By mail: Send your payment with a payment stub to Aspire Servicing Center, P.O. Box 659705, West Des Moines, IA 50265-0970. By phone: Call 800-243-7552 or 515-243-5626 to use the automated payment ...
Ellie Mae Inc., originally named Electronic Mortgage Affiliates, [1] is a software company that processes 35% of U.S. mortgage applications. [2] The services are based on a software as a service model (SaaS), [3] and specializes in originating and funding new mortgage loans and facilitating regulatory compliance.
In 2003, Countrywide was the subject of a class-action lawsuit alleging overtime violations. Countrywide was charged with working employees 10–15 hours per day, 6 to 7 days per week without compensating them for overtime wages. The lawsuit was settled in May 2005, with the payment of $30 million in compensation to 400 account executives. [11]