ONITY GROUP INC. (ONIT) Business
This page reproduces the company's own Item 1 Business text from the linked SEC filing. It is filer text, not grepcent analysis, scoring, or investment advice.
Informational only - not investment advice. See Disclaimer.
ITEM 1. BUSINESS
When we use the terms “Onity,” “ONIT,” “we,” “us” and “our,” we are referring to Onity Group Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries.
OVERVIEW
We are a financial services company that services and originates both forward and reverse mortgage loans, through our primary brands, PHH Mortgage and Liberty Reverse Mortgage. We are a leader in the servicing industry that is focused on creating positive outcomes for homeowners, clients, and investors. This long-standing core competency continues to be a guiding principle as we seek to grow our business and improve our financial performance.
We are headquartered in West Palm Beach, Florida with offices and operations in the U.S., in the United States Virgin Islands (USVI), in India and the Philippines. At December 31, 2025, approximately 75% of our workforce was located outside the U.S. Onity Group Inc. is a Florida corporation organized in February 1988. With our predecessor companies, we have been servicing residential mortgage loans since 1988. We have been originating forward mortgage loans since 2012 and reverse mortgage loans since 2013.
BUSINESS MODEL AND SEGMENTS
We seek to create value and maximize returns for shareholders through balance and diversification, prudent capital-light growth, industry-leading cost structure, top tier operating performance and capabilities, and dynamic asset management. Our core competencies revolve around our Servicing business with an Originations platform to replenish and pursue growth of our servicing portfolio.
Our Servicing business is comprised of two components, our owned mortgage servicing rights (MSR) servicing portfolio and our subservicing portfolio that complement each other when managing scale. We invest our capital to fund purchases and originations of our owned MSRs, for which we establish a targeted return on investment. Our net return includes servicing revenue net of servicing costs, less MSR portfolio runoff, and less MSR and advance funding cost. Our net return is impacted by fair value changes of our owned MSRs, net of hedging, that vary based on market conditions. Our subservicing portfolio generates a relatively stable source of revenue that enhances our returns. While subservicing fees are relatively lower than servicing fees, we do not incur any significant capital utilization or funding of advances and are not exposed to MSR fair value volatility. We target a balanced mix of our portfolio between servicing and subservicing based on capital allocation and returns. Our servicing operations and customer interactions do not differentiate whether loans are serviced or subserviced.
Our Originations business’ strategy is to provide self-sustained replenishment opportunities to our servicing portfolio and profitable growth. Our Originations success is built on our relationships with borrowers, lenders and other market participants. We purchase MSRs through bulk portfolio purchases, through flow purchase agreements with our network of mortgage companies and financial institutions, and through participation in the Agency Cash Window (or Co-Issue) programs. In order to diversify our sources of servicing and reduce our reliance on others, we have been developing our origination of MSRs through different channels, including our portfolio recapture channel, retail, wholesale and correspondent lending.
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The chart below summarizes our current business model:
We report our activities in three segments, Servicing, Originations and Corporate. Our business segments reflect the internal reporting that we use to evaluate operating performance of services and to assess the allocation of our resources. The financial information for our segments is presented in our financial statements in Note 24 — Business Segment Reporting and discussed in the individual business operations sections of Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.
Servicing
Our Servicing business is primarily comprised of our residential forward mortgage servicing business that currently accounts for the majority of our total revenues, our reverse mortgage servicing business, and our small commercial mortgage servicing business. Our servicing clients include some of the largest financial institutions in the U.S., including the GSEs, Ginnie Mae and non-Agency residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) trusts, and other large MSR investors.
As of December 31, 2025, our servicing and subservicing portfolio consisted of approximately 1.4 million loans with an unpaid principal balance (UPB) of $328.3 billion.
Servicing involves the collection of principal and interest payments from borrowers, the administration of tax and insurance escrow accounts, the collection of insurance claims, the management of loans that are delinquent or in foreclosure or bankruptcy, including making servicing advances, evaluating loans for modification and other loss mitigation activities and, if necessary, foreclosure referrals and the sale of the underlying mortgaged property following foreclosure (REO) on behalf of mortgage loan investors or other servicers. Master servicing involves the collection of payments from servicers and the distribution of funds to investors in mortgage and asset-backed securities and whole loan packages. Reverse servicing includes additional functions such as the funding of borrowers under their approved borrowing capacity, the repurchase of loans and assignment to HUD upon reaching a limit (based on the maximum claim amount) and the securitization of tails under the Ginnie Mae program. We earn contractual monthly servicing fees (which are typically payable as a fixed percentage of UPB) pursuant to servicing agreements as well as other ancillary fees relating to our servicing activities such as late fees.
We own MSRs outright, where we typically receive all the servicing economics, and we subservice on behalf of other institutions that own the MSRs, in which case we typically earn a relatively smaller fee for performing the subservicing activities. Special servicing is a form of subservicing where we generally manage only delinquent loans on behalf of a loan owner. We typically earn subservicing and special servicing fees either as a percentage of UPB or on a per loan basis based on delinquency status. Our reverse owned servicing activities are mainly reflected in our financial statements with the gain on reverse loans and HMBS-related borrowings, net.
Servicing advances are an important component of our business and are amounts that we, as MSR owner, are required to advance to, or on behalf of, investors if we do not receive such amounts from borrowers. These amounts include principal and interest payments, property taxes and insurance premiums and amounts to maintain, repair and market real estate properties on behalf of our servicing clients. Most of our advances have the highest reimbursement priority, entitling us to repayment of the advances from the loan or property liquidation proceeds before most other claims on these proceeds. Advances are contractually
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non-interest bearing. The costs incurred by servicers in meeting advancing obligations consist principally of the interest expense incurred in financing the advance receivables and the costs of arranging such financing. Under subservicing agreements, Onity is promptly reimbursed by the owners of the MSRs who generally finance the advances and incur the associated financing cost.
