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Wednesday, October 15, 2008
J.P. Morgan HELOC Origination Fell 77% In Third Quarter
Greg Morcroft
MarketWatch Pulse
NEW YORK -- J.P. Morgan Chase said on Wednesday that tighter underwriting standards and panic in the credit markets slowed mortgage and home equity loan origination dramatically in the third quarter. The firm said mortgage loan originations fell 4% year over year, but dropped a dramatic 3% on a quarter-to-quarter basis form a year ago. Home equity loan origination dropped more dramatically, falling 77% on a year-to-year basis. "Declines reflect tighter underwriting standards and the overall reduction in liquidity in the financial markets," the bank said. Highlighting the caution in the market, the firm said more than 90% of mortgage originations in the third quarter were loans that conformed to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lending guidelines, which require earnings documentation and specific loan to value ratios.
Copyright © 2008 MarketWatch, Inc.
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It's time to let you in on a dirty little secret: You may not own the stock you own. That's right, if you invest with a brokerage firm, the shares you bought are almost certainly not held in your name. Technically, they're held in the name of the Wall Street firm you do business with, hence the term "street name."
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