Skip to main content

Inlanta Mortgage now licensed in Colorado

Aug 24, 2010

Inlanta Mortgage, a mortgage banker since 1993, has announced that it has obtained the ability to conduct business in the state of Colorado. “From our continued growth and expansion into additional states, we are able to provide increasing opportunities for our mortgage professionals, partner branches and the customers they serve” said Joe Ramis, branch recruitment director at Inlanta Mortgage. “We hope this will increase the awareness of Inlanta as a company and show mortgage professionals our offerings, including how we allow them to originate more and worry less, and invite them to become a part of our growth into Colorado.” Inlanta Mortgage is also licensed in Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota and Wisconsin. Beyond bringing on more partner branches in these states and developing a strong presence in Colorado, the company has plans for expansion into additional states in the future. Inlanta Mortgage provides mortgage professionals with the opportunity to join a company that reflects high standards of quality in the mortgage industry. In the current mortgage market, Inlanta Mortgage has remained stable and continues to grow, adding more and more branches to serve mortgage professionals and borrowers. The company’s structure allows for its partner branches to focus on originating loans while the headquarters provides comprehensive, timely and accurate support in compliance, processing, technology, human resources, training, accounting, marketing, legal, in-house funding and underwriting. For more information, visit www.inlanta.com.
About the author
Published
Aug 24, 2010
Mortgage Servicers Added To Junk-Fee Naughty List

New release from CFPB lays out areas of improvement, and concern, for mortgage servicers.

In Wake Of NAR Settlement, Dual Licensing Carries RESPA, Steering Risks

With the NAR settlement pending approval, lenders hot to hire buyers' agents ought to closely consider all the risks.

A California CRA Law Undercuts Itself

Who pays when compliance costs increase? Borrowers.

CFPB Weighs Title Insurance Changes

The agency considers a proposal that would prevent home lenders from passing on title insurance costs to home buyers.

Fannie Mae Weeds Out "Prohibited or Subjective" Appraisal Language

The overall occurrence rate for these violations has gone down, Fannie Mae reports.

Arizona Bans NTRAPS, Following Other States

ALTA on a war path to ban the "predatory practice of filing unfair real estate fee agreements in property records."