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HOME2023-01-22T13:43:33-07:00

Damn, there is so much great knowledge out there. Did you know that “BOOKS” are full of smart?? No, I mean like life changing, I-wish-I-knew-that-years-ago type stuff.

I know that I was waaaayyy late to the game figuring it out. And I know that a lot of you are too busy to read as much as you ‘should’. And that is why you need me.

I still remember how it started for me. It started in June of 2008. After 11  years …..Click to continue

Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/21/26 {{catlist}}
April 21, 2026
READ MORE --- WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/21/2026 Geopolitical tensions over a stalled Iran ceasefire sent mortgage-backed securities down a quarter point by afternoon close, forcing lenders to weigh repricing risks as bond volatility remains elevated heading into Wednesday. The 10-year Treasury yield climbed 4.4 basis points to 4.297% amid headline swings between war escalation and diplomatic extensions, leaving market participants watching for any breakthrough in negotiations before the deadline expires. UMBS 5.0 traded at 99.18 and GNMA 5.0 at 99.60, reflecting weakness across the curve as risk-off sentiment briefly drove investors toward safety. Earlier, strong March retail sales data—up 1.7% versus 1.4% forecast—failed to rattle bonds, suggesting traders remain glued to Middle East headlines rather than economic data. The market coped with today's uncertainty in "a fairly calm way," per MBS Live, though negative reprices remain possible if volatility persists through close. Edge Home Finance just secured strategic capital from Presidio Investors, a signal that venture money continues flowing into the broker model despite mounting origination pressure. Tom Ahles, the company's new president, made it crystal clear: no pivot to banking, no shift to correspondent lending—just scale the broker platform harder. When founders double down rather than diversify after raising capital, it reveals where conviction sits in a fragmented mortgage ecosystem dominated by UWM ($164.3B) and Rocket ($116.2B), yet carved up by hundreds of regional players. The move underscores that capital today favors platform agility and specialization over the traditional correspondent or bank balance-sheet models that defined mortgage growth for decades. For smaller originators, this signals an existential choice: grow bigger or find a defensible niche fast. Retail sales crushed expectations at 1.7% month-over-month for March, beating the 1.4% forecast and marking the strongest monthly gain in a year despite war-fueled oil spikes. Consumer spending on merchandise remained resilient across categories, suggesting Americans continue to absorb inflation and higher energy costs without slowing their purchasing pace. The control group—which excludes volatile auto and gasoline sales—also beat, advancing 0.7% against a 0.2% forecast, hinting that underlying demand strength runs deeper than headline numbers. Yet this economic resilience hasn't lifted the mortgage market, as geopolitical risk continues to override positive domestic data and cap bond strength. Originators watching pending home sales (up 1.5% versus 0.1% forecast) see a spring home-buying season taking shape, though rates remain a structural headwind to refinance volume. Volatility risk intensifies heading into Wednesday due to the ceasefire deadline combined with uncertain peace negotiations, though intraday swings today proved manageable despite headline whipsaws. Neither JD Vance nor Iran confirmed attendance at Wednesday's scheduled talks in Pakistan, sparking a brief selloff that pushed MBS down nearly three-eighths of a point by mid-afternoon before Trump extended the ceasefire, triggering a partial recovery. Oil prices spiked above $96 a barrel as traders repriced the war premium, and Treasury yields climbed in lockstep with equities selling off sharply after earlier all-time-high momentum. Mortgage originators already repricing borrowers saw losses between an eighth and a quarter point depending on timing and coupon, while some lenders remained in motion with reprices at close. The path forward depends entirely on whether geopolitical talks produce an actual framework or collapse again Wednesday night. Kevin Warsh, President Trump's Federal Reserve nominee, testified before the Senate Banking Committee that the Fed needs a "different, new inflation framework," sidestepping specifics on rate-cut timing. Warsh blamed the central bank for allowing post-pandemic inflation to surge and acknowledged that hard-working Americans continue to feel elevated prices despite recent deceleration in the rate of change. When pressed on Trump's public pressure for rate cuts, Warsh said independence is ultimately the Fed's call, a careful response that avoids appearing captured while acknowledging executive preference. With $192 million in reported assets, Warsh would become one of the wealthiest Fed officials in history if confirmed, though conflicts-of-interest disclosures and asset sales remain pending. This testimony signals that whoever leads the Fed will likely maintain focus on inflation rather than capitulate fully to Trump's cutting rhetoric, suggesting mortgage originators shouldn't expect aggressive rate relief in 2026. The mortgage origination market remains bifurcated: scale leaders like UWM and Rocket dominate with combined $280.5 billion in production, while second-tier players from JPMorgan Chase ($59.4B) through Pennymac ($35.4B) compete fiercely, and a long tail of nonbanks, IMBs, and regional specialists carve out niche segments. Banks skew toward larger loan balances while specialized lenders target specific borrower cohorts, creating a fragmented ecosystem where profitability matters more than raw volume in today's compressed-margin environment. Edge Home Finance's capital raise reinforces that investors now reward platform efficiency, technology integration, and market positioning over mere production scale. For your business, this means the 2026 playbook requires ruthless cost discipline, differentiated customer acquisition, and defensible moat—not just more volume. The winners this cycle will be those who can scale lean operations that turn profit on 60 basis points instead of chasing 300-basis-point pipelines built in the 2020s. nn Locking vs Floating Volatility risk intensifies heading into Wednesday owing to the ceasefire deadline and uncertain status of ongoing peace negotiations. Current MBS prices are only 1 tick below the previous intraday low, suggesting a technical support level, though another wave of geopolitical headlines could trigger negative reprices. That said, bonds coped with today's uncertainty in a relatively calm fashion overall, indicating some resilience despite headline swings. nn Today's Events ADP Employment Change Weekly: 54.75K vs forecast N/A, prior 39K Retail Sales (Mar): 1.7% vs 1.4% forecast, 0.6% prior Retail Sales Control Group MoM (Mar): 0.7% vs 0.2% forecast, 0.5% prior Pending Home Sales (Mar): 1.5% vs 0.1% forecast, 1.8% prior nn Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | Market Data
Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/21/26 {{catlist}}
April 21, 2026
