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CoreLogic

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CoreLogic
NameCoreLogic
TypePublic company
IndustryFinancial services
Founded2010 (as current legal entity)
HeadquartersIrvine, California, United States
Area servedGlobal
ProductsProperty information, analytics, risk management
RevenueSee Financial performance
Num employeesSee Corporate governance and leadership

CoreLogic is an American provider of property information, analytics, and data-enabled services for real estate, mortgage finance, insurance, and government markets. The company aggregates property-level records, mortgage data, hazard maps, and consumer behavioral indicators to supply valuation, risk modeling, and decisioning tools. CoreLogic’s offerings support participants across capital markets such as servicers, lenders, insurers, asset managers, and public agencies.

History

CoreLogic traces its corporate lineage to multiple legacy firms in property data and mortgage services, including entities that interacted with markets associated with S&P Global, Moody's Corporation, and Fitch Ratings. Its antecedents engaged with regulatory regimes shaped by the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and agency practices from Federal Housing Finance Agency, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Executives formerly connected to Blackstone Group, KKR, and Warburg Pincus have influenced consolidation in the industry. Significant transactions occurred alongside mergers and acquisitions involving companies comparable to First American Financial Corporation, ATTOM Data Solutions, Equifax, TransUnion, and CoreLogic’s peers in the S&P 500 ecosystem. CoreLogic’s growth paralleled technology shifts involving firms such as Microsoft, IBM, Oracle Corporation, and SAP SE—adoptions that transformed property data platforms. The company’s strategic direction intersected with capital-market actors including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, and Bank of America through financing, underwriting, and advisory roles. International expansion brought interactions with countrylevel registries under frameworks similar to those used by HM Land Registry and Land Registry (England and Wales), as well as regulatory authorities like the European Central Bank and Australian Prudential Regulation Authority.

Business operations

CoreLogic operates through data acquisition, analytics development, software delivery, and consulting services. Its customer base resembles those of Wells Fargo, Citigroup, U.S. Bank, SunTrust Banks (now part of Truist Financial), and PNC Financial Services Group in mortgage and servicing segments. Distribution channels include direct sales teams, channel partners similar to Deloitte, Ernst & Young, PwC, and KPMG, and technology partnerships akin to those with Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Platform, and Salesforce. Operations depend on public-record sources analogous to datasets maintained by County Recorder (United States), cadastral services like Land Information New Zealand, and commercial data aggregators such as LexisNexis Risk Solutions and CoreLogic’s industry contemporaries. The company’s risk analytics inform insurance carriers comparable to Allstate, State Farm, AIG, and Chubb and reinsurers such as Munich Re and Swiss Re. International work brings liaison with standards bodies similar to ISO and financial-reporting regimes like International Financial Reporting Standards.

Products and services

CoreLogic provides valuation models, automated valuation models (AVMs), property-index products, mortgage performance analytics, hazard and catastrophe models, fraud-detection tools, and loss-mitigation platforms. These offerings are used by participants similar to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae, and private-label securitization desks at investment banks such as Barclays and Credit Suisse. Product suites integrate mapping and geospatial capabilities akin to those of Esri and satellite-imagery vendors reminiscent of Maxar Technologies and Planet Labs. Data feeds resemble credit and identity services offered by Experian and Equifax while combining title and deed elements comparable to First American Title Insurance Company and Old Republic International Corporation. Analytics platforms support compliance frameworks aligned with Fair Credit Reporting Act and servicing standards influenced by Consumer Financial Protection Bureau guidance. Solutions compete with alternative property-data providers such as Zillow Group and Redfin in select markets.

Financial performance

Financial metrics for property-data firms are influenced by mortgage origination volumes, housing-market indices like the Case–Shiller index, insurance loss seasons tied to Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Sandy, and wildfire events in regions such as California. Revenue streams mirror those of peer companies that report subscription, transaction, and professional services income to investors such as BlackRock and Vanguard Group. Capital structure considerations have been shaped by interactions with lenders similar to Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, and Barclays and by equity markets represented through indices like the Russell 2000 and S&P 500 when comparable firms were public. Valuation dynamics have been subject to scrutiny from rating agencies including S&P Global Ratings and Moody's Investors Service.

Corporate governance and leadership

Board composition and executive leadership have included directors and officers with experience at institutions comparable to Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, UBS Group, and Bank of New York Mellon. Governance practices reference codes and guidelines established by bodies similar to Securities and Exchange Commission and listing standards from exchanges like New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ. Compensation committees, audit committees, and risk committees operate under frameworks similar to those promoted by Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis. Human-resources strategies reflect recruiting competition with technology employers such as Google, Apple Inc., Meta Platforms, and legacy data firms like Thomson Reuters.

Controversies and litigation

Controversies in the property-data sector have involved disputes over data accuracy, privacy, pricing, and alleged anticompetitive behavior in litigation comparable to cases involving Equifax, TransUnion, Experian, and Zillow Group. Regulatory inquiries into consumer-reporting practices and data security echo enforcement actions by Federal Trade Commission and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Lawsuits and class actions in adjacent industries implicated firms such as Wells Fargo and Countrywide Financial during mortgage crisis litigation, highlighting reputational and legal risk for data vendors. Litigation themes include contract disputes, intellectual-property claims similar to disputes adjudicated in United States District Court for the Central District of California, and regulatory investigations analogous to probes by the Department of Justice and state attorneys general.

Category:Companies based in California Category:Financial services companies of the United States