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In December 1999, [[Intuit Inc.]] (makers of [[QuickBooks]], [[TurboTax]], and [[Quicken]]) purchased Rock Financial. The company was renamed Quicken Loans. In June 2002, Gilbert led a small group of private investors in purchasing the Quicken Loans subsidiary back from Intuit.
In December 1999, [[Intuit Inc.]] (makers of [[QuickBooks]], [[TurboTax]], and [[Quicken]]) purchased Rock Financial. The company was renamed Quicken Loans. In June 2002, Gilbert led a small group of private investors in purchasing the Quicken Loans subsidiary back from Intuit.


In the Winter of 2006-2007, speculation was that Dan Gilbert would announce plans to relocate his headquarters to both keep up with the company's growth and for a more central location such as [[Detroit]].{{Fact|date=September 2007}}

== Class Action Lawsuit ==

Quicken Loans Inc. is currently the defendant in a major class action lawsuit. This was filed against the company on behalf of employees who worked as loan consultants for any Quicken office within the past three years. The suit alleges that Quicken is in violation of the [[Fair Labor Act]] for failing to pay the plaintiffs overtime for working beyond a 40-hour work week.<ref>{{Citation| last = Dybis| first = Karen| title = Former Quicken Loans workers file suit| newspaper = The Detroit News| year = 2005| date = February 10| url = http://www.detnews.com/2005/business/0502/10/C01-85672.htm}}</ref>


== 2007 Credit Crunch ==
== 2007 Credit Crunch ==

Revision as of 17:54, 14 September 2007

Quicken Loans Inc.
Company typePrivate
IndustryFinance and Mortgage
Founded1985
HeadquartersLivonia, MI, the United States
Key people
Dan Gilbert, Founder and Chairman
William Emerson, CEO (since 2002)
Patrick McInnis, President (since 2002)
ProductsMortgage
Number of employees
4,800
Websitewww.quickenloans.com

Quicken Loans Corporation is an online retail home mortgage lending firm in the US. Quicken Loans Inc. is comprised of the Quicken Loans and Rock Financial, and Title Source, a settlement service provider. Quicken Loans closed $18 billion in residential mortgage loans in 2006. The company employs about 4,800 workers and is headquartered in Livonia, Michigan.

History

Quicken Loans, originally Rock Financial Corporation, was founded in 1985 by Dan Gilbert and Ron Berman and soon became one of the largest independent mortgage companies in the country. In May 1998, Gilbert took Rock Financial public, launching a successful IPO underwritten by Bear Stearns and Prudential Securities.

In December 1999, Intuit Inc. (makers of QuickBooks, TurboTax, and Quicken) purchased Rock Financial. The company was renamed Quicken Loans. In June 2002, Gilbert led a small group of private investors in purchasing the Quicken Loans subsidiary back from Intuit.

In the Winter of 2006-2007, speculation was that Dan Gilbert would announce plans to relocate his headquarters to both keep up with the company's growth and for a more central location such as Detroit.[citation needed]

Class Action Lawsuit

Quicken Loans Inc. is currently the defendant in a major class action lawsuit. This was filed against the company on behalf of employees who worked as loan consultants for any Quicken office within the past three years. The suit alleges that Quicken is in violation of the Fair Labor Act for failing to pay the plaintiffs overtime for working beyond a 40-hour work week.[1]

2007 Credit Crunch

In August of 2007 the entire mortgage industry faced a crisis in obtaining new credit from banking institutions and hedge funds. In response to that Quicken Loans stopped doing all:[2]

Gilbert is quoted as saying that Quicken is active in closing "plain vanilla loans".

References

  1. ^ Dybis, Karen (February 10), "Former Quicken Loans workers file suit", The Detroit News {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help)
  2. ^ "Gilbert: Mortgage squeeze could be blessing for Quicken". The Detroit Free Press. 2007-8-16. Retrieved 2007-8-16. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)