READ MORE --- WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/21/2026 Retail sales crushed expectations at 1.7 percent versus the 1.4 percent forecast, but Treasury investors barely blinked, treating the headline as a nominal gain rather than real demand. The 10-year yield crept up just 1.9 basis points by mid-morning after the data dropped, signaling that markets remain laser-focused on Iran ceasefire negotiations and Fed Chair nominee Kevin Warsh's Senate confirmation hearing. ADP employment data (54.75K) proved more market-relevant than retail sales, nudging MBS prices down marginally, while the broader message from fixed income traders is one of measured holding patterns amid geopolitical uncertainty. UMBS 5.0 fell to 99.28 (-0.15 from session start) and GNMA 5.0 to 99.68 (-0.12), reflecting a modest shift lower as the Tuesday risk events loom. The mortgage market remains technically stable but tactically challenged as originators weigh whether Friday's move to 1-month lows presents a genuine lock opportunity or a false bottom. Homebridge Financial Services announced a transformative merger with an affiliate of Saluda Grade, positioning the combined platform for aggressive growth in the Non-QM and HELOC space. The partnership will debut HELIX, a cutting-edge digital mortgage lending platform designed to automate complex vetting, streamline underwriting workflows, and integrate home equity and first lien lending into one seamless borrower experience. For mortgage brokers and correspondent lenders, this signals intensifying competition in alternative lending channels where scale and technology now matter more than ever. Pennymac TPO expanded its Non-QM suite to capture self-employed and investor borrowers traditional agency guidelines reject, while Click n' Close continues building out DPA solutions to expand borrower access and approval rates. The takeaway for smaller originators is clear: technology differentiation and product flexibility are becoming non-negotiable competitive advantages. Treasury curves continued bear flattening, with the 2-year climbing 3.9 basis points to 3.766 percent while the 10-year added only 1.9 basis points, reflecting classic duration hedging and short-term inflation concerns tied to oil supply disruptions. The 30-year Treasury yield stayed virtually flat at 4.891 percent (+0.01 bps), signaling that long-end investors remain skeptical of sustained rate declines despite Powell's public concern about the unsustainable $39 trillion federal debt level. Fed independence remains the dominant macro theme heading into Warsh's confirmation hearing, with markets pricing less than 50 percent probability of a rate cut by December 2026. The current stance suggests the Fed is neither cutting nor hiking, and Warsh's testimony will clarify whether that data-dependent posture holds or shifts toward either pole. Mortgage originators should expect continued range-bound trading in rates until geopolitical headlines or labor market data provide clearer directional signals. Pending home sales rose 1.5 percent in March despite expectations for only 0.1 percent growth, suggesting buyers showed more resilience than anticipated even amid higher mortgage rates and geopolitical anxiety. The upside surprise in both retail sales and pending home sales indicates consumer spending and housing demand remain more durable than credit card data and consumer sentiment surveys suggest, adding complexity to the Fed's inflation-rate cut calculus. However, real spending (adjusted for March's 2 percent goods inflation and higher fuel costs) is likely softer than nominal headline figures reveal, meaning the headline data should not be mistaken for genuine demand strength. Mortgage originators should monitor upcoming housing starts and housing permits data to confirm whether March's pending sales strength translates into actual new purchase originations or simply reflects a temporary surge before rates and affordability concerns reassert pressure. The disconnect between nominal data and real purchasing power will likely dominate mortgage market direction through May and June. Lenders focused on efficiency in 2025 but must now merge intelligence, speed, and trust to survive margin compression and higher borrower expectations. FirstClose's upcoming webinar on MeridianLink integration highlights the industry shift toward workflow automation and data visibility as core competitive levers rather than peripheral add-ons. AccountChek's early asset verification approach exemplifies the trend: one report satisfying both verification of assets and verification of income or employment simultaneously, cutting costs and accelerating approvals by 15 percent or more. For mortgage sellers and warehouse lenders, this operational efficiency translates to faster sellable inventory turn and lower carry costs, directly supporting production economics. The clear message is that technology stacks must be modernized now; legacy workflows will not survive in a sub-2.5 percent margin environment. United Wholesale Mortgage and Rocket Mortgage remain dominant with $164.3 billion and $116.2 billion in production volume respectively, but the real fragmentation occurs below the top tier where scale no longer guarantees profitability. JPMorgan Chase ($59.4B) and CrossCountry Mortgage ($49.1B) anchor a compressed middle tier, while firms like loanDepot ($25.7B) and Guild Mortgage ($26.9B) fight for market position alongside a long tail of regional banks and credit unions. Profitability metrics matter far more than volume rankings in this environment, yet the CFPB HMDA data shows that scale leaders continue extracting operational leverage that smaller platforms struggle to match. For mortgage brokers and correspondent sellers, the strategic question is whether to grow through M&A, consolidate operations to improve margins, or specialize in underserved product niches where scale disadvantage is offset by product expertise and customer intimacy. The 2025 rankings confirm that the mortgage market's top-heavy structure has only intensified, leaving limited middle ground for generalist originators lacking either massive scale or distinctive specialization. Locking vs Floating Borrowers seeking rate certainty should view this window as a genuine lock opportunity given the meaningful pullback to 1-month lows achieved last Friday. The prevailing technical setup shows limited instances of weakness following the late-March turning point, suggesting that risk-averse clients face diminishing downside if rates were to bounce. However, rate-tolerant borrowers can still justify floating through today's events (Iran ceasefire developments and Warsh hearing) because of the low probability of a sharp rally if volatility materializes. The Tuesday ceasefire expiration window does carry real binary risk, making Monday and Tuesday morning the least attractive windows for floating decisions. By Wednesday, once headline uncertainty settles, both the lock and float decision frameworks should become clearer. Today's Events ADP Employment Change Weekly: 54.75K actual vs. prior 39K March Retail Sales: 1.7% actual vs. 1.4% forecast, 0.6% prior March Retail Sales Control Group: 0.7% actual vs. 0.2% forecast, 0.5% prior March Pending Home Sales: 1.5% actual vs. 0.1% forecast, 1.8% prior February Business Inventories (10:00 AM): 0.3% forecast vs. -0.1% prior Kevin Warsh Federal Reserve Confirmation Hearing (Senate Banking Committee): Today Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 99.28 | -0.15 | | 5.5 | 100.94 | -0.10 | | 6.0 | 102.28 | -0.04 | GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 99.68 | -0.12 | | 5.5 | 100.88 | -0.06 | | 6.0 | 101.81 | -0.12 | Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | Market Data
This Is What an AI Monopoly Looks Like — And It's Already Here {{catlist}}
April 21, 2026
READ MORE

