Old Republic National Title, one of the country’s largest title insurance companies announced that it won’t insure homes that have been foreclosed on by J.P. Morgan Chase.
The New York Times obtained a company memo that said Old Republic would not write policies on foreclosed Chase properties until “objectionable issues have been resolved.” Earlier last week, the company said it would not write title policies for homes that had been foreclosed by GMAC mortgage, which is now owned by Ally Bank.
Late last week Bank of America said it would also freeze foreclosures in certain states while it reconfirmed that the foreclosure documents had been prepared and executed correctly. It’s likely that Old Republic will stop writing title policies on these foreclosures as well.
If other major title companies follow suit, and stop writing these policies, it could turn into the watershed event that actually sends the already crippled housing market into a tailspin.
Why? Let’s back up for a moment.
Title is the ownership in a property. A chain of title is a list of all owners in the property going back to when the land was first developed or, in the case of some East Coast properties, when the King of England first granted large tracts of land to homeowners.
Posted via email from Title Insurance Below are the top mid-cap surety & title insurance stocks on the NYSE and the NASDAQ in terms of dividend yield. Old Republic International Corp (NYSE: ORI) has a dividend yield of 5.00%. ORI’s shares closed at $13.85 yesterday. Fidelity National Financial Inc (NYSE: FNF [FREE Stock Trend Analysis]) has a dividend yield CoreLogic Inc (NYSE: CLGX) has a dividend yield of 4.80%. CLGX’s shares closed at $18.13 yesterday. Assured Guaranty Ltd (NYSE: AGO) has a dividend yield of 0.90%. AGO’s shares closed at $21.87 yesterday. Posted via email from Title Insurance Have you ever heard of anyone collecting title insurance? Perhaps none; yet if you are going to buy a home or refinance a mortgage, a title insurance gets the largest chunk in the itemized estimate for closing costs and fees. Though most home buyers and refinancers don’t bother to question this anymore because of the tiresome process of asking and shopping for better insurance providers, the recent buzz on foreclosure freezing by some banks and mortgage providers bring to light the immense importance of title insurance. A title insurance is supposed to cover a home buyer from cases wherein other people turn up after the house has been bought and claims rights to the house. Title insurance providers run a title search and sift through government filings related to the property prior to it being bought to lower the chances of insurance being claimed later on. But if the insurers miss something and someone else do turn up later on, insurers would have to provide legal counsel or settle with whoever is claiming. Sounds like title insurers are indeed champions of home buyers and refinancers, right? Not really; the truth is, they are more concerned about lenders, real estate agents, and lawyers who can give them more business. Though kicking back money from companies and brokers who send insurers business is technically not allowed, there’s nothing much everybody can do since title insurance is required if there’s mortgage involved. Posted via email from Title Insurance
Continuing Ed for Title Agents
Top 4 Mid-Cap Stocks In The Surety & Title Insurance Industry With The Highest Dividend Yield (ORI, FNF, CLGX, AGO) | Benzinga.com
of 4.90%. FNF’s shares closed at $14.67 yesterday.
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