Nutter Home Loans is shutting down

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Nutter Home Loans, also known as James B. Nutter & Company, is reportedly exiting the mortgage business, according to an article in the Kansas City Star.

The article claimed one reason for the exit is an ongoing lawsuit brought by the Department of Justice in September 2020 alleging violations of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 and the False Claims Act regarding the origination of Federal Housing Administration-insured Home Equity Conversion Mortgages.

National Mortgage News left a message with Kansas City, Missouri-based Nutter seeking to confirm the report. However, an industry source speaking on background said Nutter informed its employees of the decision to shut down on Oct. 14 and it has been selling its servicing rights. A check of the Missouri Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification website does not have an entry for Nutter in 2022.

Nutter's webpage was still active as of the morning of Nov. 1. But the company had not updated its Facebook or Twitter accounts since August.

The company's founder, James B. Nutter Sr., was known as a mortgage product innovator looking to provide credit to underserved markets. He was well respected in Kansas City as a philanthropist. Nutter Sr. passed away in July 2017. His son James B. Nutter Jr. currently runs the company.

The eponymous company started in business in 1951. At some point, it made a decision to focus on the reverse mortgage business that contributed to its current legal difficulties. In a pivot, Nutter reorganized into a call center operation that prioritized refinancings, a tough business to be in given the spike in interest rates.

HGTV personality Tamara Day has been a spokesperson for the company since September 2020.

Nutter Home Loans only has 14 loan officers according to the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System.

In the past, Nutter did have run-ins with regulators, including a 2014 settlement over charges Nutter failed to perform due diligence when underwriting HECMs. Its NMLS entry has a 2012 settlement with 10 state regulators that cost the company over $409,000 regarding the reverse mortgage program.

Prior to that, Nutter entered into a consent decree with the Federal Trade Commission in May 2009 over data security issues.

Nutter no longer originates HECMs, and only had six endorsements for federal fiscal year 2022 (the last reported activity was in April), according to FHA data.

This shutdown joins a growing list of companies deciding to fully exit or reduce mortgage banking operations, including Finance of America, BayFirst Financial, First Guaranty and Sprout, along with the wholesale businesses at loanDepot, AmeriSave, Mountain West and Guaranteed Rate.


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