This Is What an AI Monopoly Looks Like — And It's Already Here

Most people think of a monopoly as one company running the show. A single villain, easy to spot, easy to point at. But the most dangerous kind of market concentration doesn't look like that at all. It looks like five perfectly reasonable, extremely innovative companies quietly becoming the gatekeepers of an entire industry. That's exactly what's happening in AI — and the mortgage and real estate worlds are sitting right in the middle of it, whether they know it or not.

From 60% to 67% in Twelve Months

In early 2024, five US hyperscalers — Google, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, and Oracle — controlled about 60% of global AI computing power. By the end of 2025, that number had grown to 67%. That's a meaningful jump in a very short amount of time, and every indicator suggests it will keep climbing. The reason it's climbing is the sheer cost of staying in the game. Building the kind of computing infrastructure needed to train and run advanced AI models costs billions of dollars. Not millions. Billions. That kind of price tag doesn't just create a barrier to entry for startups — it creates a barrier that eliminates entire categories of would-be competitors before they even get started.

The Winner-Takes-All Machine

Economists have a term for markets that naturally gravitate toward one or a few dominant players: winner-takes-all dynamics. AI infrastructure has them in spades. The more computing power you own, the more AI models you can train. The better your models, the more customers pay to use them. The more customers you have, the more revenue you generate to buy more computing power. Around and around it goes, with the big players getting bigger and everyone else getting squeezed. This is not a conspiracy. It's just math. And it's the same math that gave us a world where two companies control most of your smartphone experience, three companies control most of your internet search, and four companies deliver most of your online shopping. Now it's happening to the technology that is rapidly becoming the backbone of how mortgages get processed, how leads get generated, how properties get valued, and how clients get served.

The Labs Themselves Are Dependent

Here's one of the most remarkable — and underreported — facts in all of tech right now: even the most powerful, most celebrated AI companies in the world don't own their own computing infrastructure. OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is almost entirely dependent on Microsoft's computing resources. Anthropic, the company behind Claude, recently announced a major expanded partnership with Google to secure more chip capacity. These aren't small companies scraping by — OpenAI is one of the most highly valued startups in history. And yet they rent their computing from the hyperscalers just like everyone else. When the biggest AI labs in the world are tenants rather than landlords, that tells you something important about who actually holds power in this ecosystem.

Antitrust Is Coming — But Slowly

Regulators in the US and Europe are beginning to pay attention to this concentration. Antitrust investigations into big tech's grip on AI infrastructure are underway in multiple countries. The concern isn't just that these companies are big — it's that their dominance in cloud computing gives them a structural advantage in AI that's almost impossible for competitors to overcome. But antitrust enforcement is notoriously slow. Cases take years. Markets move in months. By the time regulators act, the consolidation will be even deeper than it is today. One legal analysis from Yale Law noted that antitrust enforcement operates after the fact, case by case, while AI markets are moving so fast that significant harm could be locked in well before any regulatory remedy arrives.

What Does 'AI Concentration' Feel Like to a Loan Officer?

Right now, it might not feel like much. AI tools for mortgage professionals are proliferating. Competition among vendors seems healthy. Prices seem reasonable. But look one or two layers deeper. The companies selling you AI tools are themselves paying the hyperscalers to run those tools. As hyperscaler pricing shifts — and it will — those costs will work their way down to you. The question is when and by how much. Beyond pricing, concentration creates fragility. If your AI platform runs on one hyperscaler's infrastructure and that company decides to change its terms, raise its rates, or simply discontinue support for a particular type of workload, your vendor has limited alternatives. And so do you.

The Mortgage Industry Needs to Pay Attention Now

Fannie Mae estimated that 55% of lenders would be using AI by the end of 2025. That number is almost certainly higher today. AI is no longer an experiment in the mortgage world — it's becoming operational infrastructure. Which means the question of who controls the infrastructure it runs on is no longer abstract. It's a business continuity question. The good news is that awareness is the first step. Understanding that your AI tools don't exist in a vacuum — that they sit on top of a concentrated, powerful, increasingly expensive infrastructure layer — changes how you evaluate vendors, negotiate contracts, and think about your technology strategy. Start asking the questions now. Because the companies at the top of this stack are going to keep getting bigger. Count on it.   Subscribe to Well That Makes Sense — because in an industry moving this fast, being informed isn't optional. It's your competitive edge. (And honestly, we make it a lot more fun than your CE credits.)
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Mortgage Today (PM) – 04/21/26

April 21st, 2026|Week In Review|

--- WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/21/2026 Geopolitical tensions over a stalled Iran ceasefire sent mortgage-backed securities down a quarter point by afternoon close, forcing lenders to weigh repricing [...]

Mortgage Today (AM) – 04/21/26

April 21st, 2026|Week In Review|

--- WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/21/2026 Retail sales crushed expectations at 1.7 percent versus the 1.4 percent forecast, but Treasury investors barely blinked, treating the headline as a [...]

Article Archive

Mortgage Today (AM) – 04/17/26

April 17th, 2026|0 Comments

WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/17/2026 Middle Eastern ceasefire optimism is driving bond prices sharply higher this Friday morning, with UMBS 5.0 rallying 37 basis points and the 10-year [...]

Mortgage Today (AM) – 04/16/26

April 16th, 2026|0 Comments

WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/16/2026 Markets are sideways and traders are waiting for the ceasefire to tell them what bonds should do. Today began quietly with the slowest [...]

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April 15th, 2026|0 Comments

--- WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/15/2026 Mortgage origination ground to a halt today as the market staged only a token pullback, with UMBS 5.0 prices down just 0.10 [...]

Mortgage Today (AM) – 04/15/26

April 15th, 2026|0 Comments

WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/15/2026 Mortgage rates tumbled to their lowest point in a month as bond markets rallied on optimism that Middle East peace talks could end [...]

Mortgage Today (PM) – 04/14/26

April 14th, 2026|0 Comments

WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/14/2026 Bonds are staging their best day in four weeks on the back of war-related optimism and PPI inflation data that dramatically undershot expectations. [...]

Mortgage Today (AM) – 04/14/26

April 14th, 2026|0 Comments

WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/14/2026 Bonds ignore a massive beat in inflation data, as diplomatic hopes in Iran negotiations keep risk sentiment alive and energy costs anchored. The [...]

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April 13th, 2026|0 Comments

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