Reducing delinquencies is important to our business because it enables us to recover advances and recognize additional ancillary income, such as late fees, which we do not recognize on delinquent loans until they are brought current. Performing loans also require less work and thus are generally less costly to service. While increasing borrower participation in loan modification programs is a critical component of our ability to reduce delinquencies, borrower compliance with those modifications is also an important factor.
Our servicing and subservicing portfolios naturally decrease over time as homeowners make regularly scheduled mortgage payments, prepay loans prior to maturity, refinance with a mortgage loan not serviced by us or involuntarily liquidate through foreclosure or other liquidation process. In addition, existing clients may determine to terminate their servicing and subservicing arrangements with us and transfer the servicing to others. Therefore, our ability to maintain or grow our servicing revenue or the size of our servicing and subservicing portfolios depends on our ability to acquire the right to service or subservice additional mortgage loans at a rate that exceeds portfolio runoff and any client terminations. Our Originations segment is focused on profitably replenishing and growing our servicing and subservicing portfolios.
Originations
The primary source of revenue in our Originations segment is gain on loan sales. We originate and purchase residential mortgage loans that we promptly sell or securitize on a servicing retained basis, thereby generating mortgage servicing rights. Our mortgage loans are conventional (conforming to the underwriting standards of the GSEs) and government-insured loans (insured by the FHA or VA) (collectively Agency loans). We generally package and sell promptly the loans in the secondary mortgage market, through GSE and Ginnie Mae guaranteed securitizations and whole loan transactions. We originate forward mortgage loans directly with customers (consumer direct channel) as well as through correspondent lending arrangements. We originate reverse mortgage loans in three channels, through our correspondent lending arrangements, broker relationships (wholesale) and retail channels. Per-loan gain on sale margins vary by channel, with correspondent typically being the lowest margin and retail the highest, commensurate with fulfillment costs. Further, margins are generally higher for reverse mortgages than forward mortgages.
In addition to our originated MSRs, we acquire MSRs through multiple channels, including flow purchase agreements, the Agency Cash Window co-issue programs and bulk MSR purchases. Our Originations business also includes the sourcing and acquisition of new subservicing clients.
In 2025, our Originations business generated total volume additions of $84.8 billion in UPB (refer to Part II, Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Overview for further details).
Retail Lending / Consumer Direct. We originate forward and reverse mortgage loans directly with borrowers through our retail lending business. Our forward lending business benefits from our servicing portfolio by offering rate and term refinance options to qualified borrowers seeking to lower their mortgage payments and cash-out refinance options. Depending on borrower eligibility, we refinance eligible customers into conforming or government-insured products. We are focused on increasing recapture rates on our existing servicing portfolio to grow this business. We also originate retail reverse loans to non-Onity servicing customers.
Correspondent Lending. Our correspondent lending operation purchases forward and reverse mortgage loans that have been originated by a network of approved third-party lenders, under our lending and risk management programs. We employ an ongoing monitoring and renewal process for participating lenders that includes an evaluation of the performance of the loans they have sold to us. We perform pre- and post-funding review procedures to ensure that the loans we purchase conform to our requirements and to the requirements of the investors to whom we sell loans. We are focused on expanding our network of correspondent lenders and increased participation of our existing relationships.
Wholesale Lending. We originate reverse mortgage loans through a network of approved brokers. Brokers are subject to a formal approval and monitoring process. We underwrite all loans originated through this channel consistent with the underwriting standards required by the ultimate investor prior to funding.
MSR Purchases. We purchase MSRs through flow purchase agreements, the Agency Cash Window co-issue programs and bulk MSR purchases. The Agency Cash Window programs we participate in, and purchase MSRs from, allow mortgage companies and financial institutions to sell whole loans to the respective Agency and sell the MSR to the winning bidder servicing released. In addition, we partner with other originators to replenish our MSR through flow purchase agreements.
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New Servicing and Subservicing Acquisitions. Our enterprise sales department strives to expand our network of servicing and subservicing clients and source new flow and co-issue or subservicing agreements. We compete as a low cost provider with our demonstrated expertise to service mortgage assets across borrowers of every credit level and our recapture capabilities.
REGULATION
Our business is subject to extensive regulation and supervision by federal, state, local and foreign governmental authorities, including the CFPB, the HUD, the SEC and various state agencies that license our servicing and lending activities. Accordingly, we are regularly subject to examinations, inquiries and requests, including civil investigative demands and subpoenas. The GSEs, Ginnie Mae, the United States Treasury Department, various investors, non-Agency securitization trustees and others also subject us to periodic reviews and audits. See Item 1A. Risk Factors – Legal and Regulatory Risks for further information.
As a mortgage originator and servicer, we must comply with a large number of federal, state and local consumer protection and other laws and regulations, including, among others, the CARES Act, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act), the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, the Homeowners Protection Act, the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA), the Federal Trade Commission Act, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, as well as individual state and local laws, and federal and local bankruptcy rules. These laws and regulations apply to all facets of our business, including, but not limited to, licensing, loan originations, consumer disclosures, default servicing and collections, foreclosure, filing of claims, registration of vacant or foreclosed properties, handling of escrow accounts, payment application, interest rate adjustments, assessment of fees, loss mitigation, use of credit reports, handling of unclaimed property, safeguarding of non-public personally identifiable information about our customers, and the ability of our employees to work remotely. These complex requirements can and do change as laws and regulations are enacted, promulgated, amended, interpreted and enforced.
