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WFG National Title Adds Two to Its Agency Audit Department | Mortgage News | Daily National and State Headlines

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WFG National Title Insurance Company has named Mark Knight senior agency auditor and Keith Nolan as agency auditor. The Williston Financial Group family of title insurers is currently licensed and operating in 37 jurisdictions nationwide. The company is a full-service provider of title insurance and real estate settlement services for lender, commercial and residential transactions nationwide.

Knight comes to WFG National Title after spending seven years in a similar position with one of the industry’s largest title insurers. He spent the previous 15 years serving in loss prevention and internal auditing manager positions with a number of firms. Knight has a degree in Business Administration and Management from James Madison University in Virginia, and is a Certified Construction Auditor (CCA) and Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE).

Nolan has been in the real estate services industry for almost 15 years, most recently having served over ten years as a regional auditor for a large national underwriter. He has a Bachelor of Science/Business Administration from the University of Central Florida.

With WFG, Knight and Nolan will be responsible for all agency escrow audits. Their focus will be on using effective data reporting and tracking practices to ensure maximum service for and communication with WFG agencies.

“Keith and Mark will be living examples of WFG’s dedication to collaborating with and supporting its agency partners,” said WFG National Title Executive Vice President Joseph Drum Esq. “In the current regulatory environment, it is critical that our partners have up-to-date information and guidance, and this will be a major part of the role Keith and Mark play.”

For more information, visit www.WillistonFinancial.com.

Filed under  //  Williston Financial   learntitle  
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Posted by Art Oswald 

Williston Financial Group Appoints Moody to Head Its Lender Services Division | Mortgage News | Daily National and State Headlines

Williston Financial Group Appoints Moody to Head Its Lender Services Division

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Williston Financial Group LLC (WFG) has appointed William Moody as executive vice president. Moody will lead wholly-owned subsidiary New Millennium Title, WFG’s lender services division, from the division’s new headquarters in Simi Valley, Calif. He will also serve on the Executive Committee of WFG. WFG is a national, full service provider of title insurance and real estate settlement services for the mortgage industry.

New Millennium Title is already operating in all 50 states. The division delivers a range of settlement services, including title insurance and closing/escrow services, for both the commercial and residential transactions.

Moody has 34 years of experience in the mortgage and settlement services industry, most recently as founder, president and chief executive officer of national settlement services firm Lender’s First Choice. He also spent 11 years as a president of financial services with Coast Federal Bank.

“WFG and New Millennium Title are a great fit for this market,” said Moody. “We are already serving a variety of large, medium and small national clients, and are pleased to see that flexibility, communication and responsiveness on the part of their settlement services partners are no longer luxuries in the eyes of mortgage lenders. They are now requirements. This fits our business model, which centers on communication, collaboration and co-existence.”

WFG President and Chief Executive Officer Patrick Stone asserts that Moody is an excellent match for the company’s approach to the market.

“Bill has tremendous experience on both the lending and settlement side of the real estate transaction," said Stone. "He strives to adapt his services to meet the needs of the customer, rather than forcing the customer to fit his operation. At a time when mortgage lenders need flexibility and speed from their partners, Bill Moody will be an asset to New Millennium’s clients.”

For more information, visit www.WillistonFinancial.com.

Filed under  //  Williston Financial   learntitle.  
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Posted by Art Oswald 

Real estate stands to gain in Fed injection

Perspective: QE2 may boost home prices, sales
October 29, 2010

Editor's note: The following is a guest perspective by Patrick F. Stone, president and CEO of Williston Financial Group, which is parent to WFG National Title Insurance Co. His contribution focuses on the Federal Reserve's announced plans for a new round of quantitative easing.

By PATRICK F. STONE

Below are some thoughts on the Federal Reserves's "Quantitative Easing 2" plan (or QE2): the reasoning, size, objective and outcome. Please understand that my comments are conjecture, and do not represent inside information or unique thinking. I have had a lot of conversations with economists and Wall Street players, and while there is a uniform belief as to the rationale behind easing, there is no consensus as to the size or outcome.

I expect "Quantitative Easing 2" (or QE2) will be implemented on a "stepped in" basis: perhaps $300 billion to $500 billion initially, followed by additional commitments as necessary. The impact will be meaningful for residential real estate, with at least a stabilization of prices through a rate-induced increase in demand (4 percent or lower 30-year-fixed mortgage rates).

If the Fed is committed to increasing inflation, and I believe it is, the resultant upward pressure in asset prices will impact real estate. Such an effect will cause an uptick in home prices and an increase in personal wealth, refinance and purchase activity, and finally, new construction when the overhang of inventory is absorbed.

While it is difficult to estimate the length of time necessary to create the impact, once inflation at or above 2 percent annually takes hold, the effects on real estate should start to take hold, and be magnified by time and increases in inflation.

REASONING: Deflationary trends in core Consumer Price Index and an uncomfortable emerging parallel with the Japanese experience. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is a student of the Great Depression, and of Japanese economic history, and does not want to see the U.S. replicate either experience.

While some would argue that commodity prices (and gold) have escalated, and that there is more of a threat of inflation than deflation, those in the real estate industry see the impact of "deflationary expectations" in the form of reluctant homebuyers who are waiting for values to fall further. (See attached slides.)

SIZE: This is the $64,000 question -- or is it a $1.5 trillion question? Smart money says $500 billion to start, and more as needed.

OBJECTIVE: Drive long-term rates down (short-term rates cannot go much lower). There is no stated goal as to how low the Fed wants to see long-term rates, but it is safe to assume that any meaningful change would cause 30-year-fixed rates to dip below 4 percent. Exactly how far is purely a guess.

The question here is at what interest-rate level does mortgage lending become problematic in terms of profitability for originators or those holding the loans (the government-sponsored entities and banks). I can't imagine too many people wanting to hold 30-year paper paying 3 percent.

OUTCOME: As the driving rationale is to reinflate the economy, inflation of real assets is the desired outcome.

We have seen meaningful increases in commodity prices and stock prices in anticipation of QE2. With the implementation of QE2, and the hoped-for inflation, house prices will stabilize and -- depending on the degree of impact and length of impact -- housing inflation is a logical byproduct. Any meaningful housing appreciation will have a tremendously positive impact on the economy by affecting the following:

1. It will increase homeowners' perception of net worth (wealth).

2. It will stop deflationary expectations with regard to house prices, and with reported price increases it will very quickly turn fence-sitters into homebuyers.

3. It will tee up further refinancing, and continue to lower homeowners' monthly payments ... and by implication, increase their spending power and hopefully their consumption.

4. It will create a positive environment for new homes and result in new construction and meaningful gains in employment.

While it is doubtful that the Fed will come right out and say it, it appears that "fixing" residential real estate would be a desirable outcome, if not the most meaningful outcome, of QE2. The potential outcome of this strategy is hard to quantify, but getting inflation going will be difficult.

We have tremendous unused capacity in the economy, and as everyone knows, unemployment is very high. The correlation between the amount of money in the system and inflation is not as high as the correlation between capacity utilization and inflation.

Patrick F. Stone is president and CEO of Williston Financial Group, which operates WFG National Title Insurance Co., based in Lake Oswego, Ore. He is chairman of The Stone Group, a commercial brokerage and development company, and is a former president and chief operating officer and director for Fidelity National Financial.

WFG National Title Insurance Co. has a license pending with the Department of Banking and Insurance in New Jersey. It will be interesting to see what a new underwriter will bring to the mix.

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Posted by Art Oswald