Holding a mortgage until the market for its resale improves; a fee may be charged to a borrower to offset a lender's mortgage costs Warehousing occurs during tight money markets when discount rates charged by lenders exceed their profit margin, forcing them to hold mortgages until rates drop
The storage of both incoming materials for production and finished goods for physical distribution to customers
Using existing loans as security for another loan Warehousing involves mortgage portfolios
The packaging together of many mortgages for the purpose of selling them in the secondary market usually by a mortgage banker who has originated the loans
The short-term borrowing of funds by a mortgage banker using permanent mortgage loans as collateral This form of interim financing is used until the mortgages are sold to a permanent investor
storing goods in warehouses; in finance, using other people to buy shares prior to a takeover bid
The borrowing of funds by a mortgage banker on a short-term basis at a commercial bank using permanent mortgage loans as collateral This form of interim financing is used until the mortgages are sold to a permanent investor
the performance of those physical and administrative functions incidental to and required in the conduct of the storage activity, i e receipt, sorting, identification, inspection, preservation, putting away, safekeeping, retrieval for issue and preparation for shipment of materiel
The interim holding period from the time of the closing of a loan to its subsequent marketing to capital market investors
Mortgage bankers and other financial institutions make loans that are then periodically sold on the secondary market After the loan is made - but before it is sold - the loan is said to be in the lenders warehouse
A term used in financing to describe the process which loan correspondents employ, assembling into one package a number of mortgage loans which the correspondent has originated and selling them in the secondary mortgage market
Short-term borrowing of funds by mortgage bankers using permanent mortgage loans as collateral The money borrowed is used to make additional mortgage loans This interim financing is used until the mortgages are sold to a permanent investor
The process by which a mortgage banker or mortgage broker assembles mortgages that he or she has made and prepares the mortgages to be sold in the secondary mortgage market By selling these mortgages the originator now has additional capital that can be used to make more mortgages which in turn may be sold in the secondary mortgage market
Mortgage bankers and other financial institutions make loans that are then periodically sold on the secondary market After the loan is made but before it is sold - the loan is said to be in the lenders warehouse
Warehousing is the act or process of storing large quantities of goods so that they can be sold or used at a later date. All donations go towards the cost of warehousing. the business or practice of storing large quantities of goods, especially in warehouses
The interim holding period from the time of the closing of a issue to its subsequent marketing to capital market investors
Warehousing is the assembly of mortgage loans into "pools " Securities that represent shares in these pools are then sold to investors Examples of warehousing "agencies" include Fannie Mae/Federal National Mortgage Association and Ginnie Mae/Government National Mortgage Association
The borrowing of funds by a mortgage banker on a short-term basis using permanent mortgage loans as collateral This form of interim financing provides capital for the mortgage banker to use to fund additional loans until the mortgages can be sold to a permanent investor
The coordinated, architected, and periodic copying of data from various sources, both inside and outside the enterprise, into an environment optimized for analytical and informational processing
The process of gathering data from various internal and external sources and storing it in a subject-oriented database, designed to help executives, managers and business professionals make better business decisions
A data warehouse is a collection of data gathered and organized so that it can easily by analyzed, extracted, synthesized, and otherwise be used for the purposes of further understanding the data It may be contrasted with data that is gathered to meet immediate business objectives such as order and payment transactions, although this data would also usually become part of a data warehouse
A building used to receive and store goods and merchandise In terms of classifying such property, warehouses are normally located in an area zoned for either commercial or industrial property
A warehouse is a large building where raw materials or manufactured goods are stored until they are exported to other countries or distributed to shops to be sold. a large building for storing large quantities of goods (ware ( -WARE) + house)
The Library Warehouse is used to house less frequently used material and the Macmillan Brown archives Request items from the Warehouse by filling in a "Warehouse request" card at any library
Premises designed and built or converted for the purpose of bulk storage of raw materials or finished or partly finished goods, pending either onward transit or division into smaller batches and subsequent distribution
Premises designed and built for the purpose of bulk storage of raw materials or finished or partly finished goods, pending either onward transit or division into smaller batches and subsequent distribution Willing seller-willing buyer An assumption sometimes made for valuation purposes that the owner of the property concerned is willing to dispose of his interest therein and that there is at least one genuine purchaser in the market for that interest, whether or not such is actually the case at the date of valuation Written-down value At a given time, the result of making one or more annual of periodic deductions for depreciation against capital cost or worth