In addition, a number of foreign laws and regulations apply to our operations outside of the U.S., including laws and regulations that govern licensing, privacy, employment, safety, payroll and other taxes and insurance and laws and regulations that govern the creation, continuation and the winding up of companies as well as the relationships between shareholders, our corporate entities, the public and the government in these countries. Our foreign subsidiaries are subject to inquiries and examinations from foreign governmental regulators in the countries in which we operate outside of the U.S.
Our licensed entities are required to renew their licenses, typically on an annual basis, and to do so they must satisfy the license renewal requirements of each jurisdiction, which generally include financial requirements such as providing audited financial statements and satisfying minimum net worth requirements and non-financial requirements such as satisfactory completion of examinations relating to the licensee’s compliance with applicable laws and regulations. The minimum net worth requirements to which our licensed entities are subject are unique to each state and type of license.
COMPETITION
The financial services markets in which we operate are highly competitive and fragmented, and we do not expect that to change. We compete with large and small financial services companies, including bank and non-bank servicers and mortgage originators, and real estate investment trusts, in the forward and reverse servicing, subservicing, lending and MSR transaction markets. Non-bank mortgage companies, like us, now account for nearly 60% of loan servicing, nearly 80% of subservicing and 80% of loan originations (based on IMF-Inside Mortgage Finance, top 50 firms, for the first nine months of 2025). Consolidation in the market has recently led to certain servicers or originators being acquired by other firms, generally for scale or balanced business considerations. In both our servicing and originations businesses, new competitors continue to emerge, including Financial Technology (“FinTech”) companies that develop new technology around customer interactions and process automation and that have a lower cost structure.
We primarily compete for profitable growth in our respective markets, rather than scale.
In our Servicing business, we compete based on price, operating performance, service quality and customer and client satisfaction. Potential counterparties also (1) assess our regulatory compliance track record and examine our systems and processes for maintaining and demonstrating regulatory compliance, (2) consider our customer satisfaction rankings, and (3) consider our third-party servicer ratings. We attempt to differentiate ourselves by offering consumers best in class service and technology solutions, including self-service portals, analytical and artificial intelligence (AI) based tools to anticipate and resolve consumer needs, and real-time engagement with our consumers. We believe that our competitive strengths also flow from our ability to control and drive down delinquencies using proprietary processes, our superior operating performance, our lower cost to service, our deep know-how as a long-time operator of servicing loans and our long-standing and well-established Asia-Pacific (APAC) operations. Our service excellence and operational expertise has been recognized by the Agencies. Specifically, PHH received Fannie Mae’s Servicer Total Achievement and Rewards (STARTM) performer recognition for the 2025 program year for the fifth consecutive year. In addition, PHH was recognized for servicing excellence through Freddie
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Mac’s Servicer Honors and Rewards Program (SHARPSM) award in the top tier servicing group for the 2022 program year for the third consecutive year, and as subservicer for the 2024 program year for the second consecutive year. PHH also achieved HUD’s Tier 1 servicer ranking for the 2025 program year, for the fifth consecutive year. As of the filing date of this Form 10-K, SHARPSM awards for the 2025 program year have not been communicated.
In our Originations business, we face intense competition in most areas, including rates, margins, fees, customer service, product offerings and name recognition. Some of our competitors have strong retail or broker presence, which can create competitive challenges in certain situations. Other competitors in consumer direct channels have developed proprietary technology to source and target borrowers with attractive solutions. Some competitors have larger resources to invest in technology, analysis and marketing to improve borrower retention or recapture rates. The competitive landscape varies according to interest rate levels and the volume and capacity in the origination market. If interest rates rise, we expect to face increased competitive pressures as the refinance opportunities diminish. We believe our competitive strengths flow from our existing client relationships and from our focus on providing strong customer service, our brand recognition, our long-standing and well-established APAC operations and our increasing use of technology and innovative solutions.
THIRD-PARTY SERVICER RATINGS
Like other servicers, we are the subject of mortgage servicer ratings or rankings (collectively, ratings) issued and revised from time to time by rating agencies including Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. (Moody’s), S&P Global Ratings, Inc. (S&P) and Fitch Ratings, Inc. (Fitch). Favorable ratings from these agencies are important to the conduct of our loan servicing and lending businesses.
The following table summarizes our latest key servicer ratings and outlook:
| PHH | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moody’s | S&P | Fitch | |||
| Forward | |||||
| Residential Prime Servicer | SQ3+ | Above Average | RPS2- | ||
| Residential Subprime Servicer | SQ3+ | Above Average | RPS2- | ||
| Residential Special Servicer | SQ3+ | Above Average | RSS2- | ||
| Residential Second/Subordinate Lien Servicer | SQ2- | Above Average | RPS3+ | ||
| Residential Home Equity Servicer | — | — | RPS3+ | ||
| Residential Alt-A Servicer | — | — | RPS2- | ||
| Master Servicer | SQ3+ | Above Average | RMS3 | ||
| Small Balance Commercial Primary and Special Servicer | — | Above Average | SBPS2- and SBSS2- | ||
| CMBS Loan Level Special Servicer, Master Servicer and Primary Servicer | — | — | CLLSS3+, CMS3 and CPS3+ | ||
| Ratings Outlook | N/A | Stable | Stable | ||
| Date of last action | June 11, 2025 | October 11, 2024 | May 29, 2025 | ||
| Reverse | |||||
| Residential Reverse Servicer | — | Above Average | — | ||
| Ratings Outlook | — | Stable | — | ||
| Date of last action | — | October 11, 2024 | — |
In addition to servicer ratings, each of the agencies will from time to time assign an outlook (or a ratings watch such as Moody’s review status) to the rating status of a mortgage servicer. A negative outlook is generally used to indicate that a rating “may be lowered,” while a positive outlook is generally used to indicate a rating “may be raised.”
On October 11, 2024, S&P affirmed the Above Average ratings and Stable outlook citing the company’s experienced management and team, effective systems and technology, sound control framework and good servicing performance metrics, among other factors.
On May 29, 2025, Fitch upgraded PHH’s residential servicer ratings and affirmed its stable outlook for all products. In addition, Fitch affirmed PHH’s residential Master Servicer rating. The rating actions reflect the company’s growth strategy based on diversification between its loan origination and servicing businesses as well as its third-party subservicing efforts, effective enterprise risk management controls and processes, and continuous technology enhancements.
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On June 11, 2025, Moody's upgraded the second lien servicer quality (SQ) assessment from SQ3+ to SQ 2- and affirmed the prime, subprime, special servicer, and master SQ assessments for PHH at SQ3+. The upgrade of PHH 's second lien servicing assessment is mainly driven by i) improvement in the company's second lien roll rates, ii) cure rates, and iii) recidivism rates.
RITHM CAPITAL CORP. RELATIONSHIP
Rithm was our largest subservicing client in 2025. We service loans on behalf of Rithm under various agreements, including traditional subservicing agreements, where Rithm is the legal owner of the MSRs, and in connection with legacy MSR transfers, referred to as Rights to MSRs (RMSR), where Onity retains legal title to the underlying MSRs but Rithm has generally assumed risks and rewards consistent with an MSR owner. On October 31, 2025, we were notified by Rithm of its intent to not renew its subservicing agreements effective January 31, 2026. The servicing transfer to Rithm’s own servicing platform is expected to begin in the first half of 2026. The transfer of $8.3 billion of UPB of the RMSR agreement is subject to the receipt of necessary consents from trustees and others, the timing and success of which are uncertain. See Note 8 — MSR Related Financing Liabilities, at Fair Value.
As of December 31, 2025, Rithm accounted for $32.2 billion, or 10% of the UPB and 19% of the loan count of our total servicing and subservicing portfolio, and approximately 50% of all delinquent loans that Onity services. The underlying loans are almost exclusively non-Agency loans, involving a higher level of operational and regulatory risk, and requiring substantial direct and oversight staffing relative to Agency loans. For 2025, servicing and subservicing fees from Rithm amounted to $78.5 million, or 12% of total servicing and subservicing fees (excluding ancillary income), and the related Rithm Pledged MSR liability expense amounted to $36.8 million. As legal MSR owner, or in compliance with the RMSR agreement, Rithm is responsible for financing all servicing advance obligations in connection with the loans underlying the MSRs.
The servicing transfer will result in the reduction of Servicing and subservicing fees and associated Pledged MSR liability expense. We expect a reduction of Operating expenses after downsizing certain aspects of our servicing business and support functions. In addition, the float amount associated with the advance collections and servicing fees of the servicing portfolio will be repaid to Rithm in cash based on the amount due upon transfer (refer to Note 15 — Other Liabilities, Due to Rithm).
OAKTREE AND MAV RELATIONSHIP
We established a strategic alliance with Oaktree in 2020 that was amended in November 2024, and financial interests were further unwound in 2025. Oaktree’s MSR investment vehicle (referred to as MAV) was our second largest subservicing client in 2025.
MAV Investment and Subservicing
The Oaktree relationship included the launch of MAV, an MSR investment vehicle in 2021 to scale up Onity’s servicing business in a capital efficient manner, with 85% and 15% interests held by Oaktree and Onity, respectively, and an initial equity commitment of $250.0 million over three years. PHH entered into a number of agreements with MAV, including a Subservicing Agreement, Joint Marketing Agreement and Recapture Agreement. In November 2024, Onity sold to Oaktree its 15% equity interest in MAV and the Subservicing Agreement was amended to provide that PHH will be the exclusive subservicer for an initial term of five years through November 2029 subject to certain extensions of all MSRs that MAV then owned, for all future MSRs that MAV acquires from PHH, and for the majority of MAV’s MSR portfolio overall, as defined. In addition, the parties agreed to certain MSR sale restrictions by MAV in 25% annual increments through September 30, 2027. MAV may freely sell or transfer any MSRs thereafter. MAV has a right of first offer (ROFO) for any GSE MSRs that PHH desires to sell that meet certain criteria. The ROFO will remain effective through November 2029 subject to certain extensions or terminations.
As of December 31, 2025, PHH subserviced a total $38.3 billion UPB on behalf of MAV under the Subservicing Agreement, of which $20.1 billion of MSRs were previously sold by PHH to MAV and do not qualify for sale accounting.
Financial Interests
In 2021, we issued to Oaktree $285.0 million of 12% senior secured notes due 2027 and 426,705 shares of our common stock, representing 4.9% of our then outstanding common stock, at a price per share of $23.15, for an aggregate purchase price of $9.9 million. In connection with these debt and equity issuances, we issued to Oaktree 1,446,016 warrants to purchase shares of our common stock at an average exercise price of $26.37 per share, representing 15% of our then outstanding common stock. In November 2024, we prepaid Oaktree the $285.0 million senior secured notes due 2027 in connection with our corporate debt refinancing and the 15% MAV sale discussed above.
In 2025, Oaktree sold its 426,705 shares of our common stock in the open market. In addition, in February and December 2025, Oaktree exercised its warrants, resulting in a $3.5 million cash payment and the issuance of a net 462,762 shares of common stock, representing 5.4% of our then outstanding common stock. Following the exercise in December 2025, we have no remaining warrants outstanding. As of December 31, 2025, Oaktree, MAV and affiliates were no longer deemed Related
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Parties. See Note 12 — Investment in Equity Method Investee and Related Party Transactions and Note 17 — Stockholders’ Equity to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information.
HUMAN CAPITAL RESOURCES
We believe the success of our organization is highly dependent on the quality and engagement of our human capital resources. Our workforce is dedicated to creating positive outcomes for homeowners, communities and investors through caring service and innovative solutions. We strive to develop a working environment and culture that fosters our company values:
•Integrity: Do What’s Right – Always
•Service Excellence: Consistently Delivering on Our Commitments
•People: Develop, Grow and Value All Employees
•Teamwork: Succeed Together as a Global Team
•Embracing Change: Value Innovation and New Thinking
We had a total of approximately 4,300 employees at December 31, 2025. Approximately 1,100 of our employees were employed in the U.S. and USVI, and approximately 3,200 of our employees were employed in our operations in India and the Philippines.
Our Board of Directors and executive leadership team places significant focus on our human capital resources through fostering and measuring employee engagement and committing to a comprehensive equal opportunity merit-based organization, free of unlawful discrimination, where all employees regardless of background, sex, race or other protected characteristic are encouraged and supported in contributing to our business objectives. To support this non-discriminatory culture we engage with both internal and external groups and organizations to ensure that our culture enables employees to consistently demonstrate our company values.
Our company culture drives success for all our stakeholders, from employees and clients to homeowners, investors, and the communities we serve. The results achieved through our programs have been central to building a culture, which promotes integrity, respect, and teamwork. We are committed to these programs as equal opportunity is essential to our innovation and employee engagement and aids in the retention of key talent. We review all our programs and practices to ensure they remain competitive, compliant, non-discriminatory and promote opportunity and fairness based on merit.
Promoting equal opportunity and inclusion. Onity remains committed to fostering a non-discriminatory environment providing for equal opportunity in all areas of employment, including applicant selection, compensation, training, and promotion. Company policies prohibit discrimination of any form. Onity strives to foster an inclusive environment in which people of all backgrounds can participate and contribute to the success of the organization’s enterprise, taking full advantage of the collective sum of employees’ individual differences, life experiences, inventiveness, and unique capabilities, knowledge and talent.
Onity’s non-discrimination policy provides equal employment opportunities for all qualified individuals without discrimination based upon legally protected characteristics in accordance with applicable law. Underlying this policy is Onity’s culture and values, including employees’ rights to be free from unlawful discrimination, and its commitment to providing a safe, secure, and productive work environment.
Onity relies on employee-led resource groups to help support employee development and foster our culture of equal opportunity and inclusion. More than half of our workforce are members of these groups, which collectively hosted more than 30 employee events globally. Our affinity groups are open to everyone, and when coupled with a culture of appreciation, help provide a comprehensive ecosystem for all our employees to flourish within our merit-based pay for performance culture.
Pay equity as viewed through a merit-based lens is a key component of Onity’s employment value proposition and regulatory compliance. We regularly evaluate our performance management, merit increase incentive award and promotion processes to ensure that all employees, regardless of race, gender, and other protected characteristics, are evaluated objectively based on their performance.
Talent Development. We continue to foster an environment in which every team member has the opportunity to gain experience and achieve his or her professional goals, with support and encouragement. We regularly measure employee engagement – our employees’ pride, energy and optimism that fuels their effort – and implement action plans that respond to employee feedback. Our most recent employee survey indicated strong engagement levels of 86% favorable. Our training platform focuses not only on the technical domain skills essential to role success but includes competency-based programs to develop leadership capabilities and skills needed for the future. Succession planning occurs annually and is reviewed by the CEO and the Compensation and Human Capital Committee. Strategic talent reviews to identify, develop and promote top talent are part of our performance management processes.
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Our training and development programs are important contributors to our ability to deliver industry-leading customer service. Over the past few years, PHH has been recognized for servicing excellence through Freddie Mac’s SHARPSM and Fannie Mae’s STARTM awards and HUD’s ranking.
Rewards. Our total rewards (compensation and benefits) programs are developed to attract, motivate, and retain employees. They demonstrate the value the employee provides to the organization, are designed to be competitive to the marketplace, and connect directly to key business strategies. Our compensation programs, including salaries and short- and long-term incentives, are centered on our pay-for-performance philosophy, aligning the interests of employees and stakeholders by rewarding both individual and overall company performance. Onity’s health and welfare benefit programs strive to keep employees productive and engaged at work by serving the total well-being of employees and their families. We are committed to and regularly evaluate our practices to ensure pay is fair in accordance with applicable law, and competitive to the marketplace.
Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance (ESG) Practices and Corporate Sustainability
Our Board of Directors and our management are committed to ensuring Onity has responsible practices to address the needs of its customers, employees, and the communities it serves. Our approach is represented by the following policies and programs, in addition to the Human Capital Resources programs listed above:
Commitment to Ethics. We have adopted a robust Code of Business Conduct and Ethics that applies to all employees and our Board of Directors, as well as an additional Code of Ethics for Senior Financial Officers that applies to our Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Chief Accounting Officer. We provide multiple anonymous methods for any employee or other person to report a suspected ethical violation, including whistleblower complaints relating to accounting, internal controls, audit matters or securities law, and our policies prohibit retaliation against any person for making a good faith complaint. We also provide methods for interested individuals to contact the members of our Board of Directors and communicate directly with the Chair of our Audit Committee. Our General Counsel serves as our Chief Ethics Officer and collaborates with members of our Internal Audit function to ensure every ethics complaint and communication to our Board is addressed in accordance with our company policies.
Community development. At Onity, we believe homeownership is an important part of achieving financial independence, and our philosophy in this regard is “helping homeowners is what we do.” This philosophy is what guides us in our commitment to the communities we serve. We organize a variety of community outreach programs and events with local and national organizations around the country to assist homeowners. Our outreach events began during the 2008 mortgage crisis and have continued since then. In 2025, we hosted 41 borrower outreach events across 21 states in partnership with various HUD certified housing counseling agencies. In addition, Onity partners with several local municipalities around vacant and abandoned properties to mitigate blight in communities.
To better serve our stakeholders and communities, Onity created a Community Advisory Council in 2014, consisting of 14 leaders from a diverse group of national non-profit organizations, consumer advocacy groups and civil rights organizations, as a platform to collaborate and share ideas on how to help homeowners. Onity provides grants and sponsorship funding to local and national nonprofit organizations each year, in support of the work they do to help distressed communities and homeowners. Since the COVID pandemic, Onity has contributed approximately $7 million to these organizations, and more than $28 million since 2012.
Charitable activity. Onity continues to find meaningful ways to give back to the communities where we live and work. The charitable events at our office locations around the globe in 2025 included raising funds for autism and cancer research, supporting local food banks through food drives and volunteering, helping economically disadvantaged children and the elderly, donating supplies to schools for vision-impaired children, holding toy drives and back-to-school supply drives, making donations to first responders and military veterans, hosting blood drives through the American Red Cross and OneBlood and making donations to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Opens Doors Foundation to help families with a critically ill or injured child.
Responsible information security management. Onity maintains a comprehensive information security program designed to safeguard the confidentiality, integrity and availability of its data and information systems. Onity’s Board of Directors is periodically updated on information security risks, which are managed through a strategic blend of policies, advanced tools and technologies, and continuous staff awareness initiatives. Onity’s cybersecurity controls are structured around a multi-layered defense-in-depth strategy designed to protect the integrity of the network against potential breaches.
Our workforce undergoes regular training designed to enhance their ability to recognize, avert, and report cybersecurity risks and incidents. In parallel, Onity’s third-party risk management program assesses and supervises the information security practices of our vendors. For example, we require certain third-party vendors who handle data processing activities on our behalf to maintain a formal information security program that meets our security standards for such vendors.
Onity’s readiness for and responsiveness to cyber threats are periodically evaluated through various assessments. These include both internal and external vulnerability assessments, penetration testing, incident response table-top exercises, and
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breach readiness and response drills. For more detailed information regarding Onity’s approach to information security risk management, see “Item 1. Business - Risk Management.”
Environmental Impact. In 2025, Onity continued its commitment to operate through a primarily remote working model, reducing the percentage of employees commuting daily to the office. Fewer associates in the offices afforded the opportunity to reduce our office footprint in several markets. As office space footprints were reduced, improvements were made to retrofit lighting and equipment to lower our use of natural resources. Recycling of office and paper products in all U.S. facilities continues to be a priority, which reduces our imprint on the local landfills. In addition, we continue to reduce paper mailings to customers through our digital mailing service, electronic notice delivery and process automations.
RISK MANAGEMENT
Our risk management framework seeks to mitigate risk and appropriately balance risk and return. We have established policies and procedures intended to identify, assess, monitor and manage the types of risk to which we are subject, including strategic, market, credit, liquidity and operational risks.
Our Chief Risk and Compliance Officer is responsible for the design, implementation and oversight of our global risk management and compliance programs. Risks unique to our businesses are governed through various management processes and governance committees to oversee risk and related control activities across our company and provide a framework for potential issues to be identified, assessed and remediated under the direction of senior executives from our business, finance, risk, compliance, internal audit and law departments, as applicable. Information is aggregated and reports on risk matters are made to the Board of Directors, its Risk and Compliance Committee or its other committees, as applicable, to enable the Board of Directors and its committees to fulfill their governance and oversight responsibilities.
Strategic Risk
We are exposed to risk with respect to the strategic initiatives we have taken to deliver sustainable growth and profitability. Strategic risk represents the risk to shareholder or enterprise value, current or future earnings, capital and liquidity from adverse business decisions and/or improper implementation of business strategies. Management is responsible for developing and implementing business strategies that leverage our core competencies and are appropriately structured, resourced and executed. Oversight for our strategic actions is provided by the Board of Directors. Our performance, relative to our business plans and our longer-term strategic plans, is reviewed by senior management and the Board of Directors.
To achieve our financial objectives, we believe we need to execute on our business strategy discussed under “Item 7. Management Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations-Overview-Business Strategy”. Our ability to achieve our objectives is highly dependent on the success of our business relationships with our critical counterparties like the GSEs, Ginnie Mae, our lenders, regulators, significant customers and our ability to attract new customers, all of which are impacted by our capability to adequately address the competitive challenges we face.
Market Risk
See Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk.
Liquidity Risk
We are exposed to liquidity risk through our ongoing needs to: originate, purchase, repurchase and finance mortgage loans; sell mortgage loans into secondary markets; retain, acquire, finance and hedge MSRs, make and finance advances; fund and sell additional future draws by borrowers under variable rate HECM loans; meet our HMBS issuer obligations with respect to MCA repurchases; repay maturing debt; meet our contractual obligations; and otherwise fund our operations. Liquidity is an essential component of our ability to operate and grow our business; therefore, it is crucial that we maintain adequate levels of excess liquidity to fund our businesses during normal economic cycles and events of market stress.
We estimate how our liquidity needs may be impacted by a number of factors, including fluctuations in asset and liability levels due to our business strategy, asset and hedging derivative valuations, changes in cash flows from operations or advance obligations, levels of interest rates, debt service requirements including contractual amortization, margin calls and maturities, and unanticipated events, including legal and regulatory expenses. We also assess market conditions and capacity for debt issuance in the various markets that we access to fund our business needs. We have established internal processes to anticipate future cash needs, evaluate stress scenarios and continuously monitor the availability of funds pursuant to our existing debt arrangements or certain liquidity actions. We monitor MSR asset valuations and communicate closely with our lenders for this asset class to ensure adequate liquidity is maintained for mark-to-market valuation changes within MSR financing facilities. We manage this risk in multiple ways, including but not limited to engaging in Originations pipeline and MSR hedging activities, and maintaining liquidity earmarks at levels to support potential changes in loans and MSR fair values.
We regularly evaluate capital structure options that we believe will most effectively provide the necessary capacity to support our investment objectives, address upcoming debt maturities and contractual amortization, and accommodate our
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business needs. Our objective is to maximize the total investment capacity through diversification of our funding sources while optimizing cost, advance rates and terms.
In general, we finance our business operations through a variety of activities - cash on hand, operating cash flow, strategic investor relationships and both committed and non-committed asset-based lending facilities for our significant MSR, mortgage warehouse and servicing advance activities. We address liquidity risk by actively managing our sources and uses of funds and maintaining contingency funding capacities, including but not limited to undrawn excess borrowing capacity on credit lines beyond our expected needs and by extending the tenor of our financing arrangements from time to time. Management closely monitors growth, and can adjust originations pricing quickly to manage its liquidity profile as needed. We have typically amended sizing on existing facilities or entered into new secured facilities in anticipation of our changing liquidity needs. Also refer to Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, Liquidity and Capital Resources.
Operational Risk
Operational risk is inherent in each of our business lines and related support activities. This risk can manifest itself in various ways, including process execution errors, clerical or technological failures or errors, business interruptions and frauds, all of which could cause us to incur losses. Operational risk includes the following key risks:
•legal risk, as we can have legal disputes with borrowers or counterparties;
•compliance risk, as we are subject to many federal and state rules and regulations;
•third-party risk, as we have many processes that have been outsourced to third parties;
•information technology risk, as we operate many information systems that depend on proper functioning of hardware and software;
•information security risk, as our information systems and associates handle personal financial data of borrowers, and
•business continuity risk, as natural disasters, pandemics, extreme weather, and other unexpected events can cause disruption to our operations;
•model risk, as we measure instruments and risks, develop forecasts, and make decisions based on model estimation outputs that may be incorrect or misused.
The Board of Directors provides direction to senior executives by setting our organization’s risk appetite, and delegates to our Chief Executive Officer and senior executives the primary ownership and responsibility for operational risk management and control. Senior executives in our risk department oversee the establishment of policies and control frameworks that are designed, executed and administered to provide a sound and well-controlled operational environment in accordance with our risk appetite framework. We mandate training for our employees in respect to these policies, require business line change management control oversight, and we conduct targeted control assessment/reviews on a regular basis. Risk issues identified are tracked in our Governance, Risk and Compliance (GRC) system. Remediation and assurance testing are also tracked in our GRC system. We also have several channels for employees to report operational and/or technological issues affecting their operations to management, the operational risk or compliance teams or the Board.
We seek to embed a culture of compliance and business line responsibility for managing operational and compliance risks in our enterprise-wide approach toward risk management. Onity has adopted a “Three Lines of Defense” model to enable risks and controls to be properly managed on an on-going basis. The model delineates business line management's accountabilities and responsibilities over risk management and the control environment and includes mechanisms to assess the effectiveness of executing these responsibilities.
The first line of defense consists of business line management, dedicated control directors and quality assurance personnel who are accountable and responsible for their day-to-day activities, processes and controls. The first line of defense is responsible for ensuring that key risks within their activities and operations are identified, assessed, mitigated and monitored by an appropriate control environment that is commensurate with the operations risk profile.
The second line of defense is independent from the business and comprises a Risk Management function (including Third-Party Risk and Information Security) and a Compliance function, which are responsible for:
•providing assurance, oversight, and credible challenge over the effectiveness of the risk and control activities conducted by the first line;
•establishing frameworks to identify and measure the risks being taken by different parts of the business;
•monitoring risk levels, through key indicators and oversight/assurance and testing programs; and
•providing periodic reporting to senior management and the Board of Directors for transparency.
The third line of defense, Internal Audit, provides independent assurance as to the effectiveness of the design, implementation and embedding of the risk management frameworks, as well as the management of the risks and controls by the first line and control oversight by the second line. The Internal Audit function provides periodic reporting on its activities to senior management and the Board of Directors for transparency.
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All business units and overhead functions are subject to unrestricted audits by our internal audit department. Internal audit is granted unrestricted access to our records, physical properties, systems, management and employees in order to perform these audits. The internal audit department reports to the Audit Committee of the Board and assists the Audit Committee in fulfilling its governance and oversight responsibility.
Compliance risk is managed through an enterprise-wide compliance risk management program designed to monitor, detect and deter compliance issues. Our compliance and risk management policies assign primary responsibility and accountability for the management of compliance risk in the lines of business to business line management.
Information Security Risk oversight is performed by our Chief Information Security Officer who reports to the Chief Administrative Officer. Onity’s information security plans are developed to meet or exceed Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council standards. See Item 1 C. “Cybersecurity” below.
Pursuant to our model risk management framework, models are generally subject to risk assessment and management by the model owners, developers, and users (i.e., first line of defense), and effective model risk oversight by Risk Management.
Credit Risk
Consumer Credit Risk
The typical obligor credit-related risks inherent in maintaining a mortgage loan portfolio as an investment tend to impact us less than a typical long-term investor because we generally sell the mortgage loans that we originate in the secondary market shortly after origination through GSE and Ginnie Mae guaranteed securitizations and whole loan transactions. We are exposed to early payment defaults from the time that we originate a loan to the time that the loan is sold in the secondary market or shortly thereafter. Early payment defaults are monitored and loans are audited by our quality assurance teams for origination defects. Our exposure to early payment defaults remains very limited and we do not anticipate material losses from this exposure.
Servicing costs are generally higher on higher credit risk loans. In addition, higher credit risk loans are generally affected to a greater extent by an economic downturn or a deterioration of the housing market. An increase in delinquencies and foreclosure rates generally results in increased advances for delinquent principal and interest, taxes and insurance, foreclosure costs and the upkeep of vacant property in foreclosure. Interest expense on advances and higher operating expenses decrease the value of our servicing portfolio. We track the credit risk profile of our servicing portfolio, including the recoverability of advances, with a view to ensuring that changes in portfolio credit risk are identified on a timely basis.
We have loan repurchase and indemnification obligations arising from potential breaches of the representation and warranty provisions in connection with loans we sell in the secondary market. In the event of a breach of these representations and warranties, we may be required to repurchase a mortgage loan or indemnify the purchaser, and we may bear any subsequent loss on the mortgage loan.
We endeavor to minimize our losses from loan repurchases and indemnifications by focusing on originating or purchasing fully compliant mortgage loans and closely monitoring investor and agency eligibility requirements for loan sales. Our quality assurance teams perform independent testing related to the processing and underwriting of mortgage loans to investor guidelines prior to closing, as well as after the closing but before the sale of loans, to identify potential repurchase exposures due to breach of representations and warranties. In addition, we perform a comprehensive review of the loan files where we receive investor requests for repurchase and indemnification to establish the validity of the claims and determine our obligation. In limited circumstances, we may retain the full risk of loss on loans sold to the extent that the liquidation value of the asset collateralizing the loan is insufficient to cover the loan itself and associated servicing expenses. In instances where we have purchased loans from third parties, we usually have the ability to recover the loss from the third-party originator.
Counterparty Credit Risk
Counterparty credit risk represents the potential loss that may occur because a party to a transaction fails to perform according to the terms of the contract. We regularly evaluate the financial position and creditworthiness of our counterparties and disperse risk among multiple counterparties to the extent possible. We manage derivative counterparty credit risk by entering into financial instrument transactions through national exchanges, primary dealers or approved counterparties and using mutual margining agreements whenever possible to limit potential exposure.
Rithm is contractually obligated, pursuant to our agreements with them related to the Rights to MSRs, to make all advances required in connection with the loans underlying such MSRs. If Rithm’s advance financing facilities do not perform as envisaged or should Rithm otherwise be unable to meets its advance financing obligations, we would be required to meet our advance financing obligations with respect to the loans underlying these Rights to MSRs, which could materially and adversely affect our liquidity, financial condition and servicing operations. Due to its concentration in our portfolio, we monitor Rithm’s payment performance, liquidity and capital on a regular basis.
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Counterparty credit risk exists with our third-party originators, including our correspondent lenders, from whom we purchase originated mortgage loans. The third-party originators make certain representations and warranties to us when we acquire the mortgage loan from them, and they agree to reimburse us for losses incurred due to an origination defect. We become exposed to losses for origination defects if the third-party originator is not able to reimburse us for losses incurred for indemnification or repurchase. We mitigate this risk by monitoring purchase levels from our third-party originators (to reduce concentration risk), by performing regular quality control reviews of the third-party originators’ underwriting standards and by regular reviews of the creditworthiness of third-party originators.
Concentration Risk
We strive to develop a diversified and balanced business to mitigate any concentration risk in our segments and operations (also refer to discussion of our financing sources).
Client concentration - Rithm is our largest subservicing client, accounting for $32.2 billion of UPB or 10% of the UPB and 19% of the loan count of our total servicing and subservicing portfolio, and approximately 50% of all delinquent loans that Onity serviced as of December 31, 2025. On October 31, 2025, Rithm exercised its right to terminate the subservicing agreements for convenience, effective January 31, 2026. The servicing transfer to Rithm’s own servicing platform is expected to begin in the first half of 2026. The transfer of $8.3 billion of UPB of these agreements is subject to the receipt of necessary consents from trustees and others, the timing and success of which are uncertain. Upon transfer, we expect to downsize certain aspects of our servicing business as well as the related corporate support functions. In addition, the float amount associated with the advance collections and servicing fees of the servicing portfolio will be repaid to Rithm in cash based on the amount due upon transfer.
Market conditions, including interest rates and future economic projections, could impact investor demand to hold MSRs, which may result in our loss of subservicing relationships (including MAV, MSR capital partners and others), or significantly decrease the number of loans under such relationships.
Geographic concentration - The mortgaged properties securing the residential loans that we service are geographically dispersed throughout all 50 states, the District of Columbia and two U.S. territories. The five largest concentrations of properties are located in California, Texas, Florida, New Jersey and New York, comprising 38% of the number of loans serviced underlying our MSRs at December 31, 2025. California has the largest concentration with 14% of the total loans serviced.
AVAILABLE INFORMATION
Our annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K and all amendments to those reports are made available free of charge through our website (www.onitygroup.com) as soon as reasonably practicable after such material is electronically filed with or furnished to the SEC. The SEC maintains an Internet site that contains reports, proxy and information statements and other information regarding issuers, including Onity, that file electronically with the SEC. The address of that site is www.sec.gov. We have also posted on our website, and have available in print upon request (1) the charters for our Audit Committee, Compensation and Human Capital Committee, Nomination/Governance Committee and Risk and Compliance Committee, (2) our Corporate Governance Guidelines, (3) our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics and (4) our Code of Ethics for Senior Financial Officers. These documents may be found at http://www.onitygroup.com in the Shareholder Relations section. We also post information such as quarterly earnings presentations, press releases, and other information that may be important to investors on our website. However, the information located on, or accessible from, our website, is not, and should not be deemed to be, part of this report or incorporated into any other filing that we submit to the Securities and Exchange